Bank of England To Go On Strike, First in 50 years

Trade union members, Bank of England, Britain’s central bank, will on Tuesday go ahead with first strike action in the last 50 years, the Unite union said on Monday.

Last-minute talks facilitated by a government-run arbitrator failed to resolve the pay dispute with the bank,’’ the union said after it agreed to delay the start of strike action “in a gesture of goodwill”, the union said.

Some 95 per cent of staff in maintenance, security and other service roles voted earlier this month for four days of strike action from Monday over a long-running pay dispute.

“The strike will now take place from Tuesday to Thursday.

“Unite members are calling on the Bank of England to give staff fair pay following the imposition of a derisory pay settlement without negotiating with recognised union Unite,’’ the union said.

It said that the dispute was caused by the bank’s imposition of a 1 per cent increase on its total wage bill for the current financial year, while it leaves rises for individual staff at the discretion of line managers.

However, the bank made no immediate comment on the planned strike.