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Colin Barnett should rule out WA WorkChoices in future terms, say unions
Thursday, 7 July 2011 6:38:25 PM

WA unions are calling for Premier Colin Barnett to rule out WorkChoices-type changes to WA work laws in any future Liberal state government.

The call comes after the Premier announced that his Government would not implement any of the recommendations from a $850,000 report into the state’s work laws.

“We welcome the Premier’s distancing himself from WorkChoices-type changes to WA work laws. This is really an admission that of those policies are extreme and bad for ordinary West Australians,” UnionsWA Secretary Simone McGurk said.

“But we know when the Court / Kierath and then Howard Government’s pushed through the worst of these changes was in their second and third terms of government,” Ms McGurk said

“Colin Barnett should be honest with the WA public and rule out any successive WA Liberal government implementing WorkChoices policies like forcing workers onto individual contracts, or taking away protection against unfair dismissal,” Ms McGurk said.

After gaining Government in 2008, then then Minister for Commerce Troy Buswell commissioned a former WorkChoices architect, Steven Amendola, to review WA’s work laws, an exercise that wasted over $1million of taxpayers’ money.

193 recommendations were made, including forcing workers onto individual contracts, stripping away the award safety net and removing unfair dismissal rights. However, two years later following an extensive union and community “No WorkChoices in WA” campaign, the State Government is still to announce what legislative change will actually take place.

In response to a question at a  doorstop interview on Wednesday morning, the Premier ruled out WorkChoices-type changes, however was not specific.

“Since before the last election we have been calling non this Government to be clear about their position on this issue.  They have not. Colin Barnett must be upfront about what his government will do with the work laws covering 300,000 West Australians, not just now, but in the future.” Ms McGurk said.


Barnett backdown shows WorkChoices is electoral poison
Wednesday, 6 July 2011 6:36:50 PM

Premier Colin Barnett’s latest distancing of his Government from implementing WorkChoices-type changes to WA work laws is an admission that those policies are damaging for working people, as well as electoral poison.

After gaining Government in 2008, then then Minister for Commerce Troy Buswell commissioned a former WorkChoices architect, Steven Amendola, to review WA’s work laws, an exercise that wasted over $1million of taxpayers’ money.

193 recommendations were made, including forcing workers onto individual contracts, stripping away the award safety net and removing unfair dismissal rights. However, two years later following an extensive union and community “No WorkChoices in WA” campaign, the State Government is still to announce what legislative change will actually take place.

At a media doorstop earlier today, Premier Colin Barnett sought to distance himself from implementing any WorkChoices-type changes to WA laws.

“This latest disavowal of WorkChoices by Colin Barnett is particularly interesting following  Peter Reith’s recent  call for the Liberal Party to take up the industrial relations “fight”, and push through employer-friendly laws,” UnionsWA Secretary Simone McGurk said today.

“Apart from being disastrous for individual workers, recent  research shows that WorkChoices laws did nothing to assist productivity growth, in fact while John Howard’s work laws were in force productivity went backwards in Australia,” Ms McGurk said.

“Colin Barnett is right to distance himself from WorkChoices –type laws.  They are bad for working West Australians and unnecessary when WA work laws are working well.  Considering almost 300,000 WA workers are still covered by these laws, you would have thought the Government would want to maintain a stable IR system, not embark on an ideological obsession at workers’ expense.”

“It’s a disgrace that Steven Amendola, sitting in his Melbourne CBD office, is $850,000 richer for this waste of time.”


Advertising suspended… for now!
Saturday, 2 July 2011 3:08:23 PM

UnionsWA has temporarily suspended our television advertising campaign against the Barnett Government’s planned changes to WA’s workplace laws, but we will not hesitate to start them again if the Premier pursues workplace changes that will harm WA workers and their families.

We launched the No WorkChoices in WA campaign in 2009, when Troy Buswell wasted more than $1million appointing a former Howard Government lawyer to review a State industrial relations system that was working well.

Colin Barnett is now considering 193 possible changes to our workplace laws.  The changes include forcing workers onto individual contracts, stripping back the award safety net, cutting minimum employment conditions and removing unfair dismissal protection.

Unions representing health, education, community safety and a range of other workers have campaigned alongside thousands of ordinary Western Australians to fight these proposed changes, because we know how damaging they are for working people.  We also know that making our public sector workplaces less attractive places to work will make it even more difficult to attract the people we need to provide quality public services – particuarly in the new resources boom.

While our campaign has been successful in stopping the implementation of these extrem recommendations so far, we will recommece our campaign if needed.

WA workers simply do not need life made tougher for them at work, when they are finding it increasingly difficult to manage rising electricity, gas, water and other State Government charges at home.

The community has clearly expressed its view about workplace laws at a number of recent elections.  We encourage the Premier to listen to the community and work to ensure the more than 300,000 workers remaining in the WA industrial relations system are treated fairly.

View our ad from the Saturday 2nd July edition of The West here.


A big thank you!
Thursday, 16 June 2011 6:08:23 PM

A very big thank you to all the people who have emailed the Premier, sent off a No WorkChoices postcard and spent time getting colleagues, friends and family to sign postcards too. Fabulous work! We’ve sent thousands of postcards off to the Premier and Brendon Grylls already and we have some more big piles ready to send off next week.

We’ve also got lots of postcards still coming in for other MPs which we’ll send off next week letting them know how we don’t want WorkChoices in WA.

Thank you for all your help! We know it’s working and that the Government has heard you because they still haven’t announced their plans for changes to workplace laws despite saying they wanted to have legislation passed this year.

A No WorkChoices postcard


$1million union campaign blitz to fight Barnett workplace changes
Friday, 11 March 2011 6:42:57 PM

WA unions will today launch a $1million campaign blitz to fight the Barnett’s Government’s plans to introduce WorkChoices in WA.

The Barnett Government is drafting new laws and will attempt to sneak through 193 changes to Western Australia’s workplace laws.

The new laws will affect more than 300,000 workers in small business and the public sector. They will force new workers onto individual contracts, strip back the award safety net and cut minimum employment standards.

The No WorkChoices in WA campaign will involve metropolitan and regional TV, radio and newspaper advertising, as well as an online strategy and community activism.

The campaign will focus on the negative impacts the Barnett changes will have on workers, as well as the impact on the quality of public sector service delivery from making the public sector a less attractive and less secure place to work.

UnionsWA Secretary Simone McGurk says the Government’s secretive handling of the report has left unions no choice but to run a large scale public awareness campaign to ensure people know about the Government’s plans.

“At the same time as Colin Barnett is planning on building himself a flash new office to make his time at work more enjoyable, the Premier is planning radical changes to the workplace conditions of more than 300,000 WA workers,” Ms McGurk said.

“Mr Barnett clearly understands that his radical workplace changes will be unpopular, because he is trying to slip them through unnoticed.

“Mr Barnett’s changes include the worst aspects of WorkChoices, including forcing new workers onto individual contracts, stripping back the award safety net and cutting minimum employment standards.

“The Barnett Government has no mandate to make changes to the industrial relations system in WA which is currently working well for both employers and employees. They were not upfront with people prior to the 2008 election about their intention to make changes and they continue to be secretive now as they try to slip these radical changes through under the radar.”

The Barnett Government’s new industrial relations laws are based on the recommendations from a review of the State’s industrial relations system, which was commissioned in 2009 by then Commerce Minister Troy Buswell. The review was undertaken by former Howard Government industrial relations advocate Steven Amendola and cost WA taxpayers more than $1million. 

The changes will directly impact on the employment conditions of about one in three working Western Australians who work in small businesses and in the public sector. However, Ms McGurk said the changes will however be felt by all Western Australians as they will undermine the workers who provide our vital public services.

“If the Premier persists with his plans to undermine the employment conditions of our public sector workers, vital public services like health, education and community safety will find it difficult to recruit and retain the staff they need to provide quality services.

“This will only be exacerbated as mining companies and the private sector pay more to attract the workers they need in the new boom.

“Mr Barnett must come clean on his Government’s plans and inform the WA public of their intentions to undermine employment conditions for 1 in 3 Western Australians.”


Email Premier Barnett now
Monday, 28 February 2011 12:45:24 PM

As former and current Federal Liberal MPs continue to talk about the need to return to WorkChoices federally, Premier Barnett is quietly plotting his own version of WorkChoices for West Australians. The Liberal-National Government is currently deciding what changes to WA’s employment laws they will implement – and just for starters individual contracts, unfair dismissal laws and a stripping back of conditions from Awards and Agreements are all high on the agenda.

Help ensure we don’t return to an unfair employment relations system. Email Premier Barnett now via the tab above and let him know that West Australians don’t want WorkChoices – we deserve better.


Barnett set to introduce WorkChoices in WA
Tuesday, 7 December 2010 7:12:49 PM

The worst fears of West Australian workers have  been realised with Colin Barnett set to introduce WorkChoices for more than 300,000 WA workers.

The radical changes were outlined yesterday in the long overdue Amendola review of WA’s industrial relations system. Changes recommended in the report include weakening the Award safety net, gutting the independent umpire, weakening unfair dismissal laws and changes which would force workers to sign individual contracts in WA workplaces. The report’s recommendations include the worst features of Workchoices.

Mr Barnett’s Christmas gift to more than 300,000 West Australians workers is a plan to force workers to sign individual contracts and strip the award system by abolishing many existing conditions provided in awards. He plans to effectively abolish unfair dismissal protection for West Australians working in small businesses and on top of this to make changes which will intimidate workers into not raising issues including those relating to workplace safety with their union.

This report is a sneaky attempt to get WorkChoices-style legislation in through the back door while people are distracted in the lead-up to Christmas. Join the No WorkChoices in WA campaign and let Mr Barnett know that WA workers won’t fall for this!


ACTU President Ged Kearney warns Premier Barnett of the dangers of isolating WA on industrial relations
Friday, 1 October 2010 3:04:37 PM

Address by ACTU President Ged Kearney to the Industrial Relations Society of Western Australia Conference
September 2010

I would like to acknowledge the traditional owners of the land on which we meet today and pay my respects to elders past and present.

Thank you for the invitation to speak at your conference today.

It’s good to be back here in Western Australia. I was last here, in Perth, taking part in our Rights at Work campaign during the federal election.

I was only here for a couple of days, but that visit left me with a couple of strong impressions about how WA is different from the rest of the nation, but also about how the image of the powerhouse WA economy that we see in the eastern states is an illusion for so many workers here.

The two-speed economy is alive and well in WA, that’s for sure.

Different as WA is, your state is not an island. To be part of an integrated national economy, Western Australia must also be part of an integrated national IR system.

I took office as President of the ACTU at the start of July, and almost from day one we were in election mode. I quickly discovered how hard my staff would have me working! I’d hate to think how many kilometres I covered in July and August.

Like most of you, the election outcome was certainly a surprise to me. It revealed how much different regions of Australia differ politically. Here in WA, there was a 5.6% swing against the government – although more of that was to the Greens rather than the Coalition.

But in my home state of Victoria, there was an almost equal swing against Labor and the Coalition that resulted in Labor’s picking two seats from the Coalition – and of course, also the first Greens MP in the Lower House.

We are in for interesting times ahead, but in the end the two regional independents, Tony Windsor and Rob Oakeshott, made the right decision in the interests of both stable and effective government, and working Australians and their families.

It was a decision for the future, framed around new agendas on climate change, broadband, health and education, a more democratic parliament and a more compassionate nation and, of course, a stronger economy that delivers job opportunities for all.

The election highlighted how the issues are also different in parts of Australia as well. Over here, no doubt the mining tax remains an area of controversy. But in the southern and eastern states, there is little argument with the idea that some of the windfall wealth generated from our natural resources should be shared so that all of Australia benefits.

However, despite our regional differences, the recent election has cemented a national consensus on a fair workplace system. WorkChoices is dead: all major parties have espoused no plans to resurrect it.

From the outset of the federal election, the union movement set itself one over-riding and primary objective: that was to ensure that the improvements to workplace rights gained since the abolition of WorkChoices were locked in.

WorkChoices was one of the major issues of the election, and the Rights at Work campaign successfully ensured that both parties have committed to fair work laws. Australians believe fundamentally in a system that delivers a strong workplace safety net, job security and good workplace conditions.

This campaign by our members and unions around Australia has shown that wages, conditions and respect at work are key political issues. We saw, from day one, Tony Abbott recant on his previous adherence to hardline, WorkChoices-style policies. Remember “WorkChoices is dead, buried and cremated”? He was forced to abandon his previous public commitments to individual contracts, to cutting protections from unfair dismissal, and to winding back the award safety net.

And he finished the campaign as he started: rejecting the policies of deregulated labour markets that have been a central plank of Liberal philosophy since the party was founded. We are pleased that the cross-bench MPs have, in the end, supported the formation of a Labor government. This will ensure that the workplace rights we value are well and truly protected, because it is true that we did have suspicions that Tony Abbott would not honour his public statements during the election campaign. It remains a travesty that we never saw a detailed IR policy from the Coalition.

I’d also remind the independents that the consensus on a fair workplace system applies to them as well. They would be going against the wishes of Australian voters if at some stage they backed legislation that would reduce protections from unfair dismissal or allow the re-introduction of individual contracts; we would hold anyone who did that fully accountable at the ballot box.

But I have faith that the rural independents are aware of their responsibilities, so I think we have little to fear on that front.

As a new President of the ACTU – I have only been in this position for a little over two months – it was an incredible privilege to be able to travel the nation during the election campaign and to meet with so many workers from all around the country and in different types of jobs. In those few weeks, I visited trucking yards for breakfast with drivers at dawn, served sausages to nurses and orderlies in hospitals at lunchtime, call centres, railway stations, building sites and factories.

Everywhere I went, I met decent, hardworking people whose aspirations are simple, yet so often unfulfilled. They want a secure job, a job at which they can earn enough to provide for their family without forfeiting precious time. They want to be safe at work. They want to be respected and consulted by their employer. They want productive and satisfying work that they have some control over, and that encourages them to learn new skills. They want to be treated fairly and women, equally. They want their workplace to be environmentally and worker-friendly.

The union movement has a responsibility to these workers. As President of the ACTU, I am determined to continue driving that agenda.

The ANF, where I came from, is a campaigning union which builds on values that are important to our members, those of social justice, of professional advocacy and leadership, and, of course, industrial outcomes. We know that unions can be places that make you feel secure, productive and proud. I want every Australian to know that and I want them to feel the need to join, to feel part of a movement, a movement that makes changes for the better.

And I am determined to fight for more respect for unions from all our political leaders and commentators. My message is this: if you want to know what’s best for jobs, for public services, for our industries – ask the people who work in them, speak to unions and their members!

I see the role of unions as not just being concerned with the experience of people at work. Unions’ roles, if they are doing their job well, are to be an advocate for change that improve the lives of all Australians in all aspects of their life – all Australians, be they young, aged, single, couples, with or without families.

We must develop good social policy that connects not only with our members, but the wider community, and be prepared to take the debate out to the people and ask for their support, not hide behind careful rhetoric.

If you think about it, our movement is at its best when it is engaging with the community and leading a policy debate to improve the lives of Australians. Whether it is the minimum wage, social policy or workers’ rights, when unions put their case to the public, they can really shine.

We cannot lose sight of the importance of campaigning to our movement. Governments, whether Labor or Liberal, will not simply implement change because unions ask them to. Of course, strong advocacy does not mean you have to be about finding conflict for conflict’s sake.

I’m sure everyone in this room knows it, but it is important that we communicate to the wider community that the union movement is far different from the stereotypes of male, blue-collar workers.

Today, more than 50% of union members are women, and increasingly our growth is in white-collar and service industries. The three largest unions in this country are the shop assistants, the teachers and the nurses – all female-dominated unions whose industrial might I think is yet to be unleashed.

In WA, I think unions and unionism have been unfairly demonised. There has also been a systematic campaign over many years to reduce collective bargaining and workplace representation in the mining industry. Take for example, the dispute at the start of the year at the Pluto project on the north-west shelf.

These workers are involved in a dangerous and difficult construction project, and were outraged when Woodside management made a unilateral decision to change their living conditions without consultation or agreement. Whatever the merits of the case, if there had been a proper collective agreement in place that included a disputes procedure and provisions about the introduction of change, the dispute may well have been avoided. And it did not help when Premier Colin Barnett inflamed the situation by calling for legal action against individual employees.

Yet we see this type of demonisation of workers and union members all the time in WA. The result is that union membership in WA is 17.2% of the workforce, compared with 20% nationally.

Now, I am not obsessed with numbers or statistics. But it does concern me when so many Western Australian workers do not have union representation, because they need a voice in their workplace.

The WA economy is an amazing success story, thanks to being blessed with some of the world’s richest mineral deposits. Unemployment is the best in the nation at 4.4% and labour force participation is 68.8%, compared to 5.3% and 65.5% for the nation as a whole.

Full-time adult ordinary time earnings in WA are $1362.40 a week – the second best in the nation and almost 9% above the national average. State final demand in the June quarter of 3% was more than twice national GDP for the same period.

But that wealth obscures the fact that in WA, as in the rest of Australia, you really have a two-speed economy. The mining industry in this state directly employs roughly 52,000 people – or about 5 per cent of the WA workforce. And it’s good money – more than $110,000 a year.

For every young bloke who, thanks to the mining boom, has a big boat in the garage of his McMansion in the fast-growing suburbs of Perth, there are many times that number of people for whom home ownership is a dream, who rely on public services for transport, health and education, for whom it is a constant struggle to make ends meet.

Mining is almost exclusively work for men, and the gender pay gap in WA of 23.3% is the worst of any state. Let me repeat that: for every $1 earnt by a man in WA, a woman will earn 76.7 cents, compared to the national average of 82.7 cents.

In industries which have a high proportion of women – such as accommodation and food – average weekly earnings are less than half those of mining. The Wage Price Index for WA increased by 35.3% between 2003 and 2010, but we know that not all workers enjoyed nominal wage increases of that magnitude. The state minimum wage has increased by 27% in nominal terms, meaning that low-paid employees have fallen further behind the rest of the workforce during the mining boom.

And not only does WA have the biggest gender pay gap in the country, but WA women have actually earned less than the average for all Australian women until very recently. The gap only closed in February of last year. WA women now earn $23.60 more than the average for Australian women, but they face higher costs of living.

The mining boom has meant that the cost of living in Perth has risen faster than in any other Australian capital city. Since mid-2003, inflation for Perth has risen 26.1%, while the national CPI has risen only 21.8%. Since mid-2003, the cost of housing in Perth has risen 54.6%, the cost of health care has risen 42.1% and the cost of education has risen 55.1%, according to the ABS.

And workers in WA have the same simple and often unfulfilled, aspirations as workers I meet everywhere else in Australia: a safe, secure and decent job that allows them to properly balance work and family life, to be treated fairly and equally, to be respected.

For them the mining boom is something going on in the background, and as far as they are concerned, WA is no different to the rest of Australia. WA is not an island.

I was also intrigued by a recent article by the economics writer for The West Australian, where he identified a growing threat that key parts of the economy, and people employed in those sectors, could be left behind by the current mining boom.1 He reported that while the mining boom continued unabated, the winding down of the economic stimulus program and higher interest rates were putting strain on other parts of the economy. House prices and new home sales have flattened and retail sales have dropped off – “If not for all the cash flowing through the mining sector these figures would suggest the WA economy was not travelling well,” the article said.

It’s also wise to show a bit of caution. WA’s unemployment rate is currently below the national average, but during the GFC it was the same as the mining industry shed 15% of its workforce in just six months last year. Mining is an extremely cyclical industry. It may seem at the moment like the Chinese-fuelled boom will continue forever, but history tells us this simply isn’t the case.

And it seems people have short memories as well. I wonder if all those people who attended that protest against the mining tax in Perth a couple of months ago – the best dressed, most jewellery-laden protest I’ve ever seen – paused to think of the people of Ravensthorpe?

Remember Ravensthorpe? That was the town BHP Billiton killed with a single decision made in an office tower thousands of kilometres away. About 1800 jobs were lost when BHP Billiton decided to close its nickel mine in January last year. The decision was also a catastrophe for the town of Ravensthorpe and neighbouring communities such as Hopetoun.

BHP Billiton showed callous disregard for those workers and the communities that depended on them when it made that decision, so it’s worthwhile treating statements about the “poor old miners” with a bit of a grain of salt when they complain about how a tax on profits would ruin them.

Yet when it comes to industrial relations, the Barnett government seems to think that an exception should be made for the those 60,000 workers in the mining industry – or more accurately, for their employers, those multinational mining companies that recently made umpteen billions in super profits over the past 12 months.

While the rest of Australia made the historic decision to create a national industrial relations system for the first time under the Fair Work Act, the Barnett government stubbornly opted out. This means that up to 30% of the state’s workforce – employees in unincorporated small businesses and the public sector – do not have all the protections provided by the Fair Work Act.

WA’s isolationism on IR is bad for workers in this state. But it’s bad for business too.

The state’s peak business body – the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Western Australia – wants WA to be part of the national system. It has publicly urged the full referral of all WA’s IR powers to the federal government to achieve a fully national system for all workers and businesses.

The CCI says this would provide certainty for businesses, who are confused about which jurisdiction they belong to. Businesses are confused about how much to pay their employees, what are the minimum conditions in their sector. Take the example highlighted in the CCI’s own submission to the state IR review in 2009. It said you could have two retail shops on opposite sides of Hay Street in the Perth CBD – one operating as an unincorporated sole trader who is required to meet one minimum standard, while the other shop, which is incorporated, sells the same merchandise, but must comply with different minimum standards.

And what happens if the business decides to change its status for taxation or other reasons, and a new set of employment standards apply? If business is confused, what chance does the average worker have? Without the help of a union, how can they wade through the mosaic of different awards – state and federal – to work out whether they are being paid correctly? These anomalies are replicated all over the state, and it seems ridiculous that they exist in 2010.

I can only agree with the sentiments of the CCI: “In the interests of simplicity and fairness, it is important that all businesses have certainty and are competing fairly within the same cost and minimum standard constructs.”

The arguments put forward by the Barnett government against joining the national system do not hold water. So, while WA remains apart from the rest of Australia, business suffers and so do workers.

But we also have major concerns about the future direction of a separate WA system. We are suspicious of last year’s review – especially when we know that the Barnett government has been sitting on the report since December. Liberal governments in WA have an unfortunate history of trashing workplace rights. WA has been a hothouse experiment in IR changes that have later been adopted by the federal Liberal government.

In the 1990s, the Court liberal government, in which Premier Colin Barnett was a minister, introduced a state version of WorkChoices. There were three waves of industrial relations changes that saw individual contracts introduced and minimum standards cut for many Western Australian workers. Many of the same changes were included in WorkChoices.

In fact, John Howard was on record saying that WA was the model for the national Liberal IR agenda. He said “I would like to see throughout Australia an industrial relations system that is largely similar to what the Coalition Government has implemented in Western Australia”.2

One report3 into the impact of IWAs found:

• 74% provided no weekend penalty rates of pay.
• 67% provided no overtime pay.
• 56% provided an ordinary rate of pay below the award rate.
• 75% had no pay rise provision.
• Many IWAs had very open-ended hours of work arrangements in the name of ‘flexibility’.

Due to the introduction of workplace agreements without an award safety net, the gender pay gap in WA blew out to between 20-27%, compared to 15-18% nationally.

In short, workers were generally worse off under IWAs than they were under the comparable award.

The Gallup Government abolished these laws in 2001. But the state Liberal Party remains wedded to the idea of a de-regulated IR system. In a speech to the parliament in October 2007, the Liberal Premier Colin Barnett said that Labor was foolish to have done this and that he agreed with the “philosophy of WorkChoices”.4

The terms of reference of last year’s review are heavily slanted in favour of the reintroduction of aspects of WorkChoices. They flag changes to unfair dismissal laws, greater flexibility in agreement making, and reduced minimum conditions. Also under review was the minimum wage-setting process and union right of entry.

Nor does the role of Steven Amendola, a Liberal Party lawyer of choice who helped write the WorkChoices laws and was involved in the waterfront dispute and the Cole Royal Commission, inspire confidence. During the federal election campaign, I called on the Barnett government to release this report. They refused to do so. We can only conclude that they are hiding this report because it is political dynamite and recommends a major rollback of IR laws in WA, nothing short of a new WorkChoices system for WA.

So today, I repeat that call on the Barnett government: be upfront with Western Australian workers and the public and release your plans for the state IR system. Do it now, so there can be a proper public debate before the next state election.

But be warned and heed the lessons of WorkChoices: meddle with people’s rights at work at your peril. Western Australia is not an island.

Thank you for your time.


Premier Barnett should heed the results of the federal election on WorkChoices
Wednesday, 8 September 2010 2:55:45 PM

While the results of the Federal election took some time to become clear – one thing that was apparent straight away is that working Australians again rejected any attempt to undermine their rights at work.

Australian people sent a clear message during the federal election that their rights at work matter, and they will not support parties that are committed to policies which undermine workers’ pay, conditions and rights.

During the election campaign public opinion forced Tony Abbott – once a passionate supporter of John Howard’s WorkChoices legislation – to state that WorkChoices was “dead, buried and cremated.”

ACTU Secretary Jeff Lawrence said:

“Our two million union members, and the more than 10 million workers in Australia have succeeded in forcing all major parties in this election to commit to fair work laws.

“We know that WorkChoices was a significant issue in workplaces and in the community and that it weighed heavily on the public’s mind in the lead up to this election.

“This is the second election in which WorkChoices has been decisively rejected by the Australian public.”

This result is a significant victory for working Australians and should be heeded by Premier Barnett. Barnett and Commerce Minister Bill Marmion are still refusing to release the results of a report containing 198-recommendations to change workplace laws in Western Australia despite repeated calls from unions to do so.

There is particular concern over the implications of the report for working West Australians as it was written by the architect of John Howard’s WorkChoices legislation.


Barnett & Abbott hide secret plan to bring back WorkChoices for West Australian workers
Monday, 9 August 2010 10:35:01 AM

The West Australian Liberal leader Colin Barnett and his federal counterpart Tony Abbott are hiding a secret plan to bring back WorkChoices for West Australian workers say unions.

More than 300,000 West Australian workers are in danger of losing penalty rates, overtime pay, public holiday pay and their protection from unfair dismissal from the WA Government’s planned industrial relations changes.

The President of the Australian Council of Trade Unions Ged Kearney joined WA workers in a protest outside Colin Barnett’s Perth office on Monday the 9th of August calling for the release of the plan.

Soon after the Barnett Liberal Government was elected it commissioned a review of Western Australian workplace laws by former Howard Government lawyer, Steven Amendola.

The terms of reference for the review specifically include the reintroduction of the worst aspects of WorkChoices and its precursor, the former Court WA government’s IR laws, including:

  • Individual contracts (AWAs) that cut workers’ take home pay and conditions
  • Cuts to unfair dismissal protection
  • Cuts to minimum wages and the award safety net of penalty rates, overtime, annual leave, sick leave, overtime pay, allowances and other basic job conditions.

Up to 300,000 Western Australian workers — about 30% of the WA workforce —- could face big cuts to their pay and conditions and rights from the ‘WA WorkChoices Review’.

The WA Liberal Government received the ‘WA WorkChoices Review’ report in December 2009, but despite repeated requests from Labor and unions has refused to release it to the public. 

The review was conducted by extreme anti-workplace rights lawyer Steven Amendola, formerly an advocate for Tony Abbott and Peter Reith when they were IR Ministers in the Howard Government. 

“There is less than two weeks to go before the federal election and it is clear that Colin Barnett is trying to help Tony Abbott con West Australians over WorkChoices,” said Ged Kearney.

“Tony Abbott is keeping the door open for bringing back WorkChoices under another name and Colin Barnett has a secret plan in his bottom drawer.

“The Liberals cannot be let off the hook from explaining what they really have in store for West Australian workers.

“In this election all we have so far are a series of glib slogans and contradictory statements from Tony Abbott and the WA Liberals that show they cannot be trusted on WorkChoices.

“It is an appalling abuse of the Australian public’s right to know who and what they are voting for that the Liberals haven’t released a detailed IR policy and that Colin Barnett is hiding the report from the WA WorkChoices Review.

“Working Australians will remember that WorkChoices was brought in without public scrutiny or approval by a Liberal Government of which Mr Abbott was a senior member. This election is shaping to be a re-run of the Liberal Party’s previous dishonesty on workplace relations,” Ms Kearney said.