Red ribbon wraps its way around Aotearoa
Red ribbon wraps its way around Aotearoa in solidarity of workers Worth It campaign
As part of FIRST Union’s stop work meetings at 58 locations around the country (more than 5,300 attendees), retail workers will be signing one of our largest banners ever in support of the three tenets of our Worth It campaign. The campaign calls on employers in the retail industry to pay workers a Living Wage of $20.55 an hour, give workers enough hours to live on, and ensure that as the minimum wage increases, so too do existing pay rates relative to this.
This is in response to the overwhelming underpayment and underemployment of workers in this sector. Many retail workers in New Zealand currently survive on minimum wage rates and don’t have enough hours of work to live on. Pay rates and work hours are so low that employers struggle to fill vacancies, and a pay crisis is already in effect as the average retail worker struggles to live. The campaign was set up as an opportunity for retail brands to instil more ethical work practices.
FIRST Union has 12,500 members across the country working in the retail industry, but the campaign is aimed at transforming a large chunk of the working sector to better the lives of almost 20% of the New Zealand workforce who are at risk of insecure and/or low-paid jobs.
The stop-work meetings begin in
Tauranga and Whakatane tomorrow and media are invited to
attend. See attached list for all venues, times and numbers
of attendees. Media are encouraged to arrive 20
minutes after the meeting start time to view the
signing. FIRST Union General Secretary Dennis Maga
(021 971 070) will be at each event to answer your questions
and provide commentary.
FIRST Union General
Secretary Dennis Maga says it’s hoped employers who’ve
not yet adopted ethical business practices will take note of
the support for the campaign.
“This is a big
demonstration to illustrate how much our workers want to
live happy and healthy lives. Masses of people are
struggling, retail makes up almost 20% of New Zealand’s
workforce. If we can make this sector fair, it will go a
long way to bettering the lives hundreds of thousands of
families.”
He says the industry, while not the
only one, is rife with high turnover due to an undervaluing
of employees.
“The casualisation of the workforce in
retail has detrimental effects on the skill level of the
people in these jobs. The low pay rates and work hours cause
a lot of strife in the lives of New Zealanders, yet we have
employers scratching their heads as to why they can’t find
skilled workers.”
Mr Maga says retail workers are
some of the lowest paid in any sector.
“If we consider
median, not average figures, it becomes obvious why many
people are struggling to make ends meet and this is made all
the more frustrating by what is a booming retail industry in
New Zealand, it’s not like the money’s not there.”
He says too fewer hours are also typical of the sector
with UNDERemployment figures hitting new highs just a couple
years ago.
“I hear a lot about high employment figures
but on the flipside we have some of the highest
UNDERemployment figures we’ve seen in years. It seems to
me that yes, more people are employed in New Zealand, but
it’s for far fewer hours.”
Mr Maga adds that to
top it off, those who are UNDERemployed are women and young
parents.
“These are the people bringing up the next
generation of New Zealanders, paying them fairly ensures a
hefty chunk of Kiwi kids are looked after, don’t we all
want that?”
He encourages the Government’s Fair
Pay Agreements workgroup to consider what an FPA would look
like in the retail sector.
“FPAs save a lot of time and
money for both employers and unions, and supermarket
retailers are well positioned for a collective,
industry-wide agreement. They would be wise to start talking
about what one could mean for the grocery retail
sector.”
ENDS