Council must take responsibility for driver shortages
Regional council must take responsibility for driver shortages
Wellington Tramways Union media release - 19
February, 2019
The Greater Wellington Regional Council's concern about a bus driver shortage is hypocrisy at its worst says the Wellington Tramways Union.
The
call comes as the council has increased its complaints about
the driver shortage they helped create. Union Secretary
Kevin O'Sullivan says the council has no credibility on this
issue after their attack on Wellington bus drivers' terms
and conditions. "The council's hypocrisy would be comic if
it wasn't for the immense uncertainty and anguish they have
put drivers through in the last three years.
"It was
the regional council who tendered the work out without
protecting terms and conditions, and who changed the routes
to make them a nightmare to drive.
"They did this
after we repeatedly warned them about the problems it would
cause, now they've done the damage they're trying to blame
anyone else but themselves.
"It's particularly galling
to see them attacking NZ Bus, the employer who has dealt
with its drivers in good faith and settled their collective
employment agreement while giving a free pass once again to
Tranzit; the company that has refused to engage with its
drivers or their union for over a year now.
"Chris
Laidlaw and Daran Ponter need to realise they can't get away
with turning bus driving in Wellington into a job people
don't want and then whinging about shortages.
"In
September of last year CTU President Richard Wagstaff told
the council there is no way Wellington’s bus service can
be fixed without the drivers’ having the security of a
decent collective agreement. The driver shortage will get
worse, he was right, but they weren't listening.
"The
answer the GWRC is after is simple. Get Tranzit to the table
to negotiate a collective employment agreement, and make
driving a bus in Wellington something people want to do
again."
ENDS