Oz waterside workers strike over job insecurity
by staff report via jimbo - ABC (Oz) Saturday, Apr 30 2011, 10:25am
international /
social equality/unity /
other press
about bloody time
The Maritime Union of Australia (MUA) has called a 24-hour strike at three major ports, saying negotiations with Patrick Stevedores over pay and conditions have reached a dead end. The MUA says Fair Work Australia has granted permission to shut down docks in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane from 7:00am on Saturday.
Workers at Fremantle docks will strike on Monday.
Victorian branch secretary Kevin Bracken says the old agreement expired in October.
Mr Bracken says the union is not just concerned about pay.
"It's about our conditions of work, about having a safe workplace, and about having a career," he said.
"In the bulk and general business, 60 per cent of the workers are casually employed with no annual leave, no holidays, no long-service leave, no guarantee that they are going to work there ever again.
"The negotiations have been going on since August. The agreement expired in October. Our members are seeing it as the company is stalling [and] doesn't want to make an agreement, and is using it as a wage pause for our members."
The Union wants a 6 per cent wage increase, but Patrick says the demands amount to a 32 per cent rise in salary costs.
Patrick says Australia's importers and exporters will bear the brunt of the strike, with the action to affect the delivery of almost 18,000 containers.
The company and the union attended a conciliation meeting yesterday and agreed to hold further talks next month.
© 2011 ABC
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2011/04/30/3204218.htm COMMENTS show oldest comments first show comment titles only
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beware
by bro Sunday, May 1 2011, 7:55am
Australian Corporations take their lead from US Corporations -- this video spells out a warning:
fair go, mate!
by snowy Saturday, Apr 30 2011, 10:37am
Execs keep their jobs in good and bad times. CEO's continue to be paid millions even when their performance is wanting.
Workers always receive the short end of the stick; they are laid-off when profits are down. They are pressured into not asking for equitable wages and job security.
In view of the fact that enterprises and businesses cannot run without skilled workers why should blue collar workers be treated differently to white collar workers?
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