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Australia: Unions collaborate with Qantas to slash wages and
conditions
By Terry Cook
18 February 2008
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With the assistance of Australian airline unions, Qantas, the
countrys largest carrier, is pushing through a fundamental
restructure of its operations to slash wages, dismantle longstanding
working conditions and impose ever-greater levels of workplace
flexibility.
Earlier this month the Australian Licensed Aircraft Engineers
Association (ALAEA) leadership brokered a deal with Qantas, reducing
the unions original pay claim and delivering substantial
concessions on rostering and the use of contractors. That the
deal represented a total capitulation to the companys demands
did not stop ALEA federal secretary Wayne Vasta claiming it to
be a win for our members. The union, he said, was
happy with the outcome.
The four-year agreement gives engineers, who must sign off
all aircraft before the planes enter service, a pay rise of just
3 percent annually, backdated one year, with an additional 1 percent
paid as part of the employers contribution to superannuation.
The deal is below the 5 percent originally sought and does not
compensate for the current official 3.5 percent inflation rate,
which is predicted to rise by the end of 2008.
In addition, the ALAEA leadership has given management complete
control of rostering, which will adversely affect engineers
penalty rates and allow the company to impose rosters of 9.5,
10.9 and even 12 hours to meet the traffic schedules of Qantass
new A380 fleet. All roster changes had to be negotiated with the
union under previous agreements.
The agreement also lifts restrictions on the employment of
fixed-term contract workers and accepts changes demanded by Qantas
to increase the number of part-time and casual workers and dictate
where they can be used across the companys operations.
Qantas chief executive Geoff Dixon hailed the agreement, declaring
it would provide Qantas Engineering with the workplace co-operation,
flexibility and efficiencies it needs to meet cost and competitive
pressures. In other words, Qantas will enhance its competitive
position and boost profits directly at the expense of its licensed
engineering staff.
While Dixon claimed the agreement was the result of intense
negotiations in recent weeks, the truth is Qantas had threatened
the licensed engineers with a strikebreaking operation if they
persisted in commencing overtime and other bans on January 9 as
part of a campaign to win the original pay claim.
At the end of last December it was revealed that Qantas had
engaged an Australian-based labour hire company to recruit alternative
engineers for strikebreaking. The hire company had already begun
to approach former licensed engineers, including some of the engineers
Qantas had made redundant just one year ago. The hire firm offered
a six-month contract with a total salary of $100,000, almost double
the pay of existing staff.
The ALAEA, rather than develop a campaign against the strike-breaking
threat and turn to other airline workers for support, dropped
its threatened bans and rushed into closed-door negotiations with
the company, scheduled to drag on at least until early February.
The timing of the ALAEA decision was significant. It came just
days before Flight Attendants Association of Australia (FAAA)
members were to vote in secret ballots on January 12 on a union-brokered
agreement for long-haul cabin crews that slashed the wages and
conditions of new starters and locked current crews into a 3 percent
pay increase annually for five years.
The deal allowed Qantas to hire 2,000 new crew members, paying
them just $55,000 a year, including allowances, or 25 percent
less than the current long-haul staff. At the same time, the new
recruits will have to work for 30 percent longer or 250 hours
across an eight-week roster. In effect, hourly wages for new starters
have been cut by more than half.
Like his ALAEA counterpart, FAAA International Division Michael
Mijatov hailed the wage-cutting deal with Qantas, claiming that
it would enable an unprecedented positive and secure future
for long-haul crews. The agreement actually does the opposite,
with the new two-tier wage system exerting constant downward pressure
on wages. Qantas will ruthlessly exploit this in future agreements.
When current crew members leave or retire they can be substituted
with new recruits on the inferior conditions negotiated by the
FAAA. In fact, the 2,000 new starters are essentially replacing
the jobs of 1,500 full-time long-haul staff eliminated in previous
downsizing.
The FAAA executive secured a yes vote for the deal last month
at a host of small off-duty membership meetings in the run up
to a secret ballot. No mass meetings were held, thereby ensuring
that arguments for a no vote could not reach a broad audience.
The FAAA executive insisted there was no alternative and threatened
that if the agreement were rejected Qantas could, under existing
industrial law, employ offshore or set up a new subsidiary company
to hire crews under so-called green-field site agreements with
inferior conditions.
No doubt the ALAEA decision to suspend work bans added to the
pressure being exerted on FAAA members to accept the agreement.
The union officials effectively undermined the possibility of
simultaneous industrial action by engineers and long-haul crew.
That the FAAA settled its dispute will now be used, in turn, to
put pressure on the licensed engineers to accept the ALAEA-negotiated
deal. Both settlements will be used as benchmarks to impose similar
conditions on other sections of Qantas workers, throughout the
airline industry and across industry generally.
The role of the ALAEA and FAAA leadership further demonstrates
that the major concern of the unions is not the defence of the
conditions of their members. Their prime aim is establishing their
position as industrial policeman under the industrial regime being
established by the Rudd Labor government.
Earlier this month, around 200 officials from all trade unions
met in Canberra over three days to discuss the unions relationship
with the Rudd government. By the end of the conference they had
accepted the governments demand for wage restraint
in the so-called fight against inflation.
Australian Council of Trade Unions president Sharon Burrow
declared that the union movement was prepared
to play its part ...to stave off inflation. This included
restricting pay increases and delivering productivity and
savings in superannuation. The FAAA and ALAEA agreements
are a warning of where this will lead.
Licensed engineers must reject the Qantas-ALAEA deal and begin
organising industrial action to defend their living standards
and hard-won working conditions. This requires a turn to other
airline employees and all sections of the working class. Above
all, engineers need to recognise that this requires a political
struggle against the union leadership and Labor government.
See Also:
Qantas prepares strike-breaking
operation against licensed engineers
[4 January 2008]
Australia: Qantas-union
deal will set new benchmark to cut pay and conditions
[7 December 2007]
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