https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/AK2208/S00058/nzpfu-gives-notice-of-strike-action.htm
|
NZPFU Gives Notice Of Strike Action
Friday, 5 August 2022, 5:47 am
Press Release: NZPFU
|
The NZPFU has issued notices of one-hour strike action to
occur on Friday 19 August and again on Friday 26 August
2022.
FENZ is on notice that all NZPFU members will
stop work from 11am to 12 noon on Friday 19th August and
again on Friday 26th August.
The NZPFU also
immediately wrote to FENZ seeking mediation be set down next
Wednesday and Thursday in a bid to get discussions moving
towards reaching an agreement. The NZPFU hopes that FENZ
takes every opportunity in the next 14 days to work with the
union to reach a resolution and settle the
bargaining.
This is an unprecedented step that has not
been taken lightly but reflects the gravity of the
situation. The NZPFU claims centre around safe systems of
work and safety, health and wellbeing. The NZPFU members
need enforceable and guaranteed protections to ensure they
are appropriately staffed and resourced to protect the
community.
FENZ has been rolling the dice on community
safety and protection with its failure to have appropriate
firefighter numbers or reliable fleet and
equipment.
- Excessive hours firefighters and 111
emergency centre dispatchers are working have not been
enough to maintain minimum staffing levels and as a result
fire trucks have been offline and stations effectively
closed regularly in recent months.
- The state of the
fleet is dire with fewer heavy aerial appliances available
than in 1990s. Systemic faults in the fire trucks and
coupled with an aging fleet have resulted in firefighters
left stranded with broken-down appliances to and from
incidents, and on some occasions being issued with vans and
utes as temporary measures when there are no other fire
appliances available.
After more than 144 hours
of negotiation over 13 months (including two rounds of
mediation) the NZPFU and FENZ reached an impasse last
Thursday. On Tuesday the NZPFU notified FENZ it would make
decisions about industrial action no later than 3pm today.
FENZ provided a new offer at 2.53pm which the NZPFU
considered before deciding later to issue the strike
notices.
- In their offer FENZ has agreed to four
recruits courses in this financial year but that is only a
drop in the bucket and only guarantees a return to normal
recruiting levels for one year. Only 44 recruits were
trained in the last financial year barely addressing
attrition levels. There is still no guarantee the outdated
staffing ratios will be remedied, and no guarantee there
will be planning to assess current and future risk and
response needs to ensure New Zealand’s fire service meets
the changing needs and growth of the community. Career
firefighter numbers and stations have largely remained
stagnant since the 1990s.
- FENZ’s offer ignores the
critical need for robust processes to ensure key health and
safety issues are addressed including reliable and
appropriate appliances and equipment are procured and
maintained. Instead FENZ continues to attack consultation
and dispute rights.
- FENZ has refused to offer any
support to assist firefighters and other NZPFU members
accessing income protection insurance but continue to
automatically provide administration and non-operational
staff with fully funded income protection and life
insurance.
- FENZ refuses to include any provision
recognising firefighters’ occupational cancer despite the
World Health Organisation recently upgrading firefighting to
a Group 1 carcinogenic to humans status.
- While FENZ
has attempted to address some health, safety and wellbeing
issues there is little faith they will follow through.
Similar issues were recorded in a 2018 record of settlement
and undertakings were either not honoured or never came to
fruition. Other offers such as health checks will be
inaccessible for many of our members.
- Wages are also
yet to be resolved. Firefighters and other NZPFU members are
considered low paid by public service standards. NZPFU
members last wage increase was on 1 July 2020. While some of
the percentage increases may look impressive, in reality it
is for the very low paid raising the lower firefighter ranks
to just above the living wage. The increases for the 2022
year go nowhere near the increased cost of living with many
NZPFU members only being offered between 2% and 3.5% for the
2022 year. By comparison workers in other industries have
recently been offered 6-8% wage increases for 2022. There
are other barbs to the offer such as the removal of base
wage increases for 2021 year instead rolling them into a
2022 increase robbing the employee of the benefits of
compounding wage growth over time and removing any
backdating to 1 July 2021. The one-off lump sum payment does
not address all of those
issues.
Home Page
| Auckland
| Previous Story
| Next Story
Copyright (c) Scoop Media