90 Day Bill - What’s the hurry
9 December 2008
The newly formed Tertiary Education Union (TEU) is calling for the government to take a breath and reassess its
priorities before urgently rushing through its proposed amendment to the Employment Relations Act. The amendment would
deny employees who work in small to medium businesses protection against unfair dismissal within their first 90 days of
employment.
“The first hundred days of a new government are meant to signal innovative changes that shape the rest of its term,”
said one of the TEU’s transitional national secretaries, Nanette Cormack. “And yet, from this National-led government
today we apparently find that one of the biggest, most urgent matters it wants to deal with is to give small employers
the absolute right to indiscriminately fire workers. It seems that this needs to be dealt with more urgently than the
international financial crises, or before other environmental and social problems.
“The question workers will be asking is ‘What is the rush?’” stated the TEU’s other transitional national secretary,
Sharn Riggs. “Why has the 90 day probation bill been put into urgency just before Christmas?”
“National knows that hundreds of thousands of workers and their unions opposed its last 90 day bill,” said Ms Riggs.
“And those workers campaigned with other New Zealanders to win political support from the Mâori Party to defeat the
bill. It appears this time the National-led government does not want to take the chance of allowing the public to have
their say. Hopefully the Mâori Party will continue to oppose this ill conceived bill.”
ENDS