Public-facing staff in shops and frontline services are donning cameras to help
fight abuse and theft
When you work in security it can be a battle to stop people stealing. Most
thieves know that they have the same legal power as guards, and it’s not easy
trying to decide who gets to dole out “reasonable force” when a teenager’s
cutting through a bike lock in front of you.
My shift mates and I recently observed a heroin user cutting through our car
park repeating a shopping list into her phone: shampoo, school uniform, other
low order goods. She’s part of a growing number of people stealing for others,
focusing on stuff that people need but don’t want to pay for.
When to press buttons isn’t my only fear around BWCs. My job’s starting pay is
£11.44 per hour, the current minimum wage; the camera I wear retails for £534. I
don’t want to think about what happens if I damage it. Sometimes I feel my
uniform’s more valuable than I am.
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Tag - Workers' rights
Increase will lift minimum rates by 9.8% and comes after online retailer
defeated GMB union bid for bargaining rights on pay
Amazon has announced a pay rise worth nearly 10% for tens of thousands of UK
employees, after defeating an attempt by the GMB trade union for bargaining
rights over pay and conditions.
The online retailer said the increase would lift minimum pay rates by 9.8% to
between £13.50 and £14.50 an hour, depending on location. Staff with at least
three years’ service will receive a minimum of between £13.75 and £14.75 an
hour.
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Gig economy workers for Deliveroo and Uber Eats in the city are living in
appalling conditions, while putting in long hours, earning low pay and facing
mental health problems
Two lines of dirt-encrusted, ramshackle caravans stretch along both sides of a
road close to the motorway that winds its way into the heart of Bristol. Rats
dart between water-filled concrete sluices to rubbish-flecked mounds of
vegetation. Drug users stumble out of the nearby underpass while lorries thunder
overhead.
This is the grim encampment where about 30 Brazilian delivery riders working for
large companies such as Deliveroo and Uber Eats are forced to live to make ends
meet.
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GMB union urges Health and Safety Executive to investigate ‘shocking’ figures
revealed by the Observer
Ambulances have been called out to Amazon warehouses more than 1,400 times in
the past five years, the Observer can reveal. The figures, which were described
as shocking by the GMB trade union, raise fresh questions about safety at the
American giant’s UK workplaces.
Amazon centres in Dunfermline and Bristol had the most ambulance callouts in
Britain, listing 161 and 125 across the period respectively.
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