Issue No 76 | 03 November 2000 | |
NewsTAB Bosses' Gamble Threatens Cup Day
If you want to punt on next Tuesday's Melbourne Cup through your phone account get on early. A mean spirited and recalcitrant TAB management has put call center activity on the day in doubt.
ASU Clerical Branch secretary Michael Want says union members in the TAB's call centers have rejected a management pay offer in talks for a new agreement. 'They are only offering 6.5 per cent over two years. Our members at Ultimo and Granville find that unacceptable. They are sick to death of management's attitude which has got meaner and meaner since privatitisation,' he says. The Labor Council of NSW is to intervene to try and resolve the dispute before the running of Australia's premier race.
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Interview: Withering On The Vine Cooking shows and 'Bugs fucking to Mozart' may become the staple diet on our ABC as news and current affairs face a war of attrition. Quentin Dempster gives Workers Online an insider's view of our endangered national broadcaster . US Election: Sugar Candy Politics Like in everything else, Americans like their politics sugar coated. A Nation in denial, they are happier maintaining the fantasy that the world is a fine and dandy place says Michael Gadiel. US Election: George W. Bushwhacked by Texas Truth Squad The Texas Truth Squad are a group of Texan union members travelling the US on a crusade to expose the Republican presidential nominee as a corporate rogue who in his time as Governer proved himself as an enemy of the worker. History: Federation and the Labour Movement National celebrations will mark the Centenary of Federation next year. The labour movement's opposition to Federation at the referenda held around the Australian colonies in 1899 will attract less commemoration, although the republicans of 1999 might have benefited from reflection on the causes of working class discontent one hundred years earlier says Stuart Macintyre. International: Unions Mac Their Day McDonald's - the biggest employer of young people around the world - is increasingly becoming the target of union recognition campaigns, backed by human rights groups concerned about the fast food chains practices in countries such as Indonesia, China, Russia, Canada and Germany. Satire: Wiranto�s charity album inspires genocidal maniacs everywhere Indonesia�s favourite former strongman, General Wiranto, has recently decided to record an album of love songs. Entitled To You My Indonesia, Wiranto�s album has already sold 8,000 copies and is raising money for refugees. Review: What About the Workers? A big, gruff bloke in a blue singlet, on strike or just not working, and generally being difficult. That's the trade unionist for you. Barry Cohen's new book What About the Workers? shows this image may have a bit of truth about it, but he would be telling a few good yarns while he was standing about.
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