8 June 2005
Dirty Laundry To Be Washed In Public:
Capital And Coast Laundry Workers Issue Strike Notices
"Laundry workers at Capital and Coast will be washing the DHB's dirty laundry in public when they take strike action
from Thursday 23 June," said Maxine Gay, secretary of the Clothing, Laundry and Allied Workers Union.
The union filed notices of strike yesterday after a breakdown in collective employment agreement negotiations last week.
Maxine Gay accused the DHB of treating their laundry workers as "second class citizens".
"Processing laundry is one of the most important jobs in the hospital," she said. "Without clean laundry the hospital
will grind to a halt."
"Capital and Coast has this year again offered laundry workers a lower wage increase than the rate of inflation," Maxine
Gay said. "Laundry workers cannot take one more year of real wage cuts. The wages of Capital and Coast laundry workers
have dropped by more than 20% compared to the minimum wage over the last 4 years."
"Capital and Coast laundry workers are paid almost $1 per hour less than all other public hospital laundry workers in
the lower half of the North Island," she said. "Yet they are being offered a lower increase than that already agreed to
for the other laundry workers."
Capital and Coast laundry workers have only been offered 2.5% plus 2.5% over two years
"Every suggestion that we have put forward at the negotiations such as productivity increases, production bonuses, skill
related pay, saving schemes and changes to work practices have been rejected by the DHB," Maxine Gay said. "The DHB
negotiators have even had the gall to tell the laundry workers that if they make savings or improve productivity, the
DHB will take all this money for "more important" parts of the organisation, rather than increase laundry workers
wages."
"More of the DHB's dirty laundry will be revealed leading up to the strike," concluded Maxine Gay.
ENDS