STRIKES on Glasgow's underground network have been “cynically” timed to impact on Rangers fans, one Tory MSP has claimed.
Scottish Conservative transport spokesperson Graham Simpson said the planned industrial action on the city’s subway will heavily disrupt Rangers fans using the service on matchdays.
“The dates for this industrial action have been cynically chosen to maximise the disruption to Rangers fans on matchdays when thousands of them use the subway,” the MSP for Central Scotland said.
“We can’t allow a main public transport artery in Scotland’s biggest city to be brought to a standstill by a dispute over duty rosters.”
He called for the strikes to be called off and for all parties involved to find a resolution.
Rangers are playing at home on all four strike dates: August 6, 9, 13 and 27. The Glasgow side’s Ibrox stadium is served by a station on the underground system, which is used by thousands of Rangers fans each home match.
Unite announced on Monday that its members on Glasgow’s subway have voted by 99% for strike action on an 83% turnout.
Industrial action has been scheduled in response to a dispute over changes to duty schedules, with the union saying its members are facing “significant work-life pressures” due to increasingly being called in to work on short notice.
Simpson added: “Public transport users have suffered enough already with the unacceptable service cuts at nationalised ScotRail, which the SNP were so slow to resolve.
“If strikes on Glasgow’s underground go ahead, they will merely prolong Scotland’s summer of transport chaos.”
More than 200 members at Strathclyde Partnership for Transport are represented by Unite, including train drivers and station staff.
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