Rmt calls for end to outsourcing as ABM doubled profits in last financial year

Underground outsourcing company doubles its profits while cutting safety-critical cleaners jobs in midst of COVID crisis.

TUBE UNION RMT today called on the Mayor of London to take back control of the Underground cleaning and put an end to the outdated dogma of outsourcing, after it emerged that the outsourcing company ABM has doubled its profits in the last financial year while cutting the number of cleaners working to keep Londoners safe on the tube.

RMT says it's a scandal that staff in the front line of keeping the tube clean and safe during the COVID-19 pandemic are facing job cuts while their employer is rolling in cash.

ABM’s annual accounts show that the company posted pre-tax profits of £4.5 million for 2019, almost double what it made in 2018 (£2.39 million). Meanwhile, figures released by the Mayor in July reveal that the company has cut the equivalent of 139 full time cleaners jobs since it took over the contract in 2017, leaving the capital under-resourced and under-prepared for the pandemic.

RMT warned in July that the outsourcing contract was not fit for purpose, pointing to clauses in the contract that commit the company to seeking savings every year and it pointed to research in the hospitals sector which demonstrates that outsourcing cleaning is less safe in terms of public health than employing cleaners in-house.

RMT General Secretary Mick Cash said:

“The Covid-19 crisis has once and for all nailed the lie that cleaning is ‘non-core’ and can be safely outsourced to the profiteers. It’s time we started to treat cleaning and cleaners like the essential service they are. ABM have been driving up profits by cutting cleaners jobs, leaving the Underground less safe as a result. We need a totally new approach to cleaning in public transport and Sadiq Khan needs to show a lead by bringing this contract in house when it expires in 2022.”

> RMT National News

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.
Thursday, 14th August
Rail union RMT, will hold a mass meeting in Manchester on Thursday 14 August at 2pm as part of its national campaign to end outsourcing on Britain’s railways.
Thursday, 14th August
Bus workers’ union RMT has welcomed the Transport Committee’s report on the state of England’s bus services and backed its call for long-term funding, protection of socially necessary routes and greater support for local authorities.
Tuesday, 12th August
Rail union, RMT warned that the failure of Government and Network Rail to fully act on safety recommendations made following the fatal Carmont rail crash has left rail workers and passengers at continued risk.