Ad
Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Scaffolders join the protest across the country

ADVERTISEMENT
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

 

Protests on construction sites across Britain turned into mass stay-aways last week. Groups of other construction workers have united with electricians to walk off the job.

At the Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station in Nottinghamshire, electricians, scaffolders and welders all stayed out of work. More than 200 electricians picketed both gates at SSI steel works (formerly Corus) in Redcar, Teeside. Scaffolders and electricians refused to work.

A student delegation from Teesside University unfurled a banner saying  “Students and workers unite and fight”. One worker from Middlesbrough said, “These protest are about freezing wages. “We’re going to need national action as these changes are going to have a knock-on effect on everybody.”

One electrician spoke of the solidarity they have received from students while another spoke about the importance of unity between public and private sector workers. A short meeting concluded with electricians blocking the Redcar entrance of the site. Traffic backed up around the roundabout.

Workers also stayed off the job at the Pembroke power station in Wales. Other sites to have walkouts included Stanlow in Ellesmere Port, Grangemouth in Scotland, Sellafield in Cumbria, West Burton in Nottinghamshire, Runcorn, Drax and Eggborough in north Yorkshire, Ferrybridge in west Yorkshire, Hinckley point in Somerset and Lindsey oil refinery in Lincolnshire.

In Saltend workers on one project protested and in Liverpool 20 workers from the John Moores University site refused to work and joined a protest there. In London, up to 200 workers protested at the Farringdon Crossrail construction site.

The electricians are campaigning to stop building bosses tearing up their national JIB agreement and cutting wages by up to 35 percent. Agencies are already recruiting the new grade of “installers” in preparation for the introduction of the new contracts.

Many of the workers protesting aren’t covered by the JIB agreement but are covered by the “blue book” national agreement instead.

One scaffolder said, “Our bosses are pushing through a pay freeze for us and pay cuts for the sparks.

“They are coming for us all, so we all have to fight back together.”

Via: www.socialistworker.co.uk 

Share your thoughts on this story in the comments below

 

 

ADVERTISEMENT

Popular Categories

Latest posts

Barking Riverside expansion approved to deliver up to 20,000 homes

Revised outline plans for the Barking Riverside development in east London have been approved by the London Borough of Barking & Dagenham, enabling a...

Beyond the Hype: Where AI Actually Delivers Value for a Scaffold Business

AI can draft a site report in seconds, but it cannot plumb a standard or assume legal accountability. Scaffold businesses operate in a world...

New data shows construction workforce becoming younger and more skilled

New data from the Construction Skills Certification Scheme (CSCS) suggests the profile of the UK construction workforce is changing, with more young people entering...

Teen in coma after scaffolding accident on Fife housing project

A teenager remains in a coma after being seriously injured by falling scaffolding material while working at a housing block in Kirkcaldy. Brodie Thomson, 16,...

NASC gains formal role in CITB levy consensus process

The National Access and Scaffolding Confederation (NASC) has been granted Prescribed Organisation status by the Construction Industry Training Board (CITB), giving the trade body...

New platform aims to bring instant scaffolding quotes to UK market

A London-based roofing contractor has launched a new digital platform designed to simplify how scaffolding is sourced and booked. The platform, called ScaffLink, allows homeowners...

Inflatable tent system installed at height during £38m Bolton hospital project

Robertson Construction has installed a series of inflatable roofing tents as part of a major redevelopment programme at the Royal Bolton Hospital. The air-filled structures...

PepsiCo begins £3.6m rooftop solar project at Leicester distribution centre

PepsiCo UK has begun construction of a £3.6 million rooftop solar installation at its Southern Region Distribution Centre in Leicester. The project will see solar...

Cardiff clears path for Wales’ tallest tower

Plans for a landmark 178-metre tower next to Cardiff Central Station and the Principality Stadium have secured planning approval, paving the way for what...

Speller Metcalfe appointed for £28m Atherstone leisure centre redevelopment

North Warwickshire Borough Council has appointed construction firm Speller Metcalfe as the principal contractor for a £28 million redevelopment of the leisure centre in...

Latest news

Magazine

Spring Issue #29 | Past issues >>

Trending now ⚡︎

Teen in coma after scaffolding accident on Fife housing project

A teenager remains in a coma after being seriously...

Second chances and scaffolding: the man giving ex-offenders a route back into work

When Aaron King talks about turning points, he does...

New platform aims to bring instant scaffolding quotes to UK market

A London-based roofing contractor has launched a new digital...

Scaffold supplier TRAD UK flags potential price adjustments as global tensions rise

TRAD UK has warned customers that external market pressures...

Young workers least likely to discuss mental health, research shows

More than one in three UK tradespeople say their...

Related articles

Latest topics

Pay gap pushing scaffolders from New Zealand to Australia

Construction firms in New Zealand are facing a growing...

Barking Riverside expansion approved to deliver up to 20,000 homes

Revised outline plans for the Barking Riverside development in...

New data shows construction workforce becoming younger and more skilled

New data from the Construction Skills Certification Scheme (CSCS)...
ADVERTISEMENTS