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"Second wave" industrial laws to strip workers'
rights in Australia
By Terry Cook
10 August 1999
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With little fanfare or significant press coverage, the Howard
government is moving to deepen the sweeping changes to working
conditions that it began in 1996 when it introduced the Workplace
Relations Act.
The government's second wave industrial legislation,
currently before parliament, includes most of the provisions that
were modified after the original Act was amended to secure the
vote of the Australian Democrats for its passage through the Senate.
While the 1996 legislation allowed the employers to make significant
inroads into dismantling hard-won working conditions and workers'
rights, it fell well short of the agenda demanded at the time
by the big business and financial organisations, the banks and
leading media barons.
The ruling circles were seeking nothing less than the dismantling
of the industrial relations framework based on a centralised system
of regulations governing wages and conditions, overseen by the
Australian Industrial Relations Commission (IRC)a system
that recognised, and indeed enshrined, the role of the unions.
For corporations facing increased competition both at the national
and international level, this system had become completely incompatible
with the need for daily flexibility in the hire of labour, constant
downsizing, contracting out, the use of part-time and casual labour
and flat-rate working to eliminate overtime payments. Today, under
conditions of economic turmoil and growing trade war, the task
of abolishing all restrictions on the exploitation of labour has
become, for the ruling class, an even more pressing issue.
While the 1996 Act gave employers the right to impose individual
work contracts, it retained 20 minimal award conditions, maintained
unfair dismissal procedures, forced employers to register industrial
agreements with the IRC and continued the role of the unions.
Central to the new second wave legislation is the
abolition of the closed union shop, whereby workers and also employers
have enforced full union membership in factories and worksites.
Breaking the closed shop has been high on the government's agenda
since the debacle when it attempted to impose individual contracts
and deunionise the country's stevedoring industry in 1998.
At that time the government fell foul of its own 1996 Act,
which prohibits discrimination on the grounds of union membership.
The unions went to the Federal Court and accused the government
of conspiring with Patrick Stevedoring to dismiss its entire workforce
and introduce non-union labour.
Under the new laws any action by workers or unions to enforce
or establish a closed shop is prohibited. This includes pressuring
employers to stipulate that union membership is a condition for
being hired, displaying no union ticket-no start signs
at worksites, and site delegates insisting on union membership.
Union officials will only be able to enter premises on the
written request of a union member. A new invitation will be required
every 28 days and the employer can insist that any discussions
between union officials and workers are restricted to a room specially
provided by the company, thereby stopping union officials from
visiting any other area of the site.
At the same time the new laws all but outlaw strikes and severely
restrict the ability of workers to take swift collective action.
The IRC will be required to issue orders stopping unprotected
strike action within 48 hours of an application being registered
by an employer. Unprotected industrial action is any
stoppage or bans outside the allowable bargaining
period for negotiating a new work contract.
Even before taking (legal) protected strike action
workers will have to give five days' notice (rather than the three
days currently required), state the precise nature of the proposed
action, the day or days on which it will take place and its duration.
Workers will also be required to apply through their unions to
the IRC for an order and will have to conduct a secret ballot.
A bargaining period can be terminated and industrial
action made unprotectedopening up individual
workers and unions to heavy finesif the IRC believes it
is against the public interest. That is, if it is
deemed to endanger life, personal safety, or public health
or welfare or cause significant damage to the Australian economy.
Any strike in the public service, such as the current fire fighters'
dispute in New South Wales, will be illegal, not to mention areas
that affect trade, such as rail and road transport and stevedoring.
The new legislation will enable employers to remove the 20
minimal award items, which the 1996 Act specifies to ensure that
workers were not disadvantaged. Employers will have
to meet only basic minimal wages and conditions.
They will be able to apply for the removal of a raft of entitlements,
including wage maintenance for workers injured at work, piece
rates and bonuses, job transfer protections and some public holidays.
Workers will be obliged to negotiate on an enterprise-by-enterprise,
or even on an individual basis, to have such protections inserted
into a workplace agreement.
Low-paid workers, who are not in position to independently
bargain for wages, and rely on the annual safety-net
wage increase negotiated in the IRC by the Australian Council
of Trade Unions (ACTU), will be forced to wait for the increase
while their particular awards go through the lengthy stripping-back
process. This is designed to deter these sections of workers,
already facing hardships because of low pay and who are dependent
on the increase, from taking action to oppose the changes.
One of the conditions high on the list for destruction is the
tally system of payment that is currently common in
the meat processing industry. This requires employers to pay workers
for any extra production once they have reached an agreed level
of output or tally. If the daily requirement is met
before the end of the normal shift workers have traditionally
gone home.
An attempt to wipe out the tally system and undermine pay rates
was at the centre of a four-month lock out at the G&K O'Conner
abattoir in Victoria last March. The lockout received the blessing
of Workplace Relations Minister Peter Reith. His department provided
advice to the company. Reith created a special unit
to deal with the restructuring of the meat industry. It is part
of the Workplace Reform Group, whose task is to draft recommendations
targeting workers conditions in industries where union membership
remains highcoal, construction, transport and the meat industry.
The new Act will make it easier for employers to impose individual
work contracts, known as Australian Workplace Agreements (AWAs),
introduced in 1996. The 1996 legislation stipulated that AWAs
would not have to be approved by the Industrial Relations Commission
before being ratified, replacing the role of the IRC with a government-appointed
Employment Advocate (EA).
The new provision gives the employers 60 days to seek approval
for a new contract and allows it to be operational before being
ratified by the EA. Under current legislation the Employment Advocate
can only ratify an AWA if it passes a no disadvantage
test, that is, if it does not reduce existing working conditions.
The new legislation will allow agreements that do not pass
the test to be endorsed, as long as the EA declares that they
are not against the public interest. The requirement
that the same conditions be offered to all comparable employees
at a work site will be repealed, making it easier to set workers
against each other.
While the ACTU and the unions have spoken against the proposals,
their essential objection is to the lessening of the role of the
IRC and other changes that weaken the position of the union hierarchy.
ACTU president Jennie George denounced the legislation because
it contained, an onslaught on the powers and independence
of the Industrial Relations Commission, which she referred
to as the independent umpire.
The IRC has never been independent. Nor has it
acted to protect the interests of workers. The arbitration system
and industrial courts have long served as useful mechanisms for
defusing workers struggles and maintaining the grip of the employers
and the union bureaucracy.
For years it has been the standard practice of the union bureaucracy
to direct disputes into the courts and subordinate workers to
their directives. As in the past, the unions are again seeking
to impose the demands of the employers, through arbitration system.
In the last round of award stripping the IRC, without
any serious opposition from the unions, endorsed the application
of major employers to eliminate hundreds of entitlements in industries
such as coal, construction and manufacturing. While the unions
made a legal challenge in the IRC, which they acknowledged had
little chance of succeeding, they did not call any industrial
action.
In the face of the second wave legislation the
ACTU and its affiliates have threatened nationwide demonstrations
this month. To date, despite the severity of the assault, they
have done little outside holding a token march and rally in Sydney
attended by just 300 union delegates. Thanks to the low-key response
of the unions, the vast majority of the working class is unaware
of the new legislation and its consequences.
However, even if the demonstrations go ahead, the unions' central
strategy is to restrict all opposition to sterile protests that
are tightly under their control, while seeking agreements with
individual employer and pleading with the Australian Democrats
to amend the legislation when it comes before the Senate.
Sections of the employers, particularly in the construction
industry, have reservations about the legislation. They still
prefer to rely on the unions to impose their demands. However,
the spread of contracting out and individual contracts, plus the
decline in union membership and working class support for the
unions, have rendered the unions less useful to most employers.
By talking of, and then heading off, possible disruption over
the new legislation, the ACTU and the unions hope to convince
employers of the continued need for their services.
Construction Forestry Mining and Energy Union general secretary
John Sutton told a rally of construction industry delegates in
Sydney earlier this month that the union planned to divide
the enemyemployers and Workplace Relations Minister Peter
Reithto block the reforms.
This is far from some clever strategy designed to defend workers'
rights. The union bureaucracy is merely seeking to play off sections
of big business against Liberal-National Party government, on
the basis that employers can more effectively impose the cuts
through an alliance with the unions, rather than through Reith.
Even though the Australian Democrats leader Meg Lees has said
the party will oppose the legislation in the Senate, her industrial
spokesman Andrew Murray has already signaled that the group is
again ready to come to an arrangement with the government.
Earlier this month Murray announced that the Democrats would
back a wide-ranging inquiry into the effectiveness of the
1996 Workplace Relations Bill. If the present legislation
could be improved then the Democrats would consider
the changes advocated by the government.
The government is confident that the Democrats will continue
to play the same role they have played in the past. Reith said
last month that he was more that happy to work through the
Bill with them (the Democrats) and explain our position on each
and every amendment".
Reith's confidence is well grounded. In August 1996, after
5,000 workers broke away from an official ACTU rally called to
protest the government's budget cuts and the original Workplace
Relations Bill, and stormed parliament house in Canberra, the
government rapidly came to an arrangement with the ACTU over the
new Bill. All sidesthe government, the Labor Party, the
Democrats and the unionsshared a common interest in ensuring
that the social and class tensions expressed in the incident were
contained.
The ACTU called off all further action against the Bill and
called on workers to rely on the Democrats, who had promised to
block the legislation in the Senate. Meanwhile, Jennie George
and the then Democrats leader, Cheryl Kernot, drafted amendments
to the Bill that were soon endorsed by the government. Kernot
and her colleagues used their numbers in the Senate to ensure
the smooth passage of the amended legislation.
For those workers who may still have illusions that the ACTU
and the unions will act to protect their interests, it would be
worth recalling the treatment dished out to those workers involved
in storming parliament house in 1996. Not only were some witchhunted
and expelled from the unions, but also the union bureaucracy identified
them to the police.
For those who may still retain lingering hopes that the Democrats
can be relied on, they need not hearken back to the lessons of
1996. Over the past few months the Democrats have cemented their
place as a virtual government partner in implementing the Goods
and Services Tax (GST) that will impose an ever-greater tax burden
on working people and further eroding living standards. After
holding a Senate inquiry, the Democrats dropped all pretence of
opposition and ensured the passage of the new tax through the
Senate.
See Also:
Consumption tax legislation
passed in Australia
A prescription for further social inequality
[13 July 1999]
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