Rendezvous Hotel lockout ended
30 June 2010
for immediate release
Rendezvous Hotel
lockout ended
Housekeeping staff at the Rendezvous
Hotel in Auckland are back at work today, having this
morning ratified an agreement won after 13 days locked out
by their employer without pay.
Service and Food
Workers Union Nga Ringa Tota Northern Regional Secretary
Jill Ovens says members won a pay increase of up to 2% for a
one-year term, and kept their sick leave, after an 11-hour
mediation yesterday.
The Union says the Hotel had
wanted to cut back on sick leave, which was a big issue for
the members as they have to clean 18 rooms a shift - well
above the industry norm.
"Housekeepers are under so
much pressure, they often go without rest breaks and work
past knock-off time, so they're getting run down," Jill
Ovens says.
Rendezvous Hotel workers get seven days
sick leave in New Zealand, compared with hotel workers in
Australia who get a minimum of 10 days sick leave.
Rendezvous Hotels operate in all major Australian
cities.
The Union says the 13-day lockout has been
very harsh on members whose families are on low incomes and
depend on the money the housekeepers bring
in.
"They are struggling to make ends meet, even
though the money we have raised from other unions and the
community, and the money from our own strike fund has meant
our members have been able to put food on the table and pay
some of their bills," Jill Ovens says.
"But the
reality is, today's pay packet will be empty after 13 days
of lockout."
Jill Ovens says members on work
permits suffered exceptional hardship as they were not
entitled to any assistance from Work and
Income.
ENDS