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Issue No. 154 27 September 2002  
E D I T O R I A L

War On The Collective
While Saddam Hussein is the primary target of George W Bush�s ham-fisted crusade to destroy a noun, the United Nations is also under its heaviest attack in its 57 years.

F E A T U R E S

Interview: Still Flying
Flight Attendant�s Association international secretary Johanna Brem looks at life in the air since last September�s terrorist attacks.

International: President Gas
NSW Firefighter�s president Darryl Snow sent this missive to his members on the anniversary of a day when 343 of their colleagues died in the line of duty.

Politics: Australia: A Rogue State?
ARM director Greg Barnes argues that September 11 has summoned a new era of isolationism and international lawlessness.

Unions: Welfare Max
Maximus Inc is big, American and controversial. Right now its knocking on the door of Australian welfare delivery and there is every chance the Howard Government will usher it inside, reports Jim Marr.

Bad Boss: Welcome to Telstra!
A Telstra call centre has joined the race for Bad Boss after sacking a pregant woman who had the audacity to need to use the toilet.

Health: Fat Albert: The Grim Reaper
Workers Online's cultural dietician Mark Morey chews the fat over this week's conference on child obesity

Satire: Iraq Pre-empts Pre-emptive Strike
Saddam Hussein has launched a pre-emptive strike on the United States to prevent it from pre-emptively striking Iraq first.

Poetry: A Man From the East And A Man From The West
Resident Bard David Peetz has penned this ode to the sacked Hilton hotel workers

Review: The Sum Of All Fears
Tara de Boehmler checks in to see that America�s cultural cringe is alive, well and sponsored by Marlboro cigarettes

N E W S

 Unions Join Anti-War Chorus

 ACM Fails Port Hedland Report

 Abbott Adds Fuel to Bias Case

 Murray�s Millions Dwarfs Workers Wages

 Rogue MP Faces Grassroots Backlash

 Harry Bridges Speaks from the Grave

 Councils Deny Multi-Lingual Workers

 US Rabbi Fights Lowy Malls

 Ansett Ticket Levy Not Reaching Workers

 Something Stinks at the Zoo

 Virgin in Delegate Situation

 Pampas Workers Baste Boss

 International Shame for Aussie IR

 Sydney Trade Talks Face Backlash

 Activists Notebook

C O L U M N S

Legends
Gough's Plaza
Labor's living legend challenged NSW Labor to lift its game as he attended a renaming of 2KY House to Gough Whitlam Plaza.

The Locker Room
Support The System That Supports You
This system is a certainty, a moral, a good thing and a knocktaker; well, at least according to Phil Doyle

Bosswatch
RIP Chainsaw Al
One of the heroes of corporate downsizing has been cut down but his memory lives on with golden handshakes for leaders of failed businesses still thick on the ground.

Awards
The Importance of Being Ernie
It was the tenth annual �Ernie� Awards for sexist behaviour and Labor Council�s Alison Peters was amongst the noisy punters

Week in review
Lest We Forget
You can�t help a sneaking suspicion, Jim Marr writes, that George Bush is conscripting the dead of September 11, 2001, to lead his push for another war in the Gulf�

Activists
Workers Out!
Gay and Lesbian trade unionists are organising an international conference to develop a global response to homophobia in the workplace, writes Ryan Heath

L E T T E R S
 The Shame (Sham) of the Democratic Party
 Weapons of Destruction
 Tears From Tom
 Good Hearts
WHAT YOU CAN DO
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News

Ansett Ticket Levy Not Reaching Workers


Ansett�s administrators have confirmed to a creditors meeting that the Federal Government's $10 air ticket levy is not being used to fund outstanding employee entitlements.

ACTU Secretary Greg Combet has called on Prime Minister John Howard to order that the $110 million so far collected through the levy be paid to former Ansett employees in accordance with the legislation establishing the tax.

Former Ansett employees are still owed an average of 34 weeks pay each in outstanding entitlements because of the eight-week cap on payments under the SEESA scheme.

Combet says the Government's insistence on recouping all monies advanced to the Ansett administration is the main obstacle to further payments to former airline employees, who are still owed $370 million in unpaid entitlements.

"Further payments are needed urgently because most former Ansett employees have not found new jobs on equivalent incomes and are struggling financially," Combet says.

"The Government is tying the hands of company administrators by forcing them to repay all funds advanced through the Special Employee Entitlement Scheme for Ansett (SEESA).

"The Government should stop trying to double-dip by reclaiming funds from the Ansett administration and instead use the ticket levy to pay for employee entitlements."

The Government's Air Passenger Ticket Levy Collection Act passed last year says: "The purpose of the levy is to meet the cost of payments by the Commonwealth under the Special Employee Entitlements Scheme for Ansett group employees."


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