Workers to begin picketing labour-hire companies
For immediate release 26/07/2018
Workers to begin picketing labour-hire companies today as union calls for law change
The union representing over 2,500 labour-hire workers will begin picketing labour-hire companies from today as they call for labour-hire companies to improve business practice, and for the Government to take action to address the exploitation of labour-hire workers.
Around 30 workers from various companies will picket outside Coverstaff in South Auckland today (Thursday 26th July) on the corner of Galway Street and Neilson Street from 1pm to 1:30pm, as part of FIRST Union’s Real Work Real Jobs campaign.
FIRST Union
Transport Logistics and Manufacturing Secretary, Jared
Abbott, says the majority of labour-hire companies are not
operating ethically, and are pushing the laws to the
limits.
“They rely on the fact workers are
desperate for work to avoid the risk of workers seeking
legal remedies. These companies offer employment with almost
no protections for workers, and almost always with contracts
that do not comply with our current
legislation.”
FIRST Union, the largest organisation advocating on behalf of labour-hire workers union is asking the government to allow workers the right to elect permanent employment with the host company where an assignment is for an indefinite period, similar to what currently exists for fixed term employees.
…
What it’s like to be a labour-hire worker…
Labour-hire workers are typically some of the most vulnerable workers; mothers returning to work after having children, young people who’ve just finished secondary school, and recent migrants to New Zealand. They’re almost always on minimum wage and typically work in distribution centres, as courier drivers and for trucking companies.
Mr Abbott says labour-hire workers are more
vulnerable to sexual harassment as the below
distribution worker outlines;
“Me and a labour-hire
worker were being sexually harassed by a manager. The
labour-hire woman went home crying and never came back. I
was a union member and complained to delegates, and we took
action. The manager was eventually terminated but the
labour-hire worker never got her job back.”
The Union
is also aware of claims that some managers working for a
host company have requested sexual acts in exchange for
permanent employment.
It’s also common for companies to
cease employment when they become aware an employee is
pregnant.
He says for most labour-hire
workers job security is a problem that
seeps into every corner of their lives because start and end
dates are not detailed in their contracts, nor is the rate
of pay, type of work, or hours. If the worker wishes to
terminate the work they must give notice of resignation
whereas the company can effectively dismiss workers
without notice.
“If they get sick,
suffer a bereavement, or take leave, they often find their
hours cut or completely lost. They never know if they have a
job the next day, or if they’ll be able to make rent the
next week, afford petrol to get to work, or afford lunch
with for kids.”
A car parts distribution
worker explains, “Over half the staff are labour-hire. If
a manager doesn’t like someone, they just get (the
company) to replace them”.
The lack of job
security also means workers are too fearful to
complain about anything. They do not wish to come
across as ungrateful, or to give the employer a reason to
cut their hours or dismiss them. Most are barely able to
make ends meet, so to be terminated and face a mandatory
13-week stand down from the Jobseeker’s benefit is to
greater risk for them.
A labour-hire worker for a major
supermarket retailer details, “It’s difficult. There’s
no stability. If we stuff up one day, you go home and
you’re panicking thinking they might let me go the next
day. It’s bad. It’s horrible. I just don’t
understand”.
Workers are also afraid to bring
up health and safety concerns, when they do, they
risk being terminated as this employee details, ““I was
told to wear a failed harness, that was completely unsafe,
by my supervisor. They told me to suck it up and get on with
it, just to wear it anyway. That it’s not likely that I am
going to die if I fall. I raised a genuine concern about my
safety and the manager warned me that I am an agency worker
and that if I was too difficult then (they would end the
contract)”.
The lack of job security causes financial hardship. Proof of fulltime permanent work is needed to rent or buy a house which labour-hire workers cannot provide. This often results in borrowing form unscrupulous lenders at much higher interest rates than banks.
…
FIRST Union’s executive summary included in its submission on the Employment Relations (Triangular Employment) Amendment Bill
The core problem with the current practise of labour hire work is that the workers have limited, if any, job security.
FIRST Union believes the following four amendments will deal with the loopholes without impacting genuine labour hire situations:
1. The Bill should be extended to allow labour-hire workers to elect the host company as their employer if their employment is for an unlimited duration.
2. The union believes that when a labour hire worker commences working on a site where a collective agreement is present, the worker should be automatically covered by the terms and conditions of the most advantageous collective, which covers the work they are performing.
3. The worker should be able to automatically join the host employer as a party to the personal grievance, rather than having to apply to the Employment Relations Authority.
4. The language and definitions used in the current Bill have the potential to create confusion in certain scenarios.
We acknowledge there are limited circumstances in which labour hire arrangements are genuine and work for both parties. However, our submission will address the large majority of labour hire arrangements which are disingenuous and simply serve to replace permanent jobs with insecure jobs.
Real Work Real Jobs
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Workersfirst article:
https://workersfirst.nz/2018/07/26/workers-to-begin-picketing-labour-hire-companies-today-as-union-calls-for-law-change/
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