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WAGE
DECISION
DISGRACE
5
July 2007
SA
Unions
Secretary,
Janet
Giles
says
today's
Fair Pay
Commission
ruling
on a
maximum
$10 a
week
rise for
minimum
wage
earners
is
disgraceful.
"This is
an
outrageous
decision
by an
organisation
that
doesn't
deserve
the word
'fair'
in its
title.
It has
ignored
the
needs of
workers
and
heeded
only the
views of
the
federal
government
and big
business",
Ms Giles
says.
"The
latest
Census
figures
show
South
Australia
has the
lowest
paid
workers
in the
nation -
more
than a
quarter
of a
million
of them.
As a
result,
we'll be
hardest
hit by
today's
ruling",
she
says.
"In
fact,
some
300,000
South
Australians
in vital
areas
such as
aged
care,
cleaning,
hospitality
and
retail
are
condemned
to
struggle
street
by this
ruling."
"Many of
these
are
young
people
and
women,
who
already
suffer
the
brunt of
WorkChoices
through
lower
pay,
cuts to
penalty
rates
and
overtime,
and loss
of job
conditions
and
security
through
AWA's".
"South
Australian
families
will
face
even
bigger
challenges
trying
to make
ends
meet
with
volatile
interest
rates,
rising
fuel
prices,
soaring
food
costs
and
increases
in
essentials
such as
power,
water,
education
and
health."
"And as
a
further
kick in
the
guts,
minimum
wage
earners
are
confronted
with the
glaring
inequity
that
their 2%
wage
rise
will
barely
keep
pace
with
inflation,
while
federal
politicians
with fat
pay
packets
are
enjoying
a 6.7%
rise -
and
without
having
to jump
through
any
hoops to
prove
they
deserve
it.
The
hypocrisy
is
galling."
"A low
paid
worker
will get
just
$10.36 a
week,
while a
federal
backbencher
will get
an extra
$150 a
week and
the
Prime
Minister
will get
an extra
$390 a
week."
"Today's
decision
galvanises
the
determination
of SA
Unions
to
reveal
the
inequity
of the
WorkChoices
system
as part
of the
SA IRC
Inquiry
which
began in
Adelaide
today.
We will
be
absolutely
dogged
in
exposing
this
system's
flaws
and
doing
all we
can to
protect
South
Australians
from the
most
unfair
IR
system
in
generations,
which
has
today
delivered
the
lowest
wage
rise for
minimum
workers
in the
past
decade",
Ms Giles
says.
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Community Meetings:
Regular community meetings are being held in the areas of Makin, Wakefield or Kingston. Come along, bring your friends and family to discuss issues facing workers today.
Contact SA Unions for the dates of the next meetings
saunions@saunions.org.au
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