Red Alert

Posts Tagged ‘waikato’

New generation heroes

Posted by Trevor Mallard on October 18th, 2009

trevor

These two guys are delegates at Open Country Cheese. On the left is Lotao Aliimatafitafi and Dave te Iringa is on the right.

They, with the rest of their team have done a great job in building community support – though to be fair Talleys and the manager have helped a lot too.  

I can’t go into details on the current state of the dispute.  My briefing was confidential.

Lotao is a pretty recent employee. People who have been around rugby circles might remember him as a talented young front rower a few years back. He has been playing professional rugby in France for the last five years.

Dave is the guy that management accussed of breaking a van window with a rock. Their problem was that they supplied the Police with a video that showed Dave was rolling a smoke with two hands throughout the incident which looks like it was caused by a stone from a preceeding car. While some of my colleagues past and present might regard rolling a smoke as a worse thing to do it isn’t illegal.

Being delegates isn’t easy at the best of time. Leading during a lockout in a rural area is tough. Good work guys.


Smoking, Alcohol and Pregnancy

Posted by Sue Moroney on October 14th, 2009

Recently, a local bar in Hamilton advertised a P-Party to students which enticed them to dress up and drink at their establishment.
Happens all the time. Only this bar used the image of a naked, smoking, pregnant woman to advertise this event.
I think the association of drinking and smoking with pregnancy as an advertising ploy is abhorrent and severly undermines the interests of children.
Perhaps other people find it attracive enough to entice them to go drinking at the establishment.
What do others think.


Off your butt Wilkinson

Posted by Trevor Mallard on September 30th, 2009

How is it possible that the Department of Labour mediation service hasn’t got the parties together in the Open Country Cheese dispute. Here we have an employer continuing a lockout in clear defiance of an Employment Court ruling and no sign of action from Kate Wilkinson’s Department.

If it had been a union defying a court ruling like this we would be hearing volumes from the Minister of Labour, the Prime Minister, Employers’ organisations etc.

Just because there is a recess on there is no excuse to go on a stopwork yourself Kate.


Crying over spilt milk

Posted by Sue Moroney on September 19th, 2009

Talley’s-owned Open Country Cheese was caught pouring sludge from its factory in Waharoa directly into the Waitoa River this morning because it insists on using scab labour to keep production going instead of paying standard industry wages and giving some job security to its staff.

The use of untrained staff during this dispute has now polluted the river and we’ll all have to pay through our rates in the Waikato to have it cleaned up.

Apparently, sludge which is normally collected by trucks and spread on farms, has poured into the river instead.

That river runs down the back of the dairy farm I was brought up on. I just hope the environmental damage is reversible.

I certainly know that OCCs harsh stance against its staff can be reversed, so I’ll be heading over to join the picket line tomorrow.

Now OCC has proven to be irresponsible on two fronts – firstly they undermine the industry with sub-standard wages and conditions and now they think they can pollute the waterways.

That’s a disgrace.


Public transport freeze hits Hamilton

Posted by Sue Moroney on September 9th, 2009

This week, the Waikato Regional Passenger Transport Committee got the bad news from the New Zealand Transport Agency that the funding that had been destined for public transport has been “redirected” by the Government into building more roads.

I must admit that I felt sorry for the councillors as I watched their discomfort at hearing this news.

I imagine some of them felt a bit conflicted, because they had argued so vigorously for the Waikato Expressway to be the top transport priority for the region.

I could see the realisation of how that campaign has been used against them start to dawn on their faces.

However, they are not to blame. They chose that priority for the region when Labour was in Government and they were never going to have to sacrifice one for the other. Labour’s committment to progressively improving public transport had enabled Hamilton’s bus patronage to increase by 9% per annum in recent years.

With the change in Government, this has all changed. The Government funding for public transport for the region will only increase by 3% next year and then will be frozen for the next two years.

With 9% growth in the use of buses in Hamilton, this means that either services will have to be cut and/or passenger fares will have to increase significantly.

Both options will force people off buses and back into their cars. Smart eh?

It also makes it virtually impossible for the Hamilton to Auckland passenger train service to be established even if the proposed trial is successful.

What a great leap backwards.


OCC v dairy workers – could be big one

Posted by Trevor Mallard on September 9th, 2009

There have been no major strikes  in the dairy industry in over 20 years. The union is generally seen as one that works very constructively with employers especially on productivity and literacy.

Enter Open Country Cheese (and especially Talleys who seem to have the worst industrial relations reputation in NZ).

They have attempted to compete with not only really favourable milk price arrangements but also with  lower wages than other companies.

The union has not been able to negotiate a fair industrial agreement. It has given 14 days notice of industrial action.

OCCs (Talley’s) response has been interesting. Their chair Laurie Margrain has called the industrial action “wildcat” – with 14 days notice – huh.

He has then called for the dairy industry to get the same level of recognition as an essential industry as the Police.  Even Kate Wilkinson isn’t that gulliable. But no offer to have binding arbitration as with the Police.

But now he has issued a lock-out notice for a six week period.

So we have moved from an industry where any strike action was terrible to one where the employer is going on strike for six weeks. Weird.

This dispute has the potential to be a very big one.


Culture No Excuse!

Posted by Nanaia Mahuta on August 18th, 2009

Well I’ve read the blogs and seen the media reports on the Janet Moses case. Plenty of people would have expressed an opinion on many aspects of the case. But the Judge after considering all the information has found five whanau members criminally responsible for a death to lift makutu(commonly referred to as a curse) thereby issuing a community sentence.

To criticise the sentence on a matter of race is ridiculous, the general mantra in Parliament is that there is one law for all. There is enough evidence in Aotearoa/NewZealand that it may be so but Maaori tend to factor negatively in all aspects of the justice system.

But the real debate here is the use of a cultural practice which in this case has led to a tragic outcome. The belief amongst Maori that Makutu exists is still apparent, as much so as those beliefs that people can be healed in the name of Jesus Christ. You wouldn’t find the aunties and uncles talking about Makutu over a cup of tea, in fact you would rarely hear anything remotely connected to a conversation of that sort. But the reality is that many people recognise it is apart of a cultural belief system.

As the whaanau connections of the Moses family link to Tainui it seems to me that their use of a cultural practice to repel evil spirits defied something I had learned long ago. Tawhiao freed his people from the use of Makutu recognising that there are some practices best left in the past with our tuupuna. Culture is no excuse for practices that lead to the harm of others- there is simply no excuse for extreme measures!


Why do the Nats Hate Rail so Much?

Posted by Sue Moroney on August 5th, 2009

The National Party’s hatred of public transport has been exposed in the Waikato, with their Hamilton-based MPs arguing against a Hamilton City Council proposal to establish a passenger train service between Hamilton and Auckland.

Now why would local MPs argue against adding an additional service for local people, particularly when a recent survey showed 85% support from ratepayers to subsidise such a service? Very curious.

Now, before bloggers trot out the Crosby-Textor line about how much Kiwirail cost to buy back remember that we had to buy it back  because the Nats sold it in the first place so it doesn’t wash as a the reason why they are so opposed a passenger transport service between Hamilton and Auckland.

Nat MP David Bennett’s contention that he doesn’t want a diesel train polluting the atmosphere doesn’t stack up given that the proposal would take 70+ cars off the road each day and that he is in the thick of fast-tracking a rule change that allows juggernaut diesel-pumping trucks on our roads that are simply not built to carry those weights.

On that issue, both Waipa District Council and Environment Waikato have voted to oppose the juggernaut rule change. Both Waipa and Waikato District Council’s noted the pressure coming from Government to stop promoting rail when they debated their positions on the rule change. You can sense how intimidated the councils were feeling by reading the Waikato Times article here.

For the record, Hamilton is our fourth-largest city and it is 120kms away from Auckland (largest city). Now where else in the developed world would you find that situation with a railway line between the two, the Government owning the railways and the train but still no passenger train service between the two?

So, who is prepared to hazard a guess on the real reason the Nats oppose rail transport.


Stop them dairying

Posted by Trevor Mallard on July 23rd, 2009

The Crafer family have for years been New Zealand’s biggest dirty dairy corporate farmers. They have multiple convictions and never learn. They have done  more harm to our international reputation than all other dairy farmers in the country put together. It is time for the dairy companies to say enough is enough and agree to not take their milk from say the end of this year.

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