KiwiRail workers in Dunedin anxious about future
KiwiRail workers in Dunedin anxious about
future
Workers at Dunedin’s Hillside
engineering workshops are becoming increasingly anxious
about the fate of their worksite, the rail union said
today.
Earlier this month KiwiRail told
the Otago Daily Times that delays in the proposed sale
of Hillside had not affected work at
Hillside.
“While it is the case that the delays
have not affected the rail projects on the books at
Hillside, it is most certainly affecting the workforce,”
said Wayne Butson, General Secretary of the Rail & Maritime
Transport Union.
“For workers, it feels like
anything but business as usual.”
“As every week
passes without any certainly around the future of Hillside,
our members get increasingly nervous. While workers of
course want potential buyers to have the time to make their
decision about investing in Hillside, what is missing from
KiwiRail is any communication about progress.”
Hillside was put up for sale in May and Wayne
Butson said the union would work with any buyer to make a
success of the place, including the retention of its highly
skilled staff.
“Hillside workshops made too
important a contribution to Dunedin to be closed. Our
union has a track record of working with new buyers of rail
assets, as occurred with with Tranz Rail and Toll, and it
will be no different at Hillside.”
Wayne Butson
said it was lamentable that KiwiRail was in the position of
selling Hillside in the first place.
He said if
stronger government procurement provisions were in place, as
being actively promoted by Opposition parties including
Labour, the Greens and NZ First, then Hillside may be in a
much stronger
position.
ENDS