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News Release |
WA WORKER
REVEALS WORK LAW REALTY
22 March 2007
Charlie Isaacs, one of the 107 sacked
WA workers facing court action and a massive fine for protesting the
unfair dismissal of a colleague, is taking the stark truth of his
situation to Adelaide workers.
59 year old Mr Isaacs, who's of
indigenous background, is on a waiting list for public housing
trying to support a wife and son, and assist his single mother
daughter, with battling health problems brought on by the stress of
his situation.
"John Howard's work laws have
destroyed my life", Mr Isaacs says.
Mr Isaacs is in Adelaide until
Saturday visiting city construction sites and workplaces in the
three key marginal federal seats to give workers a personal
perspective of the ugly unfairness of the laws, which mark their
first anniversary of Tuesday.
"My message is that this isn't
confined to Western Australia. This can - and will - happen
elsewhere, and Adelaide workers need to be prepared."
"When I was given the boot, there was
nothing I could do. Under the new laws you can't appeal, you
can't take them to court for unfair dismissal, you haven't got a leg
to stand on. Then I received a letter informing me I was being
fined $28,600 because I had taken part in a one day protest action."
"It's had a devastating impact.
I survived the stresses of Vietnam, but I'm struggling with this.
Because of what I've been through I've developed epilepsy and will
be on medication for the rest of my life. My wife has
developed tachycardia, also due to stress. And we are forced to live
with the uncertainty of being bankrupted or even jailed simply for
standing up for a point of principle."
"I urge South Australians, especially
those in marginal seats who can make a real difference, to vote
against those who back these laws at the next federal election", Mr
Isaacs says.
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