School girl photographed on tracks at tube station unstaffed due to job cuts

- Incident follows tube bosses broken pledge that all stations will be staffed when passenger trains run.
- 800 job cuts have seen numerous safety incidents on unstaffed or understaffed stations.
- Tube bosses now offering strikebreakers three times the pay of some station staff in an attempt to prop up failed 'Fit for the Future’ stations operation model.

RMT General Secretary, Mick Cash, has slammed London Underground management for allowing London’s tube stations to descend into chaos as a result of unjustified job cuts.

“RMT warned tube bosses again and again that the job cuts they were proposing would leave many stations unstaffed. This is exactly what happened at Latimer Road where it took a passenger with a mobile phone to let London Underground know that a schoolchild has been wandering across electrified track while trains run.” (picture attached)

RMT members are currently refusing to work overtime as part of industrial action that is exposing the chronic shortage of staff on the tube. “London’s tube stations have been operating on the basis of our members’ goodwill. Now that our members are refusing to work six day weeks and additional hours the system is collapsing”, said Cash.

The RMT leader is also furious that tube management are now spending huge sums to maintain the pretence that stations are properly staffed. London Underground has given non-operational staff a fraction of the training that station assistants get but claims this qualifies them to replace fully trained staff during industrial disputes.

These “Travel Ambassadors” are being offered up to three times the rate for a shift that would be paid to a station assistant. “You just could not make it up”, said Mick Cash. “London Underground management paid severance packages to around 900 experienced station supervisors and ticket clerks and now they are offering unqualified admin staff and managers up to £250 a shift to avoid stations closing due to lack of staff”. “Instead of throwing good money after bad, London Underground needs to recruit and fully train station staff to replace those they have cut.”

RMT is demanding an immediate recruitment campaign and the restoration of jobs that were cut in London Underground’s reorganisation earlier this year. Ends

> RMT National News

Saturday, 30th August
Rail union, RMT has announced strike action by staff working on the Carlisle Support Services contract for Northern Trains, covering revenue protection and station gateline roles.
Friday, 29th August
SEAFARERS union RMT said today that the resignation of P&O Ferries chief executive Peter Hebblethwaite, who sacked around 800 workers in 2022 and replaced them with cheap agency labour, as someone who had effectively left the scene of a crime.
Thursday, 21st August
Tube union RMT, today announced rolling strike action across the network beginning on Friday 5th September for seven days, with different grades taking industrial action at differing times.
Saturday, 16th August
Maritime union RMT, will begin industrial action on Orkney Ferries later this month, in a dispute over pay and conditions.
Saturday, 16th August
Rail union RMT, has condemned planned cuts to the British Transport Police (BTP), warning they will seriously endanger the safety of railway staff, particularly those working alone on trains and at stations.