Unison campaign to reinstate Karen Reissmann reaches parliament

Corin Williams
Tuesday 13 May 2008 12:24

Health workers, patients and union activists have marched on parliament in protest against the sacking of Manchester community psychiatric nurse Karen Reissmann, allegedly for speaking out against service cuts.

Reissmann, who is also a Unison branch chair, lost her job in November last year after speaking out against plans by Manchester Mental Health and Social Care Trust to transfer services to voluntary sector providers. She had been earlier found guilty of gross misconduct at a disciplinary hearing and has failed in her attempts to appeal against the decision.

Hundreds of campaigners from around the country joined Reissmann at a public meeting at the House of Commons to support an early day motion, proposed by her MP John Leech, calling for her reinstatement, which has been signed by 41 MPs so far. The motion claims that Reissmann “was unjustifiably dismissed for speaking out against proposed changes to services which many staff believed would result in a worse service to patients”.

The action follows a string of strikes by trust staff last year in protest against Reissmann's treatment. Unison north west regional secretary Frank Hont said: “We will continue to work for Karen's reinstatement by all available legal means. This lobby is a political initiative which we hope will keep the issue alive.”

Related articles

Union activist’s appeal against dismissal fails
Manchester mental health services disrupted by strike
Manchester mental health staff to strike for third time

 

What do you think? Have your say on CareSpace.

Keep up to date with the latest developments in social care by signing up to our daily and weekly newsletters.

Social care link
paperwork

Liberating adult social work

How do you free practitioners from bureaucracy, rationing and risk aversion, asks Mithran Samuel