Greater Manchester is facing grinding to a standstill next month as workers on the city’s tram system, Metrolink, begin balloting for strike action due to a miserly pay offer. Over 600 members of Unite, the UK’s leading union, are angry after Metrolink was only prepared to make a pay offer of a 4.5 per cent increase in 2024 despite years of below-inflation pay increases. Unite members want guarantees of above-inflation rises over the next three years due to accepting less than inflation (RPI) last year and a reduction in the pay progression scales within the drivers and customer service roles. Members’ include drivers, controllers, engineers, customer service representatives, and business support – without their vital, highly-skilled and safety critical jobs, the Metrolink could not function bringing Greater Manchester to a halt. Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said: Metrolink is owned by a joint venture of Keolis-Amey and runs the contract on behalf of Transport for Greater Manchester. Keolis is a French transport company with billions of euros in revenue while Amey is British private engineering company, also with over a billion pounds in revenue a year. The ballot opens on 24 June 2024 and closes 8 July 2024. Strike action could take place before the end of next month. Unite regional officer Colin Hayden added: