Unite Baggage Handlers Challenge MPs to Weight-Lifting Test
By Prne, Gaea News NetworkWednesday, March 18, 2009
LONDON - Date: Wednesday 25 March
Time: 12.30
Venue: Old Palace Yard, opposite House of Commons, Westminster
Baggage handlers will gather at Parliament next week to demand government
action forcing airlines to cut the weight of checked-in bags from 32 to 23kg
to reduce high levels of muscular skeletal injuries in the civil aviation
industry.
Unite members from airports across the UK will be lobbying their MPs.
They’ll ask the parliamentarians to take part in a ‘baggage challenge’ where
MPs will be invited to lift the heavy suitcases and other items baggage
handlers are expected to lift on a daily basis.
Unite, the UK’s largest civil air transport union, is calling on the
government to put pressure on the Health and Safety Executive to introduce
regulations to prevent injuries. Two years ago the Health and Safety
Executive (HSE) Aviation Industry group agreed to reduce the weight of
checked-in baggage from 32 to 23 kilograms per item. The International Air
Transport Association (IATA) has also backed the call.
However, airlines have refused to implement the new weight limit, saying
they will only comply if there is an industry-wide approach.
Unite’s ‘Lighten Up’ campaign also highlights the positive effect lighter
luggage will have on global warming. Lighter bags equal lighter planes,
resulting in less fuel use and lower carbon emissions. Unite will also be
asking government to fund a public awareness campaign to encourage the
travelling public to travel lighter.
Steve Turner, Unite national officer said: “Baggage handlers are
suffering unacceptably high levels of injuries caused by heavy bags. They
lift over 9 tonnes per shift, the equivalent to two elephants. We are
demanding that the government act to reduce the weight of checked in bags to
23kg which will reduce injuries significantly.”
Notes to editor:
- Baggage handlers are five times more like to suffer muscular skeletal
injury than any other worker in the UK.
- Baggage handlers lift around 9 tonnes of luggage per shift.
- If every passenger on a Boeing 747 travelled with 23 not 32kg, it would
reduce carbon emissions by the same amount as removing around 30
private cars from the road for a year.
- For more information look at www.unitetheunion.com/lightenup
Source: Unite the Union
For further information contact Liane Groves in the Unite press office on +44(0)7793-661-657
Tags: London, United Kingdom