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WSWS : News
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Workers speak out against sackings at Ford Australia
By our correspondents
22 November 2006
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Ford Australia announced plans in early November to axe 640
permanent jobs at its Broadmeadows and Geelong plants in Victoria
before the end of the year. Both the unions and the state Labor
government are collaborating with Ford to ensure there is no resistance
to the layoffs.
Rather than campaign to defend jobs, the unions are doing everything
to help management to push workers to accept voluntary
redundancies. The Bracks government has endorsed the cuts, saying
Ford had no choice because of falling sales and profits.
The World Socialist Web Site spoke to workers at Ford
and in the Broadmeadows areawhere unemployment officially
stands at 13.4 percentabout the impending job losses. All
were deeply concerned and angry about the impact on working families
and especially the youth.
One worker who has been at Ford for 18 years said: They
say the redundancies are voluntary but they are offering packages
to the men on light duties because of injury. The management is
saying to them there is no job for you here, so you have to take
the package. The unions do nothing to stop this.
Some workers over 50 or 60 years old dont mind
leaving, but it is going to be hard for some of the younger ones.
Also, it means that there are no jobs for young people in the
community who are unemployed.
They may put men back on when they launch a new model,
but the number overall will be less. This happens all the time.
When the people learn the job, they are cut back. So if you have
a job that has three men, they give it to just two. It also makes
for a pool of casuals that can be brought on when the company
needs them.
Many jobs have been lost over the time I have worked
here. There were well over 7,000 but now there are around 5,000.
In 1995, they worked two shifts at the old paint shop with a total
of 1,000. Since then they have built a new paint shop and there
is only a total of around 200 for both shifts.
If you ask any worker at Ford they will all tell you
they do not trust the union. They have all had experiences with
the union and know it is close to the company. When workers complain
to the company about having to take on an extra workload or anything,
the management says you have to accept it because there are thousands
of other people waiting for your job. They say you are lucky to
have a job and you should be grateful. When you complain to the
union, the union tells you the same thing.
Ford does not care about the workers they employ. They
are in business to make profits and thats all that counts
for them. They say they have to lay off because of reducing profits,
but if you add up what profit they made last year, and the years
before, they are still ahead.
Ford worker Leon said: I feel there is no real security
in the car industry anymore. It seems to be like the Titanicit
is sailing on troubled waters and its going down fast. First
we had the sackings at Ford and now 200 at GMH [General Motors
Holden]. And then there will be jobs going in the car parts manufacturers.
I am not sure what the future holds anymore. Of course,
Ford has said it has committed to a new model in around a year
and half. This makes a lot of workers at Ford think their jobs
are secure until then and perhaps beyond. But this does not guarantee
anything really. Markets change and maybe they will not be able
to sell the new model.
There are some real terrible things going on in the car
industry. At Ford they have casuals who they call in when they
want them. They put them on for three months or so, and then when
they dont want them they just get rid of them. It is really
awful. They dont even give them a real time framework. These
are just nonsense jobs. There is no security for these workers.
Because they are casual they cant even apply for a housing
loan or even a loan for a car.
Moetu Orangi, a worker from New Zealand who now lives in Broadmeadows,
said she was upset and disgusted about the Ford sackings.
They come right on Christmas and it is very sad for those
families. The union should have done something about this and
not just tell workers to accept it. Many of these workers will
not get full-time jobs again and will end up like me, working
as a casual.
I have been in Australia for almost three years. I had
a permanent job. I worked at a car parts place but I got laid
off when they sent the work elsewhere. Both permanents and casual
were let go. Now I cant find permanent work. It is not easy
being a casual, especially when you have a family to support like
me.
Now you are not even hired by the companies directly
and you have to go through labour-hire agencies. You see an advert
in the newspaper and ring up and it turns out to be an agency.
They send you wherever they like. If you dont take what
they give you, no matter what, then they will not give you anything
in the future.
To get any sort of employment you have to constantly
chase it and you have to know how to work the agencies. It is
enormously stressful trying to find jobs this way and also work
under the conditions that exist in the companies where you are
sent.
Also, it is stressful because the permanent workers think
you are trying to take their jobs and they are frightened. Employers
hold it over them. It is a terrible atmosphere to work in.
You can be at a company for three months and be getting
settled in. Then they just tell you to go because after that time
they have to make you permanent. You cant do anything about
it because you are casual and the unions will do nothing for you.
They dont do much for the full-time workers either. When
they come out of a union meeting, you hear them say things like,
that was a waste of time or that was a lot of
rubbish.
Moetu said she was concerned about the Howard governments
new industrial relations laws that abolish long-standing working
conditions, unfair dismissal laws and other basic rights. These
IR laws will make things worse. I dont think the unions
are going to do anything about it. They will have protests but
they dont actually do anything else.
See Also:
Australia: Labor Party and unions stifle
opposition to Ford job cuts
[22 November 2006]
Australia: a socialist alternative in
the Victorian state election Support the SEP campaign
[1 November 2006]
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