Heathrow security officers' strike resumes
Heathrow expected to pay bumper dividends, while staff face poverty pay
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Over the next five years Heathrow Airport Limited (HAL) is expected to make dividend payments worth £1.5 billion to its shareholders.
The prediction on HAL’s bumper dividends is made by the Civil Aviation Authority in a highly authoritative report into the airport’s finances.
The revelations about the forthcoming dividend bonanza coincides with the latest strike action by 1,400 security officers at the airport, who will walkout on 25, 26, and 27 May in a dispute over pay.
Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said, “These figures underline all that is wrong with Heathrow airport – mega pay outs to the shareholders while the workers who generate the dividends are on poverty pay.
“This report confounds HAL’s claims that there is not enough money to give its lowest paid workers a decent pay rise. The company knows it needs to do the right thing and pay our members a fair pay increase.”
Unite’s research has revealed that since 2017, in real terms the average remuneration of HAL workers has fallen by 24 per cent. The company fired and rehired its entire workforce at the height of Covid in 2020, which dramatically cut the pay of many of its workforce.
Unite has discovered that Heathrow security officers are paid less than workers at other major airports in London and the South East. The officers, who were the highest paid prior to the Covid pandemic, are now paid between £5,000 and £6,000 per annum less than their counterparts at Stansted and Gatwick.
Unite regional co-ordinating officer Wayne King added, “There is absolutely no justification for security officers at Heathrow being paid far less than comparable officers at other London airports.
“Heathrow regularly trumpets how successful it is as the UK’s premium airport so there is no defence in it paying bargain basement wages. Heathrow can clearly meet a cost of living increase for our members; they’re deliberately choosing not to, pushing our members deeper into financial difficulties.”
By Barckley Sumner