Baiada Poultry

I hope everyone enjoyed their Christmas yesterday, whatever you ended up doing. I spent the day, as I do every year, with my large family, which seems to grow every year.

This picture may make you thirsty for that cool, refreshing Schweppervescence, which is actually not the point Ged's trying to get across.

Like many Australians, I’m looking forward to spending the next few weeks, relaxing, doing some reading, hanging out at the beach, catching up with family and friends – and doing a few chores around the house that I’ve been putting off for far too long.

But, of course, many others worked yesterday, and will be working during the summer break. When I was a nurse, I often worked on public holidays, including Christmas, which gave me a real appreciation of the penalty rates unions have won as compensation for those rostered on at those times.

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  • Steve says:

    01:40pm | 29/12/11

    Employers give money / Unions take money from workers. (and spend it on themselves on brothels , holidays etc. Unions block young workers from getting jobs by keeping the cushy scams going other older union members. Read more »

  • Wilma J Craig says:

    11:42am | 29/12/11

    Gabrielle, She did not do that she simply got up, walked across to her niece, tossed the rag into her lap and said ” Sue, you can wear this yourself & if it doesn’t fit then take it back where you got it from” She is 88 & doesn’t drive… Read more »

 

Until the dramatic events of Friday night, the Baiada Poultry dispute in suburban Melbourne had not had the publicity of Qantas. That’s a shame because the gutsy fight by low-paid Baiada workers is just as important in the fight for fair treatment at work.

Baiada workers, like this chook, have their hands tied by greater powers. Pic: John Fotiadis.

Media coverage has focused on the clashes between police and workers, but has ignored the basic issues at stake. A couple of hundred low-paid workers have been forced to take legal industrial action because their employer has refused to bargain with them.

They are taking collective action in an attempt to stop the spread of insecure work – and ensure that Baiada workers on low wages have some certainty around their jobs and basic rights to sick leave and holiday pay.

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  • Jill Morton. says:

    10:59am | 20/03/12

    Well count your blessings you have jobs, or is Baiada also moving to China like hundreds of other companies? What has the union done for the thousands of workers who have lost their jobs in the last few months because of Manufacturing companies closing down altogether or simply moving to… Read more »

  • Been There, Seen All says:

    04:04pm | 14/12/11

    Robert Smissen Of rural SA, when was it the last time you’ve worked at any of Baiada’s plants as a forklift operator to have an idea how it was to be trained not to drive/operate an unsafe forklift truck, asked to sign a form that you have been trained not… Read more »

 

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