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Royal Mail refusenik calls share offer 'a step backwards' | Royal Mail refusenik calls share offer 'a step backwards' |
(about 7 hours later) | |
Of the 150,000 Royal Mail employees, just 368 have turned down the £2,200 of free shares offered to them as part of the privatisation of the 500-year-old company. One of them, Paul Firmage, described the free shares as "little more than a bribe" and said he refused to take the shares as a "matter of principle", even though they could be worth more than £2,600 by Friday if the stock rises by 20% or more as predicted. | |
"I know my refusal to take the shares won't make much difference, but it is a matter of principle. I've always been opposed to privatisations. It's a step backwards," he said. "Only those at the top – the snouts in the trough brigade, the corporate executives and the speculators – will win. We, the postmen and women on the ground, will lose." | |
Firmage, 59, from Downham Market, Norfolk, admits that others think he is silly for not accepting the shares. "Yeah, I could have taken the money and still been opposed to it … Some people think it is amazing to turn down £2,000, but I'm looking at it from a long-term point of view – the service will rapidly deteriorate. When it's private they can cut back on pay and conditions. Our conditions are quite good at the moment." | |
He concedes that he might have thought differently about taking a principled stand if he had a family to support. "I've got an older brother, but no other family," he said. "If I had a family around me I might have a different view, but principles are principles." "colleagues had said they were also going to turn down the shares in protest, but "[the company] hit us with a lot of propaganda". | |
The rejected shares will be redistributed between the 150,000 staff who have accepted the shares, which they must hold on to for at least three years. | The rejected shares will be redistributed between the 150,000 staff who have accepted the shares, which they must hold on to for at least three years. |
The 368 figure includes all eight of Royal Mail's non-executive directors, who are not taking part in the free allocation. | The 368 figure includes all eight of Royal Mail's non-executive directors, who are not taking part in the free allocation. |
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