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SIPTU to Break Bertie's Presidency?

category national | anti-capitalism | opinion/analysis author Thursday January 15, 2004 15:49author by Justin Moran - Sinn Féinauthor email maigh_nuad at yahoo dot com Report this post to the editors

Next week will see the opening shots being fired in an industrial conflict that has the potential to dominate politics, and the issue of transport in particular, over the next six months. Barring a change of mind by SIPTU within the next seven days workers in Aer Rianta will engage in a two hour work stoppage targeted directly at the EU Presidency Programme next Thursday.

(Note: This is the full version of an article I wrote for An Phoblacht where it will appear in edited form, comments welcome)

Next week will see the opening shots being fired in an industrial conflict that has the potential to dominate politics, and the issue of transport in particular, over the next six months. Barring a change of mind by SIPTU within the next seven days workers in Aer Rianta will engage in a two hour work stoppage targeted directly at the EU Presidency Programme next Thursday.

The Irish Independent described it in a condemnatory editorial as the ‘nuclear option’. The warning from SIPTU’s national industrial secretary Michael Halpenny that bus, rail and taxi SIPTU members will consider coordinated action in an effort to exert maximum pressure on the Coalition shows the level of anger in Ireland’s largest union. It is also an indication of the raw power the union movement still has in Irish society and its ability to take on the Government when absolutely necessary for the good of the country.

Speaking after the announcement Sinn Féin Spokesperson on Transport Seán Crowe TD said, “The media, and the wider public, should be in no mistake that the responsibility for this rests solely and squarely on the shoulders of Minister Seamus Brennan whose intransigence in pushing for the break up of Aer Rianta without either explanation or justification has pushed workers to taking this action.”

The decision by SIPTU to deliberately target high-profile EU meetings and undermine the EU presidency through work stoppages is calculated to put maximum pressure on Bertie Ahern and the floundering Dublin Government who badly need a positive EU presidency in the run up to the elections this summer.

The so-called Social Partnership process will be put under acute levels of stress by these developments. If SIPTU workers outside of Aer Rianta become involved it may lead to the largest industrial dispute since Ahern took power in 1997, dwarfing the ASTI ‘s pay campaign.

Aer Rianta is perhaps the most glaring example of the ideological idiocy driving Government policy towards the public sector. By any measurement it is a successful, profitable and productive company. The Government’s own Price Waterhouse Coopers report states that any break up of the company would result in Cork and Shannon airports losing money and clearly they would find it impossible to survive in the long term.

A variety of myths, and outright lies, are peddled about Aer Rianta in the media and by its opponents in business and politics. According to Seamus Brennan’s view of the world, breaking up the company will inevitably make it more efficient, cheaper and more competitive.

The truth is somewhat different. Far from being overly expensive as repeatedly claimed by Ryan Air, Aer Rianta’s airport charges are among the lowest in Europe. Professor Rigas Doganis, retained by the Taoiseach to examine Aer Rianta’s charges, described them as ‘historically very low compared to other major European airports.’ In fact, they are 15% below the average for all European airports.

Consultants appointed by Minister Brennan to investigate the case for a private terminal at Dublin Airport said the charges were ‘unrealistically low’ and a range of other reports from various independent consultancies and commissions underlines the fact that Aer Rianta’s airport charges are among the lowest in Europe. Despite such low pricing, the company is still extremely profitable. Last year it made a profit after tax of €36.2 million, a substantial increase on 2001.

In 2002 Dublin Airport was one of the three highest growth airports in Europe and one of only seven of the top twenty European airports to report annualised growth in the year ending October 2002. Since 1995 passenger traffic in this state has increased by over 80%. Last year workers moved 19 million passengers and 87,000 tonnes of freight through Dublin, Cork and Shannon airports.

Minister Brennan believes that the break up of the company would allow Dublin, Shannon and Cork to compete against each other for custom. This is based on the theory that Aer Rianta is too focussed on Dublin Airport and as a result, operations in Cork and Shannon are suffering.

In reality, Cork Airport is continuing to grow. Passenger figures for the Airport grew
5.6% last year, almost 1.9 million people. Numbers travelling to Britain were up a minimum of 10% and as much as 29% to London Stansted while there was a 16% increase in travellers to Europe.

While the figures for Shannon Airport showed a small decline, this was expected given the reduction in transatlantic services but there were hopeful signs in a massive increase in European traffic. Certainly there is no evidence to suggest that by itself, Shannon Airport could do any better. If Brennan does away with the compulsory Shannon stopover, it would cripple the airport, with an estimated 900,000 fall in passenger numbers as a consequence.

In all likelihood the regional airports would be the first to suffer from the break-up. When economic commentators report on company mergers they often point to the reduced costs as various administrative and back-up services are combined. The reverse is also true. By splitting the company into three, the individual airports would no longer be able to share central administration, accounting and middle management putting a heavy burden on the new companies.

The smaller individual companies would also have a great deal of difficulty raising money through loans for further development. While Aer Rianta’s credit rating has already been adversely affected by the confusion generated by Minister Brennan, it is still far superior to that which would be enjoyed by each airport standing alone. Higher interest rates on loans mean higher charges for airlines and passengers.

This does not take into account the Minister’s decision to also hamstring Dublin Airport’s future development from the beginning by saddling it with the debt for the entire Aer Rianta group. This currently stands at €376 million and does not include an extra €150 million for a new development planned for Cork Airport.

If Seamus Brennan’s goal was to cripple our three major Irish airports he could not do it better. After the break-up Dublin Airport will find itself with a debt of over half a billion Euros. Cork and Shannon Airports will find themselves with rising costs and no support in standing up to the airlines.

SIPTU points to the experience in New Zealand, another small island economy, where, with little economic justification for the decision, the Government decided to privatise most of its publically owned services in the 1990s including the state airline and the airports. It has now been obliged to buy back Air New Zealand for twice what they sold it for and has launched a process of reviewing its airport structures.

The case of Aer Rianta is a classic example of the fantasy land of free market economics. As SIPTU have put it, “The Minister for Transport has offered no explanation or justification for the decision – other than his ‘passionate belief’ that competition is inherently good and a ‘hunch’ that everything will be right at the end of the day.”

Deputy Crowe has assured SIPTU of Sinn Féin’s full support “There is no economic sense behind Minister Brennan's proposals whatsoever but he seems determined to sleepwalk Aer Rianta into the abyss. If strike action is the last resort available to bring this man to his senses then SIPTU is to be commended in having the courage to push ahead with it.”

Economic and transport policy in this state is being crafted on the basis of soundbites and shallow thinking. SIPTU’s industrial campaign might just be the last hope to avert disaster.

author by Ann Speed?publication date Fri Jan 16, 2004 00:36author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Who's Ann Speed voting for? Your a Union Official, your members have a right to know where you stand.

author by Aunty naivepublication date Thu Jan 15, 2004 22:44author address author phone Report this post to the editors

I dont think so, these siptu chancers love the EU even more than they loved the thousands of US army childkillers that flew out of Shannon.

author by Januspublication date Thu Jan 15, 2004 19:22author address author phone Report this post to the editors

I think SIPTU member is probably spot on in his analysis of the SF attitude to Social Partnership. A lot of them would certainly be opposed to it in principle as Justin seems to be, but as a party they seem to be against the practice of social partnership rather than the principle of it.

As for the party taking a line, I'd be very surprised if it did. If it went to a vote, I think SF members would vote for Derwin, and will do in the election, but the party won't want to call for their members to vote for Derwin because they'll expect him to lose. If he loses after SF backed him it might make it difficult to play nice with Brendan Hayes who will see the Shinners as part of the group that started to get him elected.

I think if the shinners HAD to publically back someone, they'd back Derwin, and maybe they yet might do it in the paper, but the party as a whole won't because they'll want to be onside with the new boy.

author by SIPTU Memberpublication date Thu Jan 15, 2004 18:33author address author phone Report this post to the editors

My comment was'nt meant to spark a SF bashing fest. I seriously believe that if the SF party backed Des it would be a major boost to him. Could'nt a motion be put to the Ard Comhairle on the issue?

Personally, my guess is that there are some in SF who just oppose the existing partnership but not the principle of business/state/union deals but that there are more who are opposed to the whole processs.

Fair dues Justin for helping Des and never mind the trolls.

author by seedotpublication date Thu Jan 15, 2004 16:55author address author phone Report this post to the editors

On April 29, 2003 EU Trade Commissioner Pascal Lamy announced an offer to liberalise certain sections of EU services market saying. "This EU offer is a substantial one," . It contains real improvements for foreign services providers in terms of access to the EU market and takes particular account of developing countries' interests."


The section of interest here states:
Transport
The main improvements in the offer are:
· · air transport: the offer includes new commitments on groundhandling and airport management services.

i.e. the EU made a commitment to allow competition in airport management across the EU - this was a binding GATS offer.

Now this wasn't really a surprise - people have been saying for years the GATS will privatise Aer Rianta. But perhaps the best evidence of this comes from Pat Cox when he was addressing the Seanad in 2002 during the Nice campaign. He said:

.A man came up to me and told me he was voting "No" because he works in Aer Rianta. I had heard many arguments but this was a new one. I asked him to explain the logic in that argument. He told me that he was given a sheet in work stating that an article in the Nice treaty provided for the privatisation of Aer Rianta.
Article 133 of the treaty confers on the European Union authority to negotiate trade for the Union, mandated by the member states and accountable to the European Parliament, on the global stage. Article 133 is good for this State because it is the largest exporter of software in the world. The greatest threat to the software industry is piracy and we rely on our negotiating strength in the WTO to protect intellectual property, the real value of software, from piracy abroad. Having muscle in such a body provides muscle for Irish jobs. Isolation would not work for us. Someone has perverted the EU capacity to negotiate in the World Trade Organisation into a scare story.
I told that man that my father was a watchmaker who worked Aer Rianta's duty free shop in Shannon Airport. It was a good employer but when he died without a pension, it employed my mother and I paid my way through Trinity College by working there in the summers. I told that man that the company means something to me and that whoever was telling him this was wrong.


Now if you read this carefully, Pat Cox does not say Article 133 does not affect Aer Rianta - he just tells us how nice it is. He does not say that he will or can stop Aer Rianta being included in GATS - just how much the company means to him.

Respect to SIPTU for maiking this stance now - lets hope it is more than the usual grandstanding.

author by UCD Student - Faculty of Celtic Studiespublication date Thu Jan 15, 2004 16:52author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Fair play to Justin for backing Des. It shows that he has good instincts and has a good ability to analyse what is needed for the left.

But this thing of "he's not a SF backed person....it's up to the Ard Comhairle to decide" reminds me of the approach of Sinn Fein on the Coca Cola question in UCDSU. Their members in UCD said they supported the ban, but they had members on the gates doing the work of Coca Cola.

I understand that decisions have to come from the elected bodies (that's democracy). It's also essential that decisions are made between Ard Comhairle meetings. Surly SF should be able to made basic decisions on the backing of THE left candidate in the SIPTU electons.

PS
I'd be interested in how Ann Speed votes.

author by Justin Moran - Sinn Féinpublication date Thu Jan 15, 2004 16:45author email maigh_nuad at yahoo dot comauthor address author phone Report this post to the editors

Personally, I back Derwin and I hope to be able to give a hand in his campaign. As for the party, it would be a decision for the party's Ard Comhairle as to whether to back anyone, and if so, who to back. I have no idea whether Des has even asked Sinn Féin for support and i leave now before the sectarian infighting begins.

author by SIPTU memberpublication date Thu Jan 15, 2004 16:01author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Justin, will SF back Des Derwin against the bureaucracy's choice Hayes? If SF are really committed to opposing social partnership then backing Des would give a huge boost to the anti-partnership element in the union. It would not pose any problems for SF as Des is not a member of any political organisation. SF members who are genuinely opposed to partnership should be lobbying for their party to back Des or at least help in the David versus Goliath campaign.

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