ORGANISING ACADEMY » Academy http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk Group blog for TUC Organising Academy trainees Thu, 11 Nov 2010 11:38:01 +0000 http://wordpress.org/?v=2.9.2 en hourly 1 The power of organising, and progressive Lincolnshire… http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/04/the-power-of-organising-and-progressive-lincolnshire/ http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/04/the-power-of-organising-and-progressive-lincolnshire/#comments Thu, 29 Apr 2010 11:04:33 +0000 Stewart http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/?p=518 Back to Lincolnshire again, where the road beneath you is the highest point in the landscape. This time a bit of experience, and a bit more planning, and every visit was a success. Even where the head wanted to turn us away they couldn’t.

For this visit hundreds of letters, scores of posters and dozens of phone calls helped smooth the way so that every visit produced a result. Using email, snail mail, text and telephony every school visit involved some kind of meeting with members.

Progressive Lincolnshire

lincolnshire has links with the east coast of the United States. The first published poet in the states, Anne Bradstreet, lived in Lincolnshire before emigrating with other pilgrims to the US. She has often been described as a feminist. Below are a few lines from a poem about Queen Elizabeth I.

Now say, have women worth, or have they none
Or had they some, but with our Queen is’t gone?
Nay, masculines, you have taxed us long;
But she, though dead, will vindicate our wrong.
Let such as say our sex is void of reason,
Know ’tis a slander now, but once was treason.

So it aint all bad.

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Mapping http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/04/mapping/ http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/04/mapping/#comments Tue, 20 Apr 2010 16:18:59 +0000 Ellenor http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/?p=516 Followers of my blog will remember that I have recently put together my project plan and that the first item is mapping.

Mapping is just what it sounds like: a process of understanding the important features of a workplace or situation: how many people work in this office, or warehouse or industry, how many are union members, who is doing what, with whom and how? What the hell is going on and how could it be improved on?

Since I’ve been given a remit that could easily encompass the entire working class and the area of London, a city of seven and a half million people, the main difficulty presented by this task is where to start and when to end!

Because I had the luxury of writing my own work plan, I left myself a very generous two to three months for this part, got on the phone to anyone and everyone who seemed interesting and started to set up meetings. This is surprisingly easy: any number busy people have found time to talk a newcomer through their terrain and for this I am eternally grateful.

When I think of the readership of this blog I imagine someone like me: perhaps considering applying to the organiser academy, perhaps about to start a placement. I want to be encouraging but I want to be realistic too. So I’ll tell you the truth: There have been moments when I’ve found myself staring at a blank computer screen wondering how to fill my diary or coming back from a meeting  wondering if I’m doing the “right” thing.

You get through it: you look at the contacts you have and the resources in front of you, you get on the phone and you make appointments and talk to people and take notes. Pretty soon filling time isn’t a problem anymore although finding it might be!

You need flat shoes for running about the city, an A to Z and the nerve to talk to a lot of strangers. Apparently in Brazil they call this having a “wooden face.” I would never have known that if it wasn’t for the mapping.

What I’ve found is that generally people are happy to chat and are very helpful. Only very occasionally is someone sarcastic, patronising or clutchy over their knowledge. After a while it’s clicked with me that these are the people who perhaps are not so sure of what they’re doing.

Where people are helpful, I try to cultivate a similarly friendly and open attitude and if possible to do some small favour to show willing: even if this is just passing on a contact or putting them in the direction of some information.

Gradually, gradually, the hopeful little lines on my Gantt chart have begun to look like definite possibilities.

Real things that might get done by real people.

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What do you do all day? http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/03/what-do-you-do-all-day/ http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/03/what-do-you-do-all-day/#comments Fri, 26 Mar 2010 11:43:46 +0000 Ellenor http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/?p=503  Here’s an example of a working week from around the beginning of March. What I notice about this week, looking back is that it’s a remarkably unstructured.

 At this stage I was beginning to think about my work plan and I certainly had some ideas but nothing had been given the go-ahead. I was still trying to get a handle on things, orient myself and work out the parameters of what might or might not be achieved. 

Monday and Tuesday are fairly quiet. I have a little bout of panicky wondering what to do (apparently this happens to all project workers and is normal) then phone calls, emails and facebook. People seem to reply faster and more helpfully to facebook messages for some reason so I try and friend contacts where possible. This is legitimate networking and NOT, repeat NOT time wasting as suspected by certain people in my office (Ok, sometimes it is!) On Tuesday there’s a student meeting at SOAS but we won’t count that because it was only around the corner and I couldn’t find them anyhow!

During this time I also design some flyers for the GMB Equalities conference and send them down to the print room. I don’t really like them because I can’t find any good images so I end up using  naff clip art.

On wednesday things start to pick up a little; I have an appointment with some people in the organising department of PCS. The PCS building is in Clapham and not knowing South London I get a train to Clapham North rather than Clapham Junction and have to find a bus to take me the rest of the way. I get in just in time and am very warmly received.

“Oh it’s great to see an Academy Organiser on the project”

“Really? You realise I’m basically a trainee right?”

We have a very useful discussion on the difficulties of organising contracted out staff, even in workplaces where they already have a presence. The recognition agreement only allows reps facilities time to consult with members working for the same employer. This means that until the contracted out staff have their own rep: they are basically asking activists to take on extra work in their own time. To relieve the pressure somewhat they plan a centralised team to take on casework for a time.

 I then run back to the office to talk to the print room. They can’t get my flyers done for two days, which will be too late because the conference is tomorrow. I am clearly failing to develop the kind of friendly relationship with the print room that can so easily make or break a TUC career. After a brief panic resolve to get in at 8 the next day to run some off on the photocopier.

Then I run over to Hackney to check out a Hackney Unites meeting. Hackney Unites is a pretty impressive project, initiated by Hackney Trades Council and intended to build community cohesion, anti-racism and generally promote progressive stuff. http://hackneyunites.blogspot.com/ The most interesting part of the project from my point of view is their plan for drop in workers advice sessions, feeding into a course in workplace rights and organising. I stick about for a while being quietly impressed, have a quick chat with a few people and arrange follow up meetings then wander up Stoke Newington High Road for the bus home at about 9.30, arriving home soon after 10.

A quick phone call, reveals a good friend, down from Cardiff is drinking in my local. A few beers and a chat later I hit my pillow only to drag myself up about 5 minutes later (That’s what it FELT like!) for early morning photocopying at the office and then onto the train station.

The GMB equalities conference is in Southampton and is an enthusiastic if slightly under attended affair. I needn’t have worried about the printing really. My official business here is to encourage more nominations onto the SERTUC council and committee’s but it’s also a good opportunity to meet and talk to their youth organiser, Rachel Verdin, who puts my gripes about the early morning into perspective by telling me she was up at 4am: 4! One of the participants accuses me of looking like a “demented gnome” because I turn up wearing a jumper with a busy pattern and then stand outside in it with the hood up. I let it go. Then it’s the train home at 10ish and in the front door at midnight.

On Friday I wake up at 8, wanting to do anything else but go to the office. Luckily, in SERTUC world, attending a demonstration is pretty much always a good reason for being out of the office and it just so happens that the English Defence League are in town prompting a small but spirited counter demonstration by Unite against Fascism.

I ring the office explaining that I will be there (The UAF one Obviously!): “Promoting the SERTUC anti fascist strategy” It just so happens my mate from Cardiff is still about and planning much the same thing (minus the promotion of SERTUC) so we team up for a leisurely breakfast and a proper catch up before heading over to Charing Cross. The sun shines down on us as we make our way down Whitehall and I show off slightly about getting paid to do stuff  that I would have done anyway.

The UAF demo is best summed up by this remark overheard by a cop explaining the situation to a passer-by:

“The far right are having a demo and the far left are upset because they can’t do anything about it”

 Not looking good comrades, not good at all.

Still, I give out flyers and I chat. Some old guy in an anorak asks me “Who’s in charge of SERTUC these days?” I explain that Megan Dobney is the Regional Secretary and he says “yes, but who’s in charge, really?” as if he expects me to let him in on some great conspiracy.

Normally of course I’d be happy to help, its just that Megan says if I  betray my secret oath I’ll be  killed and have my tongue buried at a crossroads at midnight and besides, i’m still in my probationary period and i don’t want to rock the boat.

So sorry anorak man, I’ll leave you to it this time. Remember the truth is out there!

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British Airways http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/03/british-airways/ http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/03/british-airways/#comments Fri, 19 Mar 2010 15:16:15 +0000 Ellenor http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/?p=498  One of the cool things about working at Congress House is the sense you have of national events unfolding around you. Just lately, the building’s been hosting the  negotiations around the British Airways dispute.

Yesterday the  guy in the phone shop wanted to know  if I thought he’d still be able to get to his brothers stag do in Miami. I had no idea of course, its not like they announce updates throughout the building on a tannoy.  

 A whole bunch of journalists are camped outside the main entrance, sometimes until midnight, waiting for some news to happen. I have to push past them to get in and out of work.

This morning Willie Walsh walked past and they all formed a little scrum around him like a flock of camera wielding geese. There is a TV in the canteen and from where I was sitting I could watch events simultaneously in real life and on the screen.

Later on I begin to wonder what would happen if I were to get dressed up in a sharp suit, march out of the front door and make an “announcement.”

“Don’t worry it all sorted out!”

Before I can get any further with this dangerous line of thought, John Ball wanders into the office with the latest news. It seems the talks have broken down.

Too bad phone shop guy, looks like the strike is on.

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Planning http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/03/planning/ http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/03/planning/#comments Mon, 15 Mar 2010 14:47:21 +0000 Ellenor http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/?p=495 Ever heard of a Gantt chart? No neither had I!  But a Gantt chart I was asked for and a Gantt chart I have produced.

For the uninitiated this is a way of showing when different parts of a project should be started or finished. It looks a load of lines or boxes on a calendar. If that still doesn’t make sense then I’ll let Wikipedia do the talking: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gantt_chart

 My one shows  the work I plan to carry out for the vulnerable workers project. It started life, over the course of a weekend as a load of post-it notes on a pasting table at my boyfriend’s flat but is now a magnificently eccentric publisher document.

I only understand how eccentric exactly because i ran it past a Gantt Chart aficionado (Fred Grindrod of the Recession and Recovery Team: take a bow!). Still quirky methods are to be expected from the self educated and hopefully everyone who needs to can tell what it means. It’s actually pretty cool to be allowed to plan a project. Planning is not something I’ve ever been asked to do before.

 Initially I was concerned that I would be expected to return from the mountain with tablets of stone to be rigidly pursued no matter what. This led to all sorts of worries that the plan would be “wrong.” How could I hope to produce a plan at all when there is so much I don’t know at this stage?

It’s now been explained to me that of course the plan can change depending on opportunities and setbacks encountered on the way and I have now added set points in the plan for reassessment, if necessary changing things.

At the moment looking at the chart is monumentally reassuring because all that’s down for March and April is “Mapping.” This means scoping out the situation, meeting people, getting to figure out what is generally happening and so on.

When I have occasional (no, make that frequent!) moments of self doubt I can look at it and think that yes, so far all I have done is run about meeting people and chatting to them and yes that’s exactly what I’m meant to be doing. Onwards and Upwards then!

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More on SERTUC: The Race Relations Committee http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/02/more-on-sertuc-the-race-relations-committee/ http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/02/more-on-sertuc-the-race-relations-committee/#comments Thu, 11 Feb 2010 16:05:56 +0000 Ellenor http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/?p=483 Well a month has gone by and it feels about the right time for a little update on my progress. I can picture you all waiting with baited breath.  You will remember  that I had arrived in Congress house, wide eyed and naive with scarcely any knowledge of the strange new world I found myself in, marvelling at the print room and wondering what to write on here that would justify the investment you have all made in my out of your dues money.

Before you all rush to rip up your union cards, I am happy to report that I am starting to get the hang of things!

The main thing to learn, after locating the toilets and learning how to use the photocopier has been the structure of the SERTUC region, the structure and processes of the affiliated unions and the important personalities within the region.

One of the first tasks I was given was to help build up the Race Relations Committee. This has been hugely useful in orienting me as it has required me to contact the officers of the different unions, learn how their nomination procedures and internal democracy work and then explain these procedures to interested members. This should hold me in good stead for future tasks.

It has also given me the opportunity to get to know my way around the various race relations, black members and equalities substructures in the region, which vary from union to union. I’ve been making contact with these organisations and have a number of invitations to visit meetings so I’m very much looking forward to meeting active members. I’ll be finding out what black and minority ethnic activists are up to across the region and also promoting SERTUC’s activities, in particular the snappily titled ARAFAP.

For the uninitiated this is SERTUC’s Anti Racist Anti Fascist Action Plan.

With the BNP’s steady growth and the startling rise, seemingly out of nowhere of EDL (aficionados of the contemporary cultural history of the football firm can pull me up on this statement: if they must); anyone with eyes in their head can see the urgency of anti fascist activity. Cross union coordination is obviously useful and this is a good example of the kind of situation where SERTUC really adds something to the trade union movement so I’m very pleased to be involved.

 This Saturday is the national conference of Unite Against Fascism which SERTUC supports and which will be held in Congress House. See here fro more info: http://www.uaf.org.uk/news.asp?choice=91217

I will be there on the SERTUC stall promoting ARAFAP and other SERTUC activities and hopefully also getting some new people interested in the Race Relations committee.

This will  be the test of how well I’ve understood all the different structures and procedures as any interested people will have to be signposted to the right person in their own union to talk to!

I’ve even had a go at designing my own leaflet for the event. I’d show you a copy but all attempts at pasting here have failed. Still, I picked up 500 of the little beauties this morning.One email to the copy desk and there they all were just five minutes later. Fantastic! The print room still holds the power to impress!

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Andrew Robbins – NUT Organiser! http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/01/andrew-robbins-nut-organiser/ http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/01/andrew-robbins-nut-organiser/#comments Fri, 22 Jan 2010 16:01:47 +0000 Andrew http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/?p=474 Andrew Robbins – NUT Organiser!

Somewhere around the summer of 2008, I took the difficult decision to leave behind my blossoming future as an Elvis Presley impersonator and take up the gauntlet of organising full-time in the labour movement!! A tough call you might think – after all it’s hard to beat Elvis when it comes to rock ‘n’ roll! The problem was, Elvis didn’t much bother with picket lines or the peace movement – and I certainly do! So I downed my white cape and shiny Las Vegas glasses, sung my last Suspicious Minds, and headed straight to the Graceland of the workers – the TUC Development Centre, Exeter…

It certainly was a tough weekend, but clearly someone in the sky (most probably Elvis) was shining down upon me that fateful Sunday afternoon, when (wearing my favourite Beatles T-Shirt – mainly for the benefit of Carl Roper) I was told I had been selected for a TUC interview! Two weeks later I had passed and it wasn’t long before I had been selected as the NUT organiser for Kent and East Sussex!!! Finally, I was going to do for trade unionism what Elvis had done for music… (Make it fashionable again, get the masses involved and inspire other people to great things)!

As a long standing socialist, anti-privatisation, community and peace activist, I have engaged in numerous campaigns. At the age of 17, you would have found me occupying the University of Luton. Following the decision to abolish the humanities department, I and a group of students elected an occupation committee and engaged in direct action lasting two days (I was the look out)! This provided a valuable first experience of organising. The action made the press and highlighted the market-driven disruption to higher education, which Luton students were experiencing.

I have organised a number of campaigning and community projects over the years. In 2005 I founded ‘Musicardo’ – a now well established community arts project in Luton. Together with Beds Senior Citizens’ Arts and Recreational Forum, University of Bedfordshire Student Union and Luton Sixth Form College (amongst others) Musicardo has supported International Older Persons’ Festival and continues to organise multicultural community projects such as ‘Community for Humanity’.

In 2009, I founded Luton Love Music Hate Racism – in response to the recession, rising social inequality and the potential for far-right growth in these circumstances. Luton Trades Council, SERTUC, Kelvin Hopkins MP, Esther Rantzen and a host of other trade union, community, political groups and performers – have all supported Luton LMHR. It represents successful organising on a profound scale! When English Defence League gangs invaded Luton in May 2009 – unleashing racist violence and hatred towards the local community – Luton LMHR was ready and prepared! I and the committee organised a huge 2000 strong, one-day music festival. We recruited massively and made the racists look pathetic. Shortly afterwards the Home Office granted an order banning the EDL from marching through Luton.

Luton LMHR – 1                       Racist Bigots – 0 !!!!!              

My ambitions from here onwards lie with the NUT. I view the union’s role within the school environment as invaluable. The union’s commitment to fairness for teachers and students alike; it’s principled stand against privatisation and its support for the environmental movement, is what makes it such an important trade union. With the NUT, I will be working hard to organise, expand and involve teachers in a progressive agenda – making sure the union remains the powerful force for good which we can all unite behind!

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Working for SERTUC http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/01/working-for-sertuc/ http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/01/working-for-sertuc/#comments Thu, 21 Jan 2010 13:05:29 +0000 Ellenor http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/?p=464 This is a post I’ve put slightly on the back burner. The environment is new to me so it’s taken some time to form an impression.

I’m working for the South East region TUC, based in the magnificent Congress House, just off of London’s Oxford Street (my first pay packet was spent in my mind at least within about 2 days of being here!)

The building is a marvel of modernist design with a pleasingly solid 50’s type feel, a slightly idiosyncratic layout (for example: 2 separate 3rd floors that don’t connect and must be reached by different lifts!) and cool features such as this guy:

 Congress House Statue

There’s a difference of scale compared to my last job. It’s the difference between having a set of keys to the building or a fancy swipe card thingy and a concierge. Or the difference between a little jar of coins for the office coffee fund and the canteen in the marble hall (It really is called the Marble Hall: How cool is that?)

And Congress House is big! Inside you can find such disparate things as an entire solicitors office, a printing press, an industrial kitchen (for the canteen of course!), and an extremely flashy conference hall.

But what Congress House mainly has is lots and lots of offices containing people at work on extremely interesting things such as mapping the progress of the recession or planning ways to maintain interest in trade unions among the unemployed, or negotiating in major disputes.

If you need to know something: the incidence of employment abuses among home workers say or the effect of the super rich on the wider economy, you can wander down to the publications department and find yourself a report printed right next door in the print room, read it at your desk and, if you’re lucky, chat to the person who wrote or researched it over lunch!

SERTUC is just one tiny piece of what goes on here but there’s still a fair bit to it. The South east region covers London, Kent and East Anglia in the east and stretches as far west as Basingstoke and as far north as Peterborough. 21 million people live here, including 2 million members of affiliated unions.

These are represented by a Regional Council meeting once every three months and an executive committee, elected at the AGM, meeting monthly. So far I have been to both of these meetings, wearing my best gear, smiling and attempting to make myself useful. The most pressing current issues are the threatened closure of the Twinings factory in Hampshire and, of course the ongoing dispute at British Airways but issues such as proposed change to the border of Norfolk and Suffolk were also discussed!

There are also various subgroups and a small staff based in Congress House and made up of: Regional Secretary Megan Dobney, Campaigns and Policy Officer Laurie Heselden, policy officer John Ball, Administrative Secretary Darren Lewis and for 18 months me! Very soon we should also have a manager for the vulnerable workers project who will be my immediate boss.

SERTUC also has a Union Learn department of some 20 people and three branches covering Trade Union Education, Regional Union Learning Centres and Development work.  Some of this stuff, and in particular the work of the Recession and Recovery Unit is pretty interesting so expect to read more about them later.

My previous experience of trade unions has taken me no further than branch level and often not further than my own section. In other words my experience has consisted mostly of sitting about in my own staff room, with my own workmates, running through meetings with the slight self consciousness of people who do that kind of thing only occasionally.

As you can imagine, all of the above is very, very new to me and will take some getting used to. To those readers (do we have readers?) who have been at serious work in the movement for many years, I can only apologise if my tone here is flippant, or blasé or if my observations are just very, very obvious and trite. I am walking around Congress house with the bewildered wide eyed look and irritating keenness of a work experience kid in Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory. I expect we all have some time to wait before this effect wears off.

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Stewart Halforty http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/01/stewart-halforty/ http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/01/stewart-halforty/#comments Tue, 12 Jan 2010 13:50:47 +0000 Stewart http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/?p=444 Sponsoring Union: NASUWT
Age:29

Stewart first got involved with unions when he joined USDAW as a 16 year old Tesco worker. He distributed his first union leaflet at 17 and was almost sacked for it.

He has been a campaigning activist for many years, most recently when he worked for Stop the War Coalition setting up and supporting local campaigning groups across the country.

Stewart heard about the organising model through friends who worked for Unite the Union. He was intrigued by a model for organising but as no one could explain exactly what it was he decided to try his hand at it. Unite took him out for a day to the Del Monte factory at Wisbech where he experienced organising agency workers for the first time. ‘It’s hard and management don’t like it.’

He enjoyed learning about mapping and the organising model and was encouraged to go for the TUC Organising Academy. He think anyone who is interested in building up the strength of the Trade Union movement should apply as even if they don’t get through they will get a fantastic introduction to the organising model and how it is reinvigorating trade union recruitment and activism.

‘Trade unions will play a vital role in resisting attacks on workers during the recession and I look forward to my time at the chalk-face of union organising’ said Stewart of his new role.

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Profile of Chris Thomas – Organising Academy Trainee http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/01/chris-thomas/ http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/01/chris-thomas/#comments Mon, 11 Jan 2010 15:28:09 +0000 Christian http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/?p=425 Chris is originally from a small town in South Wales, where he worked as a Liaison Officer for the local authority, providing Disabled Facility grants for children, the elderly and young adults.

He was a steward with Unison for 14 months, before becoming an officer and taking up the position of Joint Trade Union Convenor covering all four trade unions within the authority (UCAT, UNITE, GMB & UNISON) for the Welsh Housing Quality Standard.

He thoroughly enjoyed his time within the UNISON branch and cannot thank them enough for providing him with the training and skills to get him where he is today, so a big thank you to UNISON for that!!

He found the recruitment process very demanding and on regular occasions was totally out of his comfort zone, he felt he dealt with the recruitment challenges well and was over the moon when he achieved a place as an Academy Organiser 2010. He would highly recommend the process to anybody who wants to become seriously involved in the trade union movement.

He aspires to be the best he can be and wants to establish himself within the TUC and his sponsoring Union, he wants to promote the importance of organising and the need for Trade Unions to be active in the current climate.

He feels that due to economic downturn, trade unions are going to be at the forefront of many work related issues in the next 18/24 months.

Public service budgets are looking to be cut back and due to the lack of financial resources available, workforces are going to be squeezed in all areas.

He states “in the near future, I feel there will be a surge on Union resources, from individuals and organisations, struggling to cope with economic meltdown. However, if we all pull in the same direction, we organise efficiently and effectively and we work alongside the expertise and togetherness that trade unions provide, I feel that we can weather any storm that is put in our path”

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Welcoming the 2010 Organising Academy trainees! http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/01/welcoming-the-2010-organising-academy-trainees/ http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/2010/01/welcoming-the-2010-organising-academy-trainees/#comments Tue, 05 Jan 2010 12:52:28 +0000 Organising Academy http://www.organisingacademy.org.uk/?p=366 This blog is under new management! We’d like to welcome the next intake of trainees on the TUC Organising Academy programme. You’ll start seeing posts here from our new colleagues now, and can use the blog to keep up with their journey throughout 2010. We’ve a great bunch on board this year, so here’s wishing everyone a blogtastic year with the Academy.

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