Holmes on POAL dispute

writes in NZ Herald:

 I formed the view that the ports company have not been ungenerous in their offers to the union. In fact, even Auckland Mayor Len Brown himself agreed that the company's first offer made early last September should have been accepted.

The offer would have rolled over the collective agreement and given the workers a 2.5 per cent pay increase each year for three years. There were several offers but early on the company decided it could no longer tolerate its workers getting paid for sitting around doing nothing.

I do not believe the union when it says that it's a lie that the workers earn in excess of $90,000 for an average 26 hours work. Ports of Auckland had Ernst and Young audit the figures. And that's something you notice about the ports' conduct throughout the dispute. They've done things very thoroughly.

The union's argument that its people ceasing to be permanent staff would mean that their families couldn't plan things was obliterated by the company's offer to roster the men for 160 hours a month, and the roster delivered a month ahead. For the life of me, I can't see what's wrong with that.

I think the union was dyed in the . I think they didn't read the signs. Before they knew it, it was all over. Nearly 300 men were made redundant, just like that. End of story. I think there were some hardliners who've buggered things up for everyone. Hysteria is never a good thing.

turned down a sgnificant pay rise and a guarantee of 160 hours a month, with rosters known a month in advance. By turning it down, their name is now going to stand for More Unemployed New Zealanders.

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