WORKERS UNITED: COLLECTIVE AGREEMENTS (CAs) With the undermining and gutting of awards, Certified Agreements (CAs) are basically the only form of collective coverage left open to unions to maintain and improve workers' wages and conditions. Reith's legislation gives employers a number of new big sticks to prevent union involvement in collective bargaining and to sabotage CAs. Workers may still be represented by their union in meeting and conferring with their employer about a particular agreement, if they are not too intimidated and have the confidence to make a written request. Employers could offer an agreement to some workers, and not to others and then, having got their "agreement", take it to the Registrar at the Workplace Relations Commission for certification without a public hearing. There would be no requirement to notify the union during the negotiation period, and the union would have no power to veto the agreement. An employer could negotiate as many agreements as it likes with different groups of workers. Each agreement could have completely different wage rates and conditions. In addition employers would be permitted to sign up workers on individual employment contracts, regardless of the existence of any agreements. Individual contracts override Certified Agreements. It would be illegal to include in an agreement provisions excluding individual contracts from a workplace or to do anything that might inhibit the signing of individual contracts. Transfer of business The Commission is given the power to waive the requirement that where business (e.g. a new $1 shell company, or contracting out) is transferred to a different company, the new employer is not be bound by the Agreement. Decentralisation The undermining of awards and the focus on enterprise bargaining has already cost unions and workers dearly. Those unions with thousands of workplaces to cover do not have the staff or financial means to re-negotiate agreements in every workplace every two or three years, let alone monitor them and ensure employers are carrying out their obligations. In the past a union would serve one log of claims on hundreds or Šthousands of employers in an industry and run a national campaign in support of its demands. Any industrial action would have been centrally co-ordinated, across a number of workplaces, possibly covering a whole industry or service nationwide. Such a campaign would usually result in a wage rise and improvements in conditions that would be included in the appropriate award and apply to all workers covered by that award. Decentralisation through reliance on enterprise agreements has tended to fragment the struggle. It has also stretched the resources of unions to the point where they can pay little attention to the day to day problems being suffered by workers. It means that unions have fewer resources to recruit, to build and organise, compounding all the other pressures that the Workplace Relations Act has brought on unions, such as the greater use of civil courts. "Pattern bargaining" Faced with these problems, some unions adopted an approach known as "pattern bargaining", whereby their campaigns and demands were co- ordinated and similar or identical agreements made with a number of employers with common expiry dates. In this way the unity of all the workers in an industry was maintained. For example, in the metal industry unions are pursuing a common expiry date as agreements are renewed. This would enable them to campaign together and take "protected action" at the same time when their agreements came up for renewal. Reith's "second wave" legislation outlaws "pattern bargaining", a reflection of the Government's determination to prevent industry- wide solidarity between workers across workplaces or even within a workplace. Solidarity action by workers in one workplace in support of workers in another workplace or the same workplace is not "protected" and is, consequently, illegal if Reith's legislation is adopted. If there were several Certified Agreements in a workplace with different expiry dates, it could lead to a situation where one group continues to work while another group whose Agreement has expired attempts to take "protected action". NNo doubt this is what Reith has in mind. Anything to divide workers and prevent united action. Outlawing pattern bargaining also makes it more difficult to obtain uniform wage rates based on skill and experience. It does make it easier for employers to pit workers against each other as they compete for jobs. Š ****************************************************************** AWARD SAFETY NET SHRINKS In Reith's first wave, awards were stripped back to 20 "allowable award matters". Rostered days off, rest periods, occupational health and safety provisions, amenities, limits on maximum hours or the spread of hours, restrictions on the use of casual and contract labour, consultation over workplace change, and many more important conditions were all stripped from awards. In the second wave Reith plans to completely remove four of the 20 allowable award matters that remained and reduce in scope or partially delete nine other matters, to leave only seven of the 20 matters intact! Superannuation, long service leave, bonuses and tallies (used in meat industry), some public holidays, union picnic days, notice of termination, recording the hours employees work, training and education provisions, accident make-up pay, transfer to a different type of employment, maximum or minimum hours a regular part-time employee can work, long service leave, and paid leave for jury service will NNOT be allowable in awards. Redundancy rules such as "last on first off" are strictly prohibited from inclusion in awards. Preference to unionists in hiring workers was completely outlawed in the "first wave", -- not just removed from awards. And that's not all. The few matters that remain, mainly concerning leave and wages, are to be slashed back to provide a minimum for the lowest paid. Kiss goodbye incremental scales, skill-based classification structures and some allowances. Unions will have to campaign to have these matters incorporated in collective agreements with employers if they are to be retained. Awards will become a skeleton of their past, when they provided comprehensive and legally enforceable coverage of wages and conditions for workers across an industry or occupation. When awards prevailed, industry or enterprise agreements were "over and above" the Award. According to Reith, awards will "act as a safety net providing basic minimum wages and conditions of employment in respect of appropriate allowable award matters to help address the needs of the low paid". Blackmail The system of "safety net" wage rises will continue but future wage rises will not be paid until the relevant existing award has been Šsubjected to a second round of stripping. The aim is to make awards so inadequate that workers will be tempted by individual contracts. But the Government and its Employment Advocate are having a great deal of difficulty selling individual contracts. After two years of operation only 55,548 workers (out of a workforce of around eight million) had been signed up on individual employment contracts despite the millions of dollars being spent on advertising. That figure represents 1,436 employers. One third of those signing were managerial, administrative and professional staff. In the longer term the Government hopes to see what remains of the award system whither away and die, "leaving workers with no legally enforceable protection" from the most ruthless exploitation of employers. ***************************************************************** WORKERS DIVIDED: INDIVIDUAL CONTRACTS (AWAs) The system of Individual Contracts which has been encouraged under the Howard Government's Workplace Relations Act offers employers more power over individual workers than they have ever dreamed about. The so-called "no disadvantage test" that was to ensure Individual Contracts did not undermine basic minimum standards has turned out to be a farce. NNow Reith wants to formalise this by adding to the Act a specific clause allowing the Employment Advocate to approve a Contract "which does not pass the [no disadvantage] test where it would not be contrary to the public interest to do so". Never mind if it is contrary to the worker's interests! One typical individual contract in the retail sector says that "The ordinary hours may be worked over any day of the week, Monday to Sunday inclusive, and shall be arranged by the employer to meet business requirements". The worker has to be on call 24 hours a day, seven days a week to respond to a request to work 12-hour shifts as directed. After five hours straight the worker is entitled to a 20 minute meal break, but "must maintain customer service" during that break! Failure to work as directed and when directed, can result in dismissal. So can being more than five minutes late more than once. Under this particular contract the specific wage rate to be paid is not specified, it is up to the boss! Š The whole system is open to victimisation, intimidation and discrimination. It leaves women in particular, extremely vulnerable to sexual harassment and discrimination. It creates insecurity and disrupts family life. The aim of Individual Contracts is to slash wages and take back all the conditions that workers united in their trade unions have won over the last 150 years of struggle. Individual Contracts enable employers to deal with workers on a one to one basis, instead of on a collective basis. The individual worker is powerless in the face of an employer who determines how you work and whether you have a job or not. The "second wave" legislation enables employers to discriminate against workers on whatever grounds they like -- sex, race, religion, age, union membership, concern about safety, politics, health. Anti-discrimination legislation is rendered meaningless as the contracts are secret and the legislation specifically make it legal to pay different rates of pay for the same work. Individual Contracts provide employers with a weapon to keep workers divided and weak to be bludgeoned into accepting slave like conditions. The "second wave" legislation gives bosses open slather: * Individual Contracts can coexist with certified agreements. So, even if a union has fought a mighty battle and won a Certified Agreement, the employer can still pick off vulnerable workers one by one and secretly sign them up on Individual Contracts; * the wages and working conditions in an Individual Contract can be (would be) below those in the Certified Agreement it is replacing, even though other workers in the same workplace are still covered by the Certified Agreement; * in employer can pick and choose who is invited (or told) to sign an Individual Contract; * each Individual Contract could be quite different to others; * Individual Contracts would come into force as soon as the worker signed on the dotted line. The employer would then have 60 days in which to present the contract for approval by the Employment Advocate. * in the unlikely event that the Employment Advocate rejected the Contract, the worker would have to pursue outstanding entitlements in the very expensive civil courts at his own expense -- or forget it. Individual Contracts constitute the main threat to the union Šmovement. Without their union, without the ability to collectively bargain, workers are powerless. ****************************************************************** UNDER THE PRESENT WORKPLACE RELATIONS ACT THERE ARE THREE DIFFERENT FORMS BY WHICH WAGES AND CONDITIONS ARE SET OUT: 1. AWARDS: provide a bare minimum legally enforceable "safety net" based on 20 "allowable matters" for workers who are not covered by a Certified Agreement or Individual Contract. The award wage rates of low paid workers are periodically increased by the Industrial Relations Commission in response to claims made by the Australian Council of Trade Unions. 2. CERTIFIED AGREEMENTS (or enterprise agreements): are collective agreements made with or without trade union participation which cover a workplace or company. 3. INDIVIDUAL CONTRACTS (Australian Workplace Agreements): secret individual employment contracts between individual workers and their employer. Certified Agreements and Individual Contracts do not have to meet the award safety net conditions. Agreements and contracts are subjected to the NO DISADVANTAGE TEST. If properly applied their contents should not, "on balance", result in a reduction in the overall terms and conditions of an employee when compared with the award. However, in practice this has proved to be a farce. END OF PAGE 2 The Guardian 65 Campbell Street, Surry Hills. 2010 Australia. 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