On the war in Afghanistan. Senator Scott Ludlam

Blog Post | Blog of Scott Ludlam
Tuesday 1st November 2011, 3:17pm

Senator LUDLAM (Western Australia) (October 31st, 17:04):


I rise to add my condolences to those of my colleagues on all sides of the chamber concerning the horror that occurred on the weekend and to pay my respects to the three fallen Australians whose sacrifice is appreciated by all of us. Also to the Afghan interpreter, who was killed, and the many who were terribly injured, our thoughts are with them and their families. It is worth noting in passing, with a sense of sadness, that we do not speak to the names of each of Australia's fallen troops now because there are so many. We stand in silence in acknowledgement of their sacrifice but simply do not have time as a parliament to speak to them all as we used to-32 in a decade and a third of them fallen in only the last 12 months. If there has been such progress, if things look as wonderful on the ground as Senator Feeney has been describing, it appears that the violence that our troops have been exposed to is only getting worse.

Qantas ignores passengers in union-busting tactics

Blog Post | Blog of Sarah Hanson-Young
Tuesday 1st November 2011, 7:56am

For years Qantas has marketed itself to the world with the Peter Allen song, "I still call Australia home."

Tasmanian forest conservation – are we there yet?

Blog Post | Blog of Bob Brown
Monday 31st October 2011, 12:41pm

Nearly 20 years after the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area was declared a group of environment groups, forest industry representatives and workers' unions signed on to the Statement of Principles: a set of agreed principles that aimed to guide the transition of the forestry industry to a more sustainable base and to protect the high conservation value forests across Tasmania.

 

Following the principles process the signatory groups worked with the Tasmanian and Australian governments to come up with a Heads of Agreement, and then on 7 August 2011 an Intergovernmental Agreement was signed off by both governments and all the signatories.

Government shouldn't be taking sides on Qantas

Blog Post | Blog of Adam Bandt MP
Sunday 30th October 2011, 7:08pm
by DamienLawson in

In 2001, when Ansett was placed into administration and the entire fleet subsequently grounded, I spent weeks working around the clock to help get the airline flying again and preserve as many jobs as possible.

I was a lawyer for some of the key unions involved and one of our first tasks was to help install an administrator that would get the planes back in the air. It was widely accepted that grounding the planes was a very bad business move, as goodwill and brand image can be irreparably damaged.

The exigencies of Ansett, though, saw decisions made where an airline was near insolvent. I never thought I'd see a profitable airline ground its entire fleet as an industrial tactic, nor see a Labor government step in so willingly to complete the second act of a well thought out industrial strategy.

Industrial disputes cannot last forever. There does come a time when government should step in and intervene. And when an airline chief grounds the fleet of a national carrier as an industrial tactic, that time has come. There can be no qualms with the government approaching Fair Work Australia to help resolve the current Qantas dispute.

But while the differences in the various ways a government can get involved may seem technical to an outsider, they make a world of difference to the participants and to the outcome.

The Fair Work Act gives employees and their organizations legal rights to take industrial action. Those rights are not unlimited: the action must meet certain tests to be 'protected'. But even too much of this protected action can bring an end to the protection, which is why many unions will often do things that will not bring a business to halt, like the pilots at Qantas who wore red ties and made announcements over the PA.

This kind of low-level action is designed to pressure the other side to reach an outcome but prevent the matter from attracting the sanction of the law. Unless one party oversteps this limit, then the other party cannot go to Fair Work Australia and ask FWA to resolve the dispute. Keep bargaining, FWA will say. The legislation is based on parties reaching agreement amongst themselves and FWA will only arbitrate in exceptional circumstances.

Ever since John Howard's WorkChoices, the spirit of which still lives in the current legislation, many unions have sought to bargain for an outcome and avoid arbitration. Why? Because the outcomes you're likely to get in an arbitration are widely thought to be less than what you might get in bargaining. Especially over matters that impinge on managerial prerogative. Like job security clauses, a key claim of the unions in the Qantas dispute, because they are concerned about 'offshoring' and contracting out of their work.

Qantas clearly didn't think the unions had done anything unlawful, because it didn't apply to FWA to remove the unions' protection. Something else would be needed if Qantas wanted the dispute to be resolved by FWA. Something like the grounding of an airline.

Qantas' decision to ground the fleet forced the government's hand.  The government now effectively had four choices. It could seek to terminate Qantas' action only. It could seek to terminate all parties' action, even the pilots who'd done nothing more than hangs their clothes and make announcements. Or they could seek to suspend industrial action and force the parties back to the bargaining table. Or, lastly, they could have just demanded FWA roll up its hands and conduct serious negotiations.

The government took the second option when they should have taken the third (or the fourth, though the government clearly thought things had gone too far for that). Why? By terminating industrial action, the parties are put on a conveyor belt to arbitration.

However, if action is suspended (and not terminated) the industrial action still stops and the planes start flying again and negotiations can take place, including under the auspices of Fair Work Australia. Neither side is advantaged and there is no looming threat of arbitration, but industrial peace continues.

Qantas is publicly and before FWA calling for action to be terminated, not suspended. Qantas knows this a sure route to arbitration, where they will chance their arm on the issue of job security.

If it felt so strongly that things had become intolerable, the Government should have sought a suspension of industrial action. And it should have entered the negotiating fray itself, helping bang heads together.

As it is, a Labor government has tipped its hand and sided with Qantas. Whatever Fair Work Australia decides, Qantas now knows the government will help it get to arbitration.

Had the unions grounded the airline, all hell would have broken loose and they wouldn't have been rewarded. As it is, it was Qantas who made the biggest threat and they're now just where they want to be.

The issues surrounding Qantas are complex. It is competing with government owned and subsidised international airlines in a way that may not be sustainable. Employees are also legitimately concerned about job security.

A Labor Government should be helping reach a negotiated outcome by supporting the whole of the airline, management and employees, with an eye to the country's long-term interests. The government should not be siding with whoever is prepared to make the biggest threat.

Ten Years On and Still No Answers

Blog Post | Blog of Christine Milne
Tuesday 25th October 2011, 11:45am

On 19th October 2001, at the height of the Howard government's election campaign based on the mantra, "We will decide who comes to this country.." the SIEV X sank on its way to Australia with the shocking loss of 353 lives including 142 women and 146 children. 41 adults and three children survived. The truth about what happened to the SIEV X has never been told as no judicial inquiry or coroner's inquiry was ever held because the ship apparently did not sink in Australian waters. Huge questions remain:
Why were the asylum seekers on the SIEV X transported to the boat in buses with blacked out windows and forced to board by Indonesian police carrying guns?
What did Australian authorities know about the SIEV X before it departed given that Australia was involved in or knew about "disruption" activities in Indonesian ports at that time?
Did the Shoal Bay tracking station know where the SIEV X was and where it was sinking? Was a tracking device on the ship?

With SIEV X survivor, Faris Shohani

Coalition tied in knots over gay marriage

Blog Post | Blog of Sarah Hanson-Young
Tuesday 25th October 2011, 9:16am

Reports that Prime Minister Julia Gillard may allow Labor MPs a conscience vote on marriage equality have given hope to those of us advocating a change to the Marriage Act so same-sex couples can tie the knot.

It costs less to be humane

Blog Post | Blog of Sarah Hanson-Young
Tuesday 18th October 2011, 7:45am

Last week there was an important, positive step in asylum seeker policy for progressive Australians and those who have long-yearned for a better use of their taxpayer dollars.

Today Melbourne delivered

Blog Post | Blog of Adam Bandt MP
Wednesday 12th October 2011, 10:23am

Today I voted to pass the comprehensive Clean Energy plan through the House of Representatives – and together we have delivered on our commitment for climate action.

This legislation will help build a strong clean economy, drive investment in renewable energy and create thousands of new jobs.

Without the voters of Melbourne, we know that action on climate change would have been off the national agenda for years.

The bigger picture

Blog Post | Blog of Bob Brown
Tuesday 11th October 2011, 4:42pm

Australian Greens Leader Bob Brown made the following remarks during the Environmental and Social Taxes session of the Tax Forum, on 4 October 2011:

"The carbon pricing effort now is to reduce costs down the line, as Nicholas Stern has pointed out, 1 per cent diversion of GDP now to deal with carbon price is going to save our grandchildren five to 20 per cent diversion of their GDP to deal with the onrush of destruction of climate change, including the loss of the Great Barrier Reef, which is a six billion dollar annual business, in the lifetimes of some people in this room on current projections.

"That said, the issue of transport, we come to a huge fossil fuel rebate system which should be removed. This on various estimates is in the area of five to ten billion dollars per annum. Yet a fossil fuel rebate system which has perverse outcomes, it may lead through the deaths of cancer of 300 people in our bigger cities per annum and that's not factored in and it should be.

Labor all at sea over refugee processing

Blog Post | Blog of Sarah Hanson-Young
Tuesday 11th October 2011, 8:17am

In the past few weeks, increasing numbers of prominent and ordinary Australians have been putting up their hands for a fairer treatment of asylum seekers. It's a welcome change from the usual distortions and negative language we hear from the Prime Minister and Opposition Leader.

Last week, former prime minister Malcolm Fraser and former Australian of the Year Patrick McGorry were among signatories to a  letter urging the government return to onshore assessments of asylum seekers' claims. They also want the federal government to increase its humanitarian intake and ensure all 4000 assessed refugees in Malaysia will be transferred to Australia, regardless of the fate of the Malaysian people swap arrangement.