Some 70% of the 200 operatives working on Bouygues' contract for
the flagship Home Office development at Marsham Street in London
are migrant Portuguese brought in by an agency, according to George
Brumwell, general secretary of UCATT.
Brumwell said it was a sign of the times that a high-profile
government contract like this should be carried out by a French
firm using a preponderance of Portuguese labour.
The UCATT chief said safety standards on the site are good. But his
union is becoming increasingly suspicious about safety standards on
many other contracts employing migrant labour.
And the union is seriously concerned about the extent to which
migrant labour is being exploited.
"On some inner city jobs we are finding that 35% of the migrant
workers have an insufficient grasp of English to get through the
site induction course," he declared.
Speaking at the TUC conference in Brighton, Brumwell said the
exploitation of migrant workers on UK construction sites is a
modern form of slave labour.
He continued: "Employment agencies are openly advertising in the
trade press cheap labour from migrant workers.
"These workers are paid as little as half the wage of a British
worker. The migrants brought here often have illegal deductions
from their pay for accommodation, much of it disgraceful. Some are
here legally, some illegally. Such papers as they have - genuine or
forged - are often held by gangmasters who can thus keep exploiting
them."
He added that UCATT would support "a managed migration programme".