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BusinessBanking & Finance

Bank of England looking at first strike at its headquarters in half a century

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People walking past The Bank of England in the City of London. For the first time in five decades, staff at the bank voted for a strike action at the end of July. Photo: AFP
The Guardian

The Bank of England faces the first strike at its Threadneedle Street headquarters in its history after members of the Unite union voted for four days of industrial action in a dispute over pay.

Maintenance, security and the staff that look after the parlours, the central core of the Bank that contains the office of the governor, Mark Carney, will be striking for four consecutive days from July 31.

Although the action involves less than 2 per cent of the Bank’s 4,000-strong workforce, Unite said the threatened strike would make the institution “effectively inoperable”.

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A Bank spokeswoman said talks to avert the action would take place but there were plans to ensure that the Bank continued to operate effectively.

She added that Threadneedle Street, in the heart of the City of London, had never witnessed a strike, with the last industrial action affecting the Bank taking place at its printing plant in Essex in the late 1960s.

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A man stands outside the Bank of England in the City of London. Photo: Reuters
A man stands outside the Bank of England in the City of London. Photo: Reuters
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