The blacklist first came to light when in 2009, the
Information Commissioners Office (ICO) seized a Consulting Association database
of 3,213* construction workers which was used by 44
companies to vet new recruits and keep out of employment trade union and health
and safety activists. The ICO never contacted anyone on the list to let them
know they were blacklisted.
*When alias names and duplicates are excluded there are
3,213 individuals on the blacklist. The map shows where 2,554 lived or worked.
There are an additional 12 unmapped in Wales and 8 unmapped in Scotland. For
639, or 20%, no proper addresses are given. The ICO using NI details could,
with help of DWP, find current addresses for most of 3,213 but they have not
done so.
By autumn 2012 only 194 of the 3,213 people on the
blacklist knew three years later that they were on the list as these had
contacted the ICO directly.
After GMB representation ICO finally agreed to supply
names, date of birth, trade and town to enable a check against our own
membership records to find our members on the blacklist. We found nearly 200
exact matches and we are in contact with these members to get their files from
ICO. Leigh Day is preparing litigation
to get them compensation at no cost to these members.
There were a further 300 GMB members who may have been on
the list but we need more information to assess this.
We publish the map below, based on the locations
supplied by ICO to GMB, to prompt responses. If you were a construction worker
from one of these areas and you as a trade union and health and safety activist
were denied work for reasons you could not explain get in touch with us and we
can cross check the records. Let your construction friend see it too.
GMB priority now is to step up the campaign to get each
and every GMB members blacklisted proper compensation. GMB is also still
pushing ICO for proactive action to inform all builders on the list that they
are on the blacklist.
A GMB report on blacklisting showed that it was not
something isolated or rare. The report estimated, that in one quarter, that
Carillion for example checked 2,776 names with the Consulting Association and
in the period from October 1999 to April 2004 it estimates that Carillion checked
at least 14,724 names.
Did you work for any Carillion company like Crown House,
Schal International, SkyBlue Employment Agency, Tarmac, John Mowlem or
Carillion itself or one of the other blacklisting employers?
Paul Kenny, GMB General Secretary, said "people have
been deprived of an honest living through these illegal tactics which has
blighted their families’ lives. They have been the victims of injustice over
many years by
multi- national companies- now seeking to live off public
sector contracts.
Not a single company has yet been punished nor have any
of them paid compensation. GMB is calling on local councils not to award any
new public work to the companies that operated the blacklist till they
compensate those they damaged”
If you can help the GMB identify more names on the blacklist
call Phil Whitehurst GMB Construction Officer on 07968 338810 or email him at phil.whitehurst@gmb.org.uk or
write to him at GMB, 22 Stephenson Way London NW1 2HD. Call Justin Bowden on 07710 631351 or email him
at justin.bowden@gmb.org.uk if you can help your local council put
pressure on to get compensation.
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