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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
A cynical exercise in window-dressing
Australian unions campaign for "reasonable" working
hours
By Terry Cook
15 December 2000
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The Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU), the country's
peak union body, is carrying out a campaign for reasonable
working hours. It is highly unlikely that any but a handful
of union members and officials even know of the existence of this
crusade. No mass meetings have been called, and no strikes or
industrial action have taken place.
It began last year with a survey completed in October that
linked workplace-related illness and accidents and the increase
in working hours over the past decade. A year later, ACTU officials
lodged an application with the Australian Industrial Relations
Commission for a test case to insert a reasonable working
hours clause into federal awards. The case was due to begin
in November but has been delayed.
An ACTU spokesman told the World Socialist Web Site
that the hearing was now likely to begin early next year. You
understand, he said, these things take time.
The mixture of bureaucratic lethargy, indifference and cynicism
contained in this offhand remark simply underscores the cosmetic
character of the campaign itself.
For the first half of last century the trade unions sought
the eight-hour day and the 40-hour week, which was finally won
in the late 1940s. The fact that the present campaign is limited
to reasonable working hours indicates just how far
the conditions of workers have deteriorated over the last two
decades. Compulsory overtime, 12-hour shifts, weekend and late
night workin many cases introduced with the agreement of
union leadersas well as constant pressure to work longer
hours, extra shifts and overtime make a mockery of what is now
supposed to be a 38-hour week.
The ACTU campaign will do nothing to halt the trend. What is
reasonable or unreasonable will be left
to subjective interpretation. A successful outcome
to the ACTU's case will simply mean that a clause in the present
awards requiring employees to work a reasonable amount of
overtime will be replaced with one saying that workers will
not be required to work unreasonable hours.
As the same spokesman told the WSWS, what is meant by
unreasonable hours will not be defined in the awards
as this may differ from industry to industry according to
their requirements. Thus there will be no upper limit to
the number of hours an employee can be required to work. It will
be left to negotiations in different industries and workplaces
between employers and the unionsin other words, to the same
people who are responsible for the present state of affairs.
Just how devastating longer hours have been on the lives of
workers was made clear by the contents of the study, which was
commissioned by the ACTU and then buried away.
The survey of 7,000 workers and health and safety delegates
in over 800 workplaces in 13 different industries showed that
little more than a decade after the introduction of the 38-hour
week, 50 percent of workers regularly worked more than 40 hours
weekly, 27 percent more than 45 hours and 12 percent work over
50 hours.
Some 45 percent of the respondents said they worked some unpaid
overtime every week with 13 percent doing 10 or more hours unpaid
work. Just 29 percent said that all their overtime was paid.
One in four of those surveyed said they were working far longer
hours than they worked 12 months earlier and over half of the
7,000 said that long hours, increased shift work and broken shifts
had contributed to health problems.
According to the study, intensive work schedules and longer
hours are linked to a higher risk of heart disease and exacerbate
existing medical problems, including diabetes, epilepsy, hypertension,
asthma and digestive disorders. Those surveyed complained of chronic
fatigue, stress related illness, anxiety and depression. Over
78 percent said they suffered fatigue, either frequently or sometimes.
The study cited recent overseas research showing that people
who work more than 11 hours a day had twice the rate of heart
attacks of those who worked only seven to nine hours.
Over three quarters of the respondents said it was common for
them to work more than five days in a row and 5 percent said they
never had two consecutive days off. One in four said the opportunity
to take regular rest or meal breaks at their workplace had diminished
over recent years.
The survey estimated that fatigue was a contributing factor
in up to 40 percent of industrial and workplace accidents. Over
42 percent of those interviewed claimed that because of fatigue
they had been involved in accidents or near misses. One in seven
said they had had car accidents or near misses travelling between
work and home due to long hours or insufficient rest between shifts.
More than 56 percent indicated that shift work systems operated
in their workplaces but less than a quarter expressed a preference
for shift work. Over 88 percent of those working shifts frequently
had less that 12 hours break between them.
Pointing to the growth of sporadic and broken shifts, 20 percent
of the respondents said they worked shifts of five hours or less
and 30 percent worked shifts of between five and eight hours.
The survey noted that people who worked short shifts and broken
shifts were often prevented from taking any rest breaks.
Interviews in the study revealed that workers are under constant
pressure.
One department store worker in Brisbane said working the extended
hours on Thursday late night shopping had become an ordeal.
She caught two buses across the city to get to work to begin a
12-hour shift. After being on her feet all day and with only a
one-hour break for lunch, she clocked off at 9pm and arrived home
exhausted at 10.45pm. In addition to the Thursdays, she worked
eight-hour shifts on four days and three weekends a month.
She said workloads had increased because jobs had been cut
and workers who leave were not replaced. Casuals may be called
in at peak times but not to cover for workers on sick leave. On
days like Mondays when there are lots of people rostered off,
one staff member can be doing the jobs of more than two or more
people, she said.
Shop assistants suffer from aching legs, varicose veins and
circulation problems from standing for long periods, as well as
from carpal tunnel syndrome and neck and lower back problems from
lifting heavy merchandise.
A customer service officer in a Queensland regional council
office said she now spends more hours on the job. Whereas her
standard shift was once 7 hours and 15 minutes, she now works
eight and half-hours a day. She accumulates flextime but cannot
take it off because she is too busy due to the increased workload
following a company restructure.
Remarking on the impact of long hours on social life, she said:
You get home from work tired and depressed, and become anti-social,
not at all interested in participating in family life.
A worker employed in a welding shop said he had fallen to sleep
at the wheel of his car and veered onto the wrong side of a highway
when he was travelling home after working a 12-hour shift. At
the time he had worked 21 days straight. He said he once worked
on offshore oilrigs in Scotland but gave this away because he
had no family life.
But I am doing the same thing here, working 12-hour night
shifts, leaving home at 3pm for a long drive, working from 5pm
until 5am and then driving home again. My health is suffering
and I feel drained, especially in the summer.
A nurse complained that she sometimes worked eight days straight
if her day off fell at the start of a roster. She said nurses
often finished a late shift at 11pm, drove home, slept and were
back on duty by 7am. This is the minimum time between shifts,
but it is not enough to get home, wind down, finally get some
sleep and then get up early.
An ambulance driver in rural Gippsland, Victoria, said he was
rostered on duty for eight days straight then had six days off.
He worked 10-hour shifts on weekdays and nine-hour shifts on the
weekend. Shift work had taken its toll over the years. I
have had lots of sleep disturbances and have missed many family
events. He complained that he was unable to sleep after
being called out some nights. If I can't sleep I come home
and watch TV. I wake up with a headache the next day, feeling
dreadful, and then go out and do it all again.
The ACTU survey just scratched the surface, of course. In many
cases, workers are compelled by low wages to work longer hours
or even two jobs. For most working class families, two incomes
are now essential to make ends meet. Others have been forced to
become subcontractors and to accept whatever hours and conditions
are dictated in order to get work. Those in full-time work are
often no better off and are forced by the threat of unemployment
to accept appalling conditions.
In these conditions, the ACTU's legal case in the Industrial
Relations Commission for reasonable working hours
is a cynical exercise in window dressing, aimed at diverting attention
from the situation for which the trade unions bear central responsibility.
See Also:
Shift work and ill-health
[6 September 1999]
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