Skip to main content
Fair Pley and Unite the Union demand a Fair Fringe Now
Rosa Moxham

THE Covid pandemic lifted the veil on the millions of low-paid workers who keep the country running. It was a brief opportunity for these people, often poor and isolated, to recognise themselves as a workforce, and to organise.
 
One result has been the Fair Hospitality Charter, an initiative of Unite, that calls for employers and workers to agree a minimum set of conditions, namely: a real living wage (£8.45 an hour), rest breaks, equal pay for young workers, paid transport after midnight, policies that stamp out sexual harassment, a minimum hours contract, 100 per cent tips to staff, consultation on rotas and unfettered union access to represent and organise staff.

To support and publicise this initiative, the ethical Glasgow-based production company Fair Pley will deliver a “cabaret of dangerous ideas” featuring stars of spoken word and music on Sunday June 19 (tomorrow) at Southside Community Centre, Edinburgh.

It promises to be a brilliant evening of entertainment with some of Scotland’s finest talent.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
Playtime
Jazz preview / 4 May 2026
4 May 2026

ANGUS REID recommends that you discover a uniquely intimate community venue in central Edinburgh for an evening of beer and ambitious jazz

attila
Attila the Stockbroker Diary / 22 August 2025
22 August 2025

The Bard commutes to work for the first time in 45 years

fringe 2
Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2025 / 8 August 2025
8 August 2025

In his second round-up, EWAN CAMERON picks excellent solo shows that deal with Scottishness, Englishness and race as highlights

sauna
Theatre review / 6 August 2025
6 August 2025

ANGUS REID squirms at the spectacle of a bitter millennial on work experience in a gay sauna