Meat Industry Against Labour's 'Policies Of Past'
Meat Industry Against Labour's 'Policies Of The Past'
Labour's policies to turn back the clock on
ACC reforms and repeal the
Employment Contracts Act are
again under fire from industry leaders.
The Chairman of
the Meat Industry Association Sir David Beattie this week
urged
Labour 'not to set back the clock' at the
Association's annual meeting.
ACT Agriculture Spokesman
Owen Jennings said the Meat Industry's fears about
the
damaging effect of Labour's 'policies of the past' are being
repeated right
throughout the rural sector.
"The Meat
Industry is estimating that Labour's billion dollar pledge
to wind
back the ACC reforms and impose the Union
drafted Work Place relations Bill
would cost the
industry millions and see a return to the dark days of
strikes
and pickets at the country's meat works.
"Sir
David said the MIA's joint project with ACC to reduce long
term Accident
Compensation claims in the meat industry,
has brought a saving of more than $5
million a year.
Labour would strip those savings off the
industry.
"Employers and small businesses in the rural
sector are struggling as it is
under National's high
taxes, red tape, compliance costs and out of
control
employment laws. It's hard to believe Labour
and the Alliance are trying to
sell a policy that will
be much, much worse. Rural industries are
extremely
worried.
"There is no room for promoting
unions or union collectivity in a modern
economy.
Labour's surrender to the Council of Trade Union's
Workplace
Relations Bill is the first step. Any
influence the militant pro-Alliance
Trade Union
Federation has on the final outcome of a Labour-Alliance
industrial
relations package should send alarm bells
ringing through every employer and
employee in the
country," said Owen
Jennings.
ENDS