Fownhope’s Heart of Oak Society traces its roots to the age of friendly societies, when communities provided their own safety net. Its anniversary celebrations reveal a tradition still very much alive, says MARK SEDDON
WHILE many people have set up office in the comfort of their homes, shop workers are bearing the brunt of the coronavirus pandemic. Exposed to hundreds if not thousands of frantic people every day, retail workers are particularly at risk of falling victim to the virus.
But despite this, there’s currently a severe lack of protections in place to keep them safe. British stores have yet to fully implement measures already rolled out in Ireland such as limiting capacity, drawing out social distancing markers on the floor, putting up perspex shields on check outs or giving out protective wear to workers.
“There’s no masks, no shields, no mapping out of the floor to make sure people stand far enough away from you, no crowd control,” Sally Smith,* a supermarket worker and Usdaw rep from Hertfordshire, tells me. “Customers have been queuing out the store from half five in the morning and going all the way back and it’s just carnage because they’re in the store at the same time.”
Smith has since called in sick, fearing she has contracted coronavirus after waking up with a dry cough and chest pains. She blamed the lack of protective measures in stores for falling ill, adding that she is also in the “at risk category” having had part of her lung removed in an operation some years ago. The Hertfordshire worker says it’s up to the government to put these protections in place.
Witnessing a war of words at a meeting on tackling militarism at The World Transformed, BEN COWLES spoke to a union rep who is organising against war from inside the arms industry itself, to hear about worker-led solutions to ending weapons production
We are experiencing a wave of organised, often deadly violence targeting migrants from other parts of Africa — but the poorest South Africans reject this hatred, staying true to the spirit of Ubuntu and Pan-African unity, reports NIGEL BRANKEN
Incoming Usdaw general secretary JOANNE THOMAS talks to Ben Chacko about workers’ rights, Labour and how to arrest the decline of the high street


