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Australia: Critical lessons from the tramway sackings in Melbourne
By Terry Cook
27 May 2004
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Tramway workers, along with their counterparts throughout the
entire public transport system, must draw the sharpest lessons
from the sackings of more than 100 tram drivers and other staff
from eight depots last month. Rather than being the end of a process,
the job cuts mark the beginning of a renewed assault on public
transport workers as the state Labor government begins the $2.3
billion process of reprivatising part of Melbournes train
and tram networks.
The immediate beneficiaries are the new owners, the private
consortium Yarra Trams. The initial public transport privatisation
failed despite huge government handouts when the previous operator
National Express walked away in December 2002.
The job cuts were only possible because of the open collaboration
of the Rail Tram and Bus Industry Union (RTBIU) with the government
and Yarra Trams. Union officials actually helped to select, and
then isolate, the victims. Now, within weeks of the sackings,
the RTBIU is moving to implement a series of attacks on working
conditions, including roster changes and forced transfers. The
roster changes will see drivers weekly working hours increase
from 40 hours to 41.5 and allow a 2 percent pay increase. The
forced transfers will immediately affect 17 workers from the Malvern
depot, who will be shifted to Brunswick.
In the past, tram drivers could not be transferred forcibly.
But the enterprise work agreement signed off by the union with
Yarra Trams in early 2003 overrides the old provisions, allowing
the company to simply give workers 14 days notice. Other
conditions in the 2003 agreement, such as severe restrictions
on workers taking holiday leave and rostered days off at their
own convenience, will now apply to all the former M>Tram depots
taken over by Yarra Trams.
Union secretary Lou Di Gregorio and other RTBIU officials have
been touring the depots to soften up their members to accept the
new conditions. Such is the hostility among workers, however,
that the Malvern, Brunswick and Glenhuntly depots have rejected
the roster changes, while Malvern has voted down the transfers.
While this overwhelming rejection is important, workers should
be under no illusion that it will alter the unions direction.
The RTBIU will work to wear down opposition and call new meetings
to push through whatever management requires.
Its tactics have been developed over decades. To keep tram
workers divided, the RTBIU calls separate depot meetings. The
agenda is then tightly controlled to limit discussion. No formal
discussion has been held, for example, at any of the depots on
the April sackings or the fate of the workers who were dismissed.
In this way, the union works to create a climate of intimidation
and ensure that no movement develops against the sackings.
In a letter to the World Socialist Web Site on May 8,
a tram worker at the Glenhuntly depot, from which 15 workers were
sacked, explained: At our depot, we work in fear. We pay
our union dues solely so we can work, and even then we dont
know who is worsemanagement who pays us, or the union whom
we pay to represent our interests. He went on to say that
although workers had demanded a meeting to get an explanation
as to how this (the sackings) happened, the union had simply
ignored the requests.
There is no question but that tram and public transport workers
oppose the sackings, as well as the ongoing attacks on their working
conditions. But because their opposition remains confined within
the political framework dictated by the unions and the government,
they can see no way forward.
The lack of a political alternative is reflected in the actions
taken by the sacked workers themselves. Under attack from the
state Labor government and betrayed by their own union, one group
of sacked workers demonstrated outside state parliament, then
sought support from the Liberal Opposition leader Robert Doyle.
Doyle, of course, is as contemptuous of the plight of the sacked
workers as Di Gregorio and Labor Premier Steve Bracks, because
they all serve the same corporate interests. In fact, it was the
Liberal government in 1999 which, with the aid of the unions,
carried through the privatisation of the entire Victorian transport
system, axing thousands of jobs in the process, including those
of 1,000 tram conductors and rail guards.
Other sacked workers have mounted legal action to contest the
legality of the dismissals and seek reinstatement. These workers
face the danger of becoming enmeshed in a morass of court challenges
while the union and management continue to isolate them and bury
the issue. Legal action must be an adjunct to, not a substitute
for, the struggle to mobilise a broad political and industrial
movement fighting for the independent interests of the working
class.
A legacy of union betrayals
While some workers may have been surprised by the unashamed
collaboration of the RTBIU with the sackings, its actions were
the continuation of the policies carried out by the public transport
unions for more than a decade to subordinate workers to the program
of privatisation and job cuts.
The all-out attack on jobs and conditions began in earnest
in 1989 under the Cain state Labor government. Under the Accords
struck through the 1980s between the Australian Council of Trade
Unions (ACTU) and the federal Hawke Labor government the public
transport unions committed themselves to assisting Cain. Nationally,
the unions helped the employers to bring about a fundamental reversal
in working conditions and an historic redistribution of income
away from the working class to the coffers of big business.
In order to carry this through, the most militant sections
of workers had to be disciplined. High on the list were Melbournes
tramway workers. In August 1989, the Cain government brought down
a budget that slashed funding to public transport by $150 million.
Some months later it followed this up with a lockout of tramway
workers across all depots to impose driver-only trams, eliminate
conductors and introduce a scratch ticketing system.
Tram workers responded by setting up an indefinite tram blockade
in the centre of Melbourne, which created a major political crisis
for the government. The action attracted sympathy and support
in broad sections of working people across the state who were
themselves facing ongoing attacks on conditions and jobs.
With support for tram workers growing, the Australian Tramways
and Motor Omnibus Employees Association (ATMOEA) under its leader,
Di Gregorio, betrayed the struggle. Assisted by the lefts
on the Victorian Trades Hall Council, Di Gregorio pushed through
a return to work agreement that included a six-month trial of
one-person operations.
Labors attacks became the basis for a deepening assault
by the Kennett Liberal government, which came to power in 1992.
Although a wave of opposition greeted the new government, including
a demonstration of 100,000 workers, students and professional
people in Melbourne in November 1992, the unions brought it under
control. The ATMOEA and Di Gregorio, along with the Public Transport
Union, eventually signed a memorandum of understanding with Kennett
allowing the destruction of 10,000 public transport jobs.
Between 1995 and 1998 the union negotiated and imposed a series
of Enterprise Bargaining Agreements that surrendered a raft of
working conditions. In 1997, in order to break up what the government
called a culture of resistance, a number of tramway
workers were sacked and blamed for accidents caused by worsening
working conditions and one-person operations. The dismissals were
designed to create an atmosphere of intimidation, similar to the
operation being carried out today. The union then, as now, did
nothing to defend the sacked workers.
The unions role enabled Kennett to push through the privatisation
of the entire Victorian public transport system in 1999. As its
reward, the union was granted coverage of the workers in the newly
privatised industry. In this capacity, it served as an industrial
police force for the new owners.
The unions betrayals have not merely been the product
of the cowardice of a few self-seeking union leaders. Rather,
they are the outcome of the bankruptcy of trade union politics
and the perspective of national reformism that has dominated the
workers movement for the past century.
No matter how militant, trade unionism has always accepted
the right of capital to exploit labour. Acting as bartering agencies
for the sale of labour power, the unions simply asked for a few
more crumbs from the capitalist table. Today, the major employers
worldwide are engaged in an unrelenting drive to take back all
the gains won by the working class. Unable by their very nature
to challenge the framework of the profit system, the unions have
increasingly transformed themselves into outright agencies for
the destruction of the very concessions they once advocated.
Public transport workers need to draw the necessary political
conclusions and develop new forms of struggle that are independent
of, and in complete opposition to, the trade unions and the Labor
Party. The fight to defend jobs and conditions can only be sustained
and broadened to the degree that workers base themselves on a
socialist perspective that rejects the dictates of the profit
system and aims at the reorganisation of society on the basis
of genuine social equality.
Socialist Equality Party & WSWS Public
Meeting
The Way forward for Tramway Workers
Sunday May 30, 2.30pm
The Church Meeting Room
10A Hyde Street Footscray
For further information email: sep@sep.org.au
or call 02 9790 3511
See Also:
Australia: Transport union
collaborates in destruction of tram jobs
[27 March 2004]
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