Dinahmo " We're heading back to the days when workers turned up to a particular place and then would be either given a day's work or sent home. This is wrong and we need a change of work methods."
My grandfather in the thirties and forties, after being gassed in WW1, worked as an outside house painter. They had to turn up for work in all dreadful weathers, and stand around until someone in a nice warm dry office decided whether it was a good day to be putting on paint. If it wasn't, they were sent home with half pay, but only after a set time, by when they were drenched and frozen, (The employers' motive behind this was that it was then too late for them to go elsewhere to find casual work for the day, so they were kept tied to their job. If they just stayed away and risked finding work somewhere portering or something, and, if they were lucky, to earn a full day's pay, they got no pay for that day and could find when they returned that they had no job at all).
He had bronchitis every year, but still stood in sleet for hours so as to be sure of his half pay to feed his family (until one year the "bronchitis" turned out to be lung cancer).
Progress in work conditions has been fought for and painfully won, but it can be lost in an instant.
Last letters become first - March 26
Survey on British Women's Perspectives on Politics and Social Issues



