LIBS CONFIRM
WORKERS'
FEARS BY
DODGING
IR
QUESTIONS
11
March 2010
SA
Unions
says the
Liberal
Party's
decision
not to
publicly
reveal
details
of its
Industrial
Relations
policy
will
send a
shiver
down the
spine of
every
worker
who
values
their
job and
their
pay.
The
Independent
Weekly (Indaily,
10 March
am
edition)
reports
Liberal
Industrial
Relations
spokesman
Iain
Evans
says his
party
would
not be
announcing
an IR
policy
in the
state
election
campaign.
SA
Unions
Secretary,
Janet
Giles
says Mr
Evans
also
showed a
distinct
lack of
knowledge
of the
current
industrial
arrangements
- such
as the
entire
public
sector
and all
of local
government
is
covered
by state
industrial
laws.
"He
seems to
not
understand
the
difference
between
the
state
and
federal
IR
systems
and
indicated
that the
SA
Liberals
IR
position
would be
dictated
by their
federal
masters."
"This
means
Isobel
Redmond's
SA
Liberals
are
simply
puppets
for Tony
Abbott
and Nick
Minchin
and
their
extreme
IR
views",
she
says.
"Contrary
to what
Mr Evans
says, we
HAVE
written
to Ms
Redmond
and
asked
her to
make
specific
commitments
on
Industrial
Relations,
including
a
guarantee
to not
reintroduce
the
discredited
federal
Liberal
WorkChoices
regime,
a
guarantee
to
maintain
protections
against
unfair
dismissals,
and a
guarantee
not to
reintroduce
individual
contracts,
which
slash
take
home
pay."
"News
that the
federal
Liberals
will be
controlling
state
workplace
laws
should a
Redmond
government
be
elected
means
people's
jobs and
pay
packets
won't be
safe."
"This
is
scarily
similar
to
what's
happening
in
Western
Australia.
The
Liberals
there
were
quite on
IR too,
until
they
were
elected.
Now
they're
moving
to cut
working
conditions,
slash
pay
through
individual
contracts
and
remove
protection
from
being
unfairly
sacked."
"We're
so
concerned
that
voters
are
being
kept in
the dark
and
won't be
properly
informed
ahead of
voting
day that
we've
urgently
produced
radio
advertisements
warning
people
of the
danger.
The
ads go
to air
from
today,
to
ensure
people
realise
what a
vote for
a
Redmond
Liberal
government
could
cost
them,"
Ms Giles
says.