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Delayed Until Start Of New Union Access Code (Read 435 times)
whiteknight
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Delayed Until Start Of New Union Access Code
Jan 15th, 2019 at 4:34am
 
Government tenders delayed until start of ACT's new union access code   Smiley

15 January 2019
Sydney Morning Herald
 

Tenders for government services that were due to expire before the end of last year were pushed back so they could be covered by the ACT's new union access code, it can be revealed.


Traffic management is one of four industries where new procurement laws apply from January 15.

From Tuesday, construction, security, cleaning and traffic companies who want to vie for ACT government work will have to hold a Secure Local Jobs Code certificate, which requires them to be audited at least every 18 months to ensure they have not underpaid their staff.

The companies also have to comply with the code, which requires them to hand over addresses, working hours and contact details associated with the work to a Secure Local Jobs registrar, so unions can exercise their right of entry. Employers also have to give new employees union membership forms to be code-compliant.   Smiley

So far, just 37 businesses have obtained a certificate from across the four industries. A total of 55 applications have been filed.


But the tenderers in this small pool will soon be the only ones able to tender for ACT government work in those four industries, and tenders that should have gone out last year were purposefully delayed so only code-certified companies could apply.


An ACT government spokeswoman confirmed that a number of long-term contracts for existing services that were due for renewal in late 2018 were deferred until the code became operational.

"Interim arrangements have been put in place to allow new tenders to be undertaken following the commencement of the Secure Local Jobs Code," she said.

"One tender was recalled in late 2018. The delegate decided to delay the tender until the Secure Local Jobs Code was implemented. This decision was made to ensure a fairer procurement process and better outcomes for Canberra workers.

The government did not respond to questions about how many tenders were delayed, nor the value of those tenders. The spokeswoman also did not state what the value of the recalled tender was.

It is also not clear what the tenders were for, or what industry they related to.

ACT opposition industrial relations spokesman Andrew Wall said he remained concerned about the introduction of the code.

Mr Wall has been contacted by business owners who believe the code is too onerous and takes away the scalability of their operations.

He said one had told him it was "not viable to do business with the ACT government anymore".

"The fact only 37 businesses are compliant across the four sectors is deeply concerning and raises questions about how we will get value for money for taxpayers," Mr Wall said.
Related Article   Smiley
Workplace relations minister Rachel Stephen-Smith. The ACT government has set a new policy forcing public service bosses to actively encourage their staff to join a union.
Industrial relations
ACT executives must now encourage public servants to join a union

"If only 37 are qualified it also indicates delays on the government's part in allowing business to go through certification, but also signals barriers for businesses signing up to the new code and taking on government work."

Eight businesses have also applied for an exemption from the code, although none have been approved so far.

The exemption exists for companies caught between the ACT code and Commonwealth laws like the Federal Building Code.

There was concern parts of the code - like allowing union workplace delegates paid time to attend union training or industrial tribunals - could be seen as giving union members more benefits in the workplace,  thus breaching the freedom of association provisions of the Federal Building Code.

However the Australian Building and Construction Commission said it was possible for businesses to tread a fine line between both codes.

“While there may be some potential for conflict between the ACT code and the Commonwealth code, subject to how contractors implement the ACT code, it is possible to comply with both codes," a spokesman said.

“The [commission] is available to provide advice and assistance to contractors in relation to their particular circumstances.
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whiteknight
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Re: Delayed Until Start Of New Union Access Code
Reply #1 - Jan 15th, 2019 at 6:27am
 
ACT executives must now encourage public servants to join a union   Smiley

24 December 2018
Canberra Times


ACT government executives must "actively encourage" their staff to join a union, under a new policy that has been criticised as politicising the public service.

Directorate bosses now have to supply new starters with union membership forms and fee structures, according to the new "Union Encouragement Policy" distributed to ACT public servants last week.
.

Workplace relations minister Rachel Stephen-Smith. The ACT government has set a new policy forcing public service bosses to actively encourage their staff to join a union.

The policy requires all executives, managers and supervisors to put aside their personal views, and adopt a "positive and supportive role, not simply passively accept membership recruitment and representative activity by unions".   Smiley

Union officials or representatives also must be given the chance to recruit new members during work hours "provided that work is not unreasonably disrupted".


They must also be invited to address new employees as an "integral" part of their inductions.

An accompanying letter from the deputy director-general of workforce capability and governance Meredith Whitten said the policy "clearly articulates to managers and staff what a positive relationship with unions looks like".

The policy, signed off on in June by Chief Minister Andrew Barr and Workplace Relations Minister Rachel Stephen-Smith, was one championed by Unions ACT, with the full support of the CPSU and other affiliated unions, CPSU ACT Regional Secretary Brooke Muscat-Bentley said

Ms Muscat-Bentley said union membership in the ACT public service had been "under significant pressure" for decades now, in line with declining membership across the Australian economy.

However she said CPSU membership had been growing in the ACT public service , which had given the union a stronger voice at the bargaining table.

“This policy is more about providing some local solutions to what’s a national problem. The Liberal and National parties have been doing everything they can to discourage union membership, knowing that serves their friends at the big end of town, so we think it’s time the balance was restored," Ms Muscat-Bentley said.   Smiley


“Some areas of the ACT public service have been unnecessarily hostile to union members, with morale and working conditions in those directorates suffering accordingly and casualisation increasing. Those negative outcomes hurt not just workers but ACT residents who rely on the services they provide.”

However the Canberra Liberals' industrial relations spokesman Andrew Wall said the policy rang alarm bells for him, as it demonstrated that unions continued to exert influence over the decisions of government.

The CPSU is also the dominant union in the local Labor party, and Mr Wall said he feared this was an attempt to "overly politicise the public service".

"Labor members of the Assembly, including Rachel Stephen-Smith have made it undoubtedly clear in the chamber the Labor party and the union movement are one and actively encouraging union membership in that instance is flying very close to politicising the public service," Mr Wall said.


"This is a classic example of the faceless men and women of Labor calling the shots over those elected to office."

Mr Wall also said he was concerned the policy could be in breach of the Fair Work Act, which also gives people the right not to join a union, as well as the freedom to associate.

However a spokeswoman for Ms Stephen-Smith said the policy was not a requirement for public servants to join a union, and the government would not apply pressure on staff to do so.

" The policy is designed to provide ACT public service staff, particularly new staff, with information about the unions that represent them and actively encourages staff to participate in their union," she said.   Smiley

"This policy does not disadvantage staff who choose not to join a union, and the government does not condone any measures or policies that may disadvantage staff that are not part of a union."

The Barr government has reshaped its industrial relations policies this year in consultation with unions.

Companies that want to tender for ACT government contracts in the areas of construction, security, cleaning, and traffic management will need to be audited to prove they have not ripped off their workers starting January 15. 

They'll also have to comply with a Secure Local Jobs Code, which requires them to give new starters union membership forms, allow union fees to be directly debited and to give union officials access to their photocopiers and tea rooms.   Smiley
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aquascoot
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Re: Delayed Until Start Of New Union Access Code
Reply #2 - Jan 15th, 2019 at 7:04am
 
LOL.
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juliar
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Re: Delayed Until Start Of New Union Access Code
Reply #3 - Jan 15th, 2019 at 8:23am
 
The boring ineffective old union propaganda parrot BlackDay is really squawking the GetUp! union Greeny trash at full volume.

The sad sack is slowly realizing his hero Bilious Billy is steadily slipping as nauseated frightened voters look the other way.

Will the Labor Titanic founder on the pensioner iceberg ?
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whiteknight
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Re: Delayed Until Start Of New Union Access Code
Reply #4 - Jan 15th, 2019 at 8:27am
 
Companies that want to tender for ACT government contracts in the areas of construction, security, cleaning, and traffic management will need to be audited to prove they have not ripped off their workers starting January 15.   Smiley
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juliar
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Re: Delayed Until Start Of New Union Access Code
Reply #5 - Jan 15th, 2019 at 8:39am
 
Gosh GetUp! must have put a bomb under the slack ineffective union propaganda parrot BlackDay who is now squawking nonsense waffle uncontrollably.

The tide is slowly turning as the apathetic voters slowly awake in fright when confronted with the horror of a very destructive incompetent union and Greeny controlled  Labor "govt" which would be the WORST "GOVT" IN AUSTRALIA's HISTORY!!!!
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stunspore
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Re: Delayed Until Start Of New Union Access Code
Reply #6 - Jan 15th, 2019 at 8:43am
 
Following rules that protect workers is a good thing.
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juliar
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Re: Delayed Until Start Of New Union Access Code
Reply #7 - Jan 15th, 2019 at 9:06am
 
The threatened pensioners HATE LABOR with a vengeance. And the grey vote is VERY POWERFUL.
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stunspore
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Re: Delayed Until Start Of New Union Access Code
Reply #8 - Jan 15th, 2019 at 10:36am
 
juliar wrote on Jan 15th, 2019 at 9:06am:
The threatened pensioners HATE LABOR with a vengeance. And the grey vote is VERY POWERFUL.


They know what's good for their kids - a bit of sacrifice so their kids and grandkids have a better future than the coalition wasteland.  Besides they won't be hanging around for long to keep voting for failed coalition governments.  Not with cuts to medicare and pensions.
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