Thousands rally against Government wage freeze
27 November 2009
For immediate release
Thousands rally
against Government wage freeze
Thousands of low
paid workers took the streets of New Zealand from Kaitaia to
Invercargill today.
Service & Food Workers Union
members joined with PSA and NZEI members to protest against
the National Government’s wage freeze at marches and
rallies in 27 towns and cities throughout the country. The
rallies passed a resolution calling on the National
Government to end its wage freeze on low-paid state-funded
workers’ pay.
More than 1000 workers converged
from two directions in Auckland’s Queen St to meet up for
a rally in the Methodist Mission hall where they were
addressed by Labour-leader Phil Goff.
He told them
he supported their fight for a fair pay rise. He slammed
Bill English for threatening to freeze state-sector pay for
five years.
“A wage freeze while prices are going
up, is the same as a pay cut,” Goff said.
Nearly
1000 Wellington SFWU members and others swarmed over the
Parliament grounds to make their opposition to the
Government’s unfair “wage restraint”
policy.
Five hundred gathered in Christchurch and
four hundred in Dunedin to deliver their message of
opposition to the government’s wage freeze. Three
hundred and fifty rallied in Hamilton and more than 100 in
Rotorua, with Gisborne reaching similar figures at their
rally. Elsewhere large numbers turned out: Whanganui (230),
Palmerston North (200), Timaru (200), Invercargill
(150).
In Hawera 60 workers marched to the office
of local MP Chester Borrows and demanded he listen to them.
The workers asked Chester Borrows and the Minister of Labour
Kate Wilkinson to lift the wage freeze, and a number of
union members asked them questions. One community services
member who works for IHC told Chester Borrows that as a solo
parent he can barely survive on the wages he is
paid.
Speakers from the Labour Party and the Green Party addressed rallies around the country, and were well received.
“Low-paid workers are standing up and
fighting back,” SFWU National President Barbara Wyeth told
Auckland members. “I am extremely proud of our members’
fighting spirit. They will not, and should not, have to
accept the equivalent of a one-week’s pay cut over a year
which is what a zero per cent pay offer really
means.”
She said it was time for the country’s
wealth to be shared more fairly.
“Why should the
lowest paid always have to bear the brunt of crises that are
not of their making?” said
Wyeth.
ENDS