Friday, 7 May 2021, 1:08 pm
Today’s long-awaited announcement that Fair Pay
Agreements (FPAs) are on the way for historically underpaid
workforces like bus drivers, supermarket staff, healthcare
workers and cleaners is a welcome landmark and could be the
beginning of reclaiming those industries from a legacy of
low pay and precarity, FIRST Union said today.
FIRST
Union represents bus drivers and supermarket workers
nationally and will likely be beginning the FPA processes
outlined by the Government after legislation passes through
Parliament. Secretaries of FIRST Union outlined the
potential impact of FPAs on the separate halves of the
union’s membership: One of the major issues in
Press Release – First Union Todays long-awaited announcement that Fair Pay Agreements (FPAs) are on the way for historically underpaid workforces like bus drivers, supermarket staff, healthcare workers and cleaners is a welcome landmark and could be the beginning of reclaiming …
Today’s long-awaited announcement that Fair Pay Agreements (FPAs) are on the way for historically underpaid workforces like bus drivers, supermarket staff, healthcare workers and cleaners is a welcome landmark and could be the beginning of reclaiming those industries from a legacy of low pay and precarity, FIRST Union said today.
FIRST Union represents bus drivers and supermarket workers nationally and will likely be beginning the FPA processes outlined by the Government after legislation passes through Parliament. Secretaries of FIRST Union outlined the potential impact of FPAs on the separate halves of the union’s membership:
Last week’s illegal lockout of Wellington-based NZ Bus drivers has yet again shown us that private businesses simply aren’t fit to run New Zealand’s bus systems, with this lockout becoming the latest in a long line of failures and breakdowns under the ‘PTOM’ privatisation experiment that must end now, FIRST Union said today.
The Public Transport Operating Model (PTOM) is a framework developed in 2009 between Government, councils and private operators like NZ Bus that underpins the delivery of bus services around the country, and represents the most recent iteration in a series of moves to privatise public transport over several decades. Jared Abbott, FIRST Union Secretary for Transport, said that privatisation has meant a race to the bottom on bus drivers’ wages and conditions as companies compete for the lowest bids to deliver services, resulting in poor wages and conditions, strikes, lockouts and reduced services nationally.
Government told to include fully funded ambulance services in health reform
28 Apr, 2021 11:11 PM
3 minutes to read
Rolling ambulance services into Health NZ is vital, a First Union spokesperson says. Photo / Michael Craig
Rolling ambulance services into Health NZ is vital, a First Union spokesperson says. Photo / Michael Craig
RNZ
By Adam Jacobson of RNZ
The Government is being told its huge health system overhaul should include a fully funded ambulance service.
In countries like the United Kingdom and Canada, ambulances are paid for by their governments - but here in Aotearoa the St John service relies in part on donations and volunteers.
Press Release – First Union Last weeks illegal lockout of Wellington-based NZ Bus drivers has yet again shown us that private businesses simply arent fit to run New Zealands bus systems, with this lockout becoming the latest in a long line of failures and breakdowns under …
Last week’s illegal lockout of Wellington-based NZ Bus drivers has yet again shown us that private businesses simply aren’t fit to run New Zealand’s bus systems, with this lockout becoming the latest in a long line of failures and breakdowns under the ‘PTOM’ privatisation experiment that must end now, FIRST Union said today.