Labour will boost the pay of rural workers by reinstating an
Agricultural Wages Board (AWB) for English workers, will say today.
Addressing the Tolpuddle Martyrs’ Festival in Dorset, an annual
commemoration celebrating trade unionism and agricultural
workers’ struggle for fair pay, the Labour Leader will announce
that after Brexit a Labour Government will reinstate the Board
abolished in 2013 at an estimated cost of £149 million to the
wages of rural workers.
A reinstated AWB for English workers will ensure rural workers
are entitled to minimum rates of pay which may be higher than the
National Minimum Wage, paid holiday, sick pay and rest breaks.
Alongside other Labour policies, including free bus travel for
under-25s – linked to councils taking bus services under
public ownership or introducing franchising models – and
guaranteeing full employment rights for all workers from day one,
Labour believes the reintroduced AWB will be a major step towards
reducing rising inequality in rural economies and across the UK.
In his speech at the Festival, will say:
“Almost 200 years after the Tolpuddle Martyrs bravely stood
against the exploitation of employers paying poverty wages,
Labour is committed to reintroducing the Agricultural Wages Board
and increasing pay and fundamental rights for all agricultural
workers.
“This decision will bring back millions of pounds to workers
across the English countryside, in addition to guaranteed paid
holiday, sick pay, and rest breaks.
“Rural workers have been consistently ignored by the Tories. The
South West is the low pay capital of the UK. Here, and across the
English countryside, agricultural workers have been abandoned by
the shameful decision to scrap the Agricultural Wages Board.
“The struggle of the Tolpuddle Martyrs sowed the seed for the
modern trade union movement and the itself. The best way to
honour that noble struggle is not just to remember why it took
place, but to secure in our time what those workers fought for:
the right to fair pay and decent working conditions.”
Notes to Editors
- · The
introduced the Agricultural
Wages Board (AWB) in 1948. It was scrapped by the coalition
Government in 2013under the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform
Act 2013.
- · The
Government’s own impact assessment warned that abolishing the AWB
would take £260 million out of the agricultural economy,
including a £149 million reduction in workers’ wages.
-
· Agricultural
workers in Wales, and those employed in England before – but not
after - 1 October 2013, are normally entitled to:
- o minimum rates of pay which may be higher
than the National Minimum Wage
- o paid holiday
- o Agricultural Sick Pay
- o pay even if bad weather stops work
- o night work pay
- o on-call allowance
- o 30-minute rest breaks, if they are 18 or
over and work more than 5.5 hours a day
https://www.gov.uk/agricultural-workers-rights
- · The
Welsh Government reinstated an AWB for Wales in 2013.
The current Welsh rates are detailed here https://beta.gov.wales/agricultural-wages-minimum-rates-2018.
Both Northern Ireland and Scotland are covered by devolved
legislation in this area and have AWBs, although their
functions are relatively limited and focus on rates of pay.
-
· Labour’s
reintroduced AWB will empower trade unions and workers in
agriculture and farming, giving rural workers more power
over their pay and working conditions. The Board
will increase the bargaining power of often poorly paid
agricultural workers as part of Labour’s commitment to rolling
out sectoral collective bargaining under a new Ministry of
Labour.