London Underground Ticket Office closures Print E-mail
By an RMT activist   
Thursday, 31 May 2007
london-underground-lf7uLondon Underground has announced plans to close 40 main ticket offices, various secondary offices and restrict opening times on many others.

Apart from the 240 jobs and promotional opportunities that we will lose, the service to the travelling public will be decimated. 

At a meeting with management on the 23rd May, the Unions were told that the cuts were not negotiable and that they were only there to consult and fine tune them.

This type of management bullying was seen in our last pay dispute. They bully away until they split the unions and then go for the jugular.  We must not allow ourselves to become split on this issue. At grass roots level we need to be holding cross union meetings to explain to all staff the implications of the cuts to them. Pressure should be brought to bare on the leadership of the TSSA and the RMT to ensure that they keep their nerve and fight to protect these positions.

We need the general public on board and the passenger services bodies. People need to know that their service is being cut.

An online petition has been launched at:  http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/tubetickets

Please visit the site and sign it, urge others to sign and distribute it widely.

We are hoping to set up laptops outside stations to try and secure thousands of signatures.

The main attack will have to be industrial action.  With management refusing to negotiate the Unions have no choice but to take some form of action. Keeping the Unions united will as usual be the hardest thing.

The TSSA has put its case and wants to see ticket offices selling Mars Bars and crisps. They seem happy to let the jobs go as long as the procedures are carried out correctly.

The RMT has another view, that the cuts are withdrawn or we take action.

The oyster card is the reason given for the closures. Management want all sales to be at pass agents or on line. This is fine until the card goes wrong as they so often do. The online service sends the customer back to ticket office to sort out problems. What happens when we are not there?