Labour Day gains at risk of erosion
Labour Day gains at risk of erosion
As New Zealand is set to celebrate historic gains for
workers on Labour Day tomorrow, a major union is warning
that there are proposals to take some rights away again.
FIRST Union General Secretary Robert Reid said
that Labour Day was a chance to celebrate gains made by
generations of workers for themselves and those following in
their footsteps.
“But this week laws were
introduced to cut
young workers’ pay, and before Christmas the
government is expected to introduce legislation that would
weaken collective bargaining,” he said.
“Just
as our forebears won us decent working conditions, today
unions are making sure that current workers’ wages keep up
with the cost of living and their working conditions
improve.”
“Central to that is collective
bargaining – workers coming together to negotiate with
their boss, not going it alone.”
“But with
the government signalling their intention to cut even
further into what employment provisions we have to support
collective bargaining, their only intention can be to see
wages stagnate or go down.”
The government’s
proposals are expected to include the removal an obligation
to complete negotiations, and removal of the provision of
new workers to benefit from union-negotiated conditions for
the first 30 days while they consider joining the union.
“One of the only mitigating factors against New
Zealand’s widespread poverty wages is union collective
bargaining. This is demonstrated every year by Victoria
University research showing the gap between collectively
negotiated pay increases, against the national average.”
“Unions are part of the solution to low pay and
achieving a living wage, and any government genuinely
committed to closing the wage gap with Australia would
recognise this,” Robert Reid said.
ENDS