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$15 an hour Campaign Newsletter October 1st 2009 |
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A Working Class Hero is something to be
$15 an hour Campaign Newsletter October 1st 2009
Dear $15 an hour supporter,
The movement to get the minimum wage to $15 an hour is stepping up to a new level. Momentum has been building across New Zealand as union members, activists and supporters begin to get the petition outinto workplaces, universities and the community. The petition is appearing at bars in pubs, front-desks in community law centres, passed around stop-work meetings and on stalls.
To make sure we get 350,000 petition signatures by next May we need some working class heroes:
15 for $15
We are asking all
those who support the campaign to get 15 signatures for the
$15 minimum wage before October 30th. At work, home, with
your friends - this should only take 15 minutes. Getting
signatures is easy (see below). Click here to download the
form, print it out and go. Just do it!
Be a Hero
Commit
to getting 100 signatures and you will be an official $15 an
hour Working Class Hero. We'll send you forms, badges,
stickers and pamphlets. Click here to sign up as a working
class hero now. Download the petition here to get started
now.
Join the 300
A small number of committed people
can make a huge difference. The movie "300" immortalised 300
Spartan heroes who defied 200,000 Persians at the Battle of
Thermopylae. The $15 an hour campaign needs 300 modern
heroes who will commit to getting 1,000 signatures each by
May 2010. We'll send you forms, badges, stickers and
pamphlets. Once you send us 300 signatures we will send you
the official $15 working class hero badge, T shirt and
cap.
The 300 heroes who get 1,000 signatures will be personally commemorated at the Unite National Office and publicly as true heroes of the working class. Click here to join the 300 by email. Download the petition here to get started right away.
Getting signatures is easy
Everyone
who gets out and about with the petition is finding it easy
to get people to sign:
Unite delegate Esther Ma’ake
signed up 130 people in the video store where she works in
just one week.
410 bus drivers and 100 fire fighters sign the petition at industrial actions. One veteran firefighter asked us why we weren’t going for $20 an hour. He was serious!
200 campaign packs were distributed at the Labour Party conference in Rotorua. Labour promises to renew it’s commitment to fight for working people as conference delegates take the petition back to regions across New Zealand.
The International Socialists in Dunedin have
gathered 1100 signatures. Some of their tips on getting
signatures:
... the response is invariably positive, with
the majority of people taking leaflets and a considerable
number stopping long enough to sign......Simply asking
people “will you help raise the minimum wage?” tends to
catch people’s ear. With very few exceptions, people are
right on board....Your energy makes the difference between
50 signatures and 150 signatures. If you are confident and
enthusiastic about your work, those you talk to will be
too.
Read more about their campaign efforts here.
Minimum Wage Trick or Treat in Auckland
City
Friday October 30 2009
On the night before Halloween join the PROTEST MARCH FOR $15HR LIVING WAGE in Aotea Square at 7pm followed by a Halloween party at a secret location. Wear a Halloween costume and be part of a protest with a difference.
We won the 8 hour day and no
youth rates because of strikes. Not because the bosses are
nice. On Friday 30 October round up your friends and
workmates and head into the city for the world’s biggest
Trick or Treat.
“John Key, trick or treat? Will the
minimum wage in 2010 be a trick or a treat?”
Join
the Unite campaign team for a campus odyssey
The Unite
Union campaign team will be heading around Auckland and
Waikato campuses over the next two weeks. We need students,
campus workers and university staff to help out with lecture
speaks, running stalls, putting up posters, doing the rounds
in the bars and giving out leaflets. Want to help? Text or
email your name and campus to 029 445 5702 or
campaign@unite.org.nz.
Get in touch with the $15 campaign
Send a text to 029 445 5702 or email to sign up as a working class hero
To sign up to the $15 an hour enewsletter click here
Join the campaign on facebook
Forward this email to your friends and get them to sign up for the newsletter - just use this link
Put the $15 an hour web banner on your website or blog - click here
Order a bulk order of badges (30
cents each) and T-shirts ($15 each) from the Unite office -
click here.
We need a $15 minimum wage
An adult in a full time job should have a reasonable standard of living without getting into debt or relying on charity or income support. $15 an hour - $600 a week - is a good start.
Fire fighters, school support staff, bus drivers and supermarket workers have all either been on strike or demonstrated against poverty wages in the last few weeks. This campaign is about their struggle to make ends meet on less than a liveable wage.
Last weekend the Sunday Star-Times reported 1 in 6 New Zealand children are born into and raised in poverty. Meanwhile our politicians get more from just their $37,500 tax-free housing allowance than 500,000 workers earn from their wages.
Many fast food, cinema, call centre and hotel workers have union agreements linked to the minimum wage. If minimum wage goes up they go up. If minimum wage stays the same, so do their pay rates.
The Governments pay freeze for public servants like fire fighters and teacher aides is a clear sign that it is considering a freeze on the minimum wage this year. 100,000 workers won’t get a pay rise this year if the National Party reruns its 1990s formula of raising the minimum wage an average of 7 cents a year for ten years.
ends
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