The London Healthworker Edition 1 Front page April 1988
Bulletin of London Healthworkers Committee
Time To Link Up
The Royal Free Hospital Joint Shop Stewards Committee welcomes the formation  of  the  London Health workers Coordinating Committee,    which    has arisen from the body which played  a  major  part  in making the one-day strikes on February 3 and 
We  have already already elected 3 delegates to the Committee,  who will   represent the views of  and  report back to our JSSC.
 For a long time, we have felt  the need for some sort of body to link trade unionists across  
With the help of this bulletin we hope it will be possible to sustain and gradually develop the LHCC so that when the mood of militancy begins again to grow amongst health workers we shall be in a position to  provide a lead which will   unite all health workers and not divide them.
If we are to achieve this aim, however, we must not only be well organised,  but we  should also have a very clear sense of our objectives.
In  February and March the campaign was centred around one umbrella demand to "defend the NHS".  This clearly has its limitations,  and  we need to adopt  more  specific demands in order not only to make it clear what we are fighting for,  but  to try to overcome the present tendency towards sectionalism     - between different unions,  between different staff groups and between different areas of the country.
The following provides a possible starting point for discussion:
  *  A basic minimum wage of,  say,  £140  take home per week for all hospital
workers, including student nurses.
   *  A  certain number of new hospitals to be built in each Region,  depending on  the length of  waiting lists.
  * No NHS acute bed to be closed before waiting lists have been abolished.
  * An increase in funding for the NHS of 5% per year over and  above  hospital
inflation. 
*   An end to all charges for  prescriptions,  eye-tests  and dental care, etc.
  *  The  ejection of  all private  contractors  from the NHS and an end to Competitive Tendering.
  *  All private  beds  in NHS  hospitals to be  made public.
  Should  such a "charter" of  demands be adopted  by the LHCC, after full
discussion  amongst  trade unionists within  
made  great  progress.
  We could organise joint campaigns around the various demands.  Going to
support  a  march in  some other part of 
perhaps  be less seen as a vague sense  of duty to show solidarity with somebody else's campaign, and more as a fight for the demands of OUR
charter,  which pledges us to  fight  the closure of any NHS acute hospital bed.
For all these  reasons, many of us believe that high on the agenda of the new  London Healthworkers Coordinating Committee should  be a discussion on the adoption of such a set of demands.
     ANDREW PHILLIPS,
     Chair, Royal Free Hospital Joint shop Steward Committee
London Health workers Coordinating Committee established as a rank and file stewards group during the 1988 dispute, by stewards at Royal free Hospital and Maudsley Hospital Steering Committee: Andrew Phillips, Gayle Adams, Camilla Crivello, John Speakman, David Esterson, John Kaufman, Hal Satterwhite
Note:  Probably established 
NUPE, COHSE,NALGO,MPU,MSF
 
