“Shut up!” they explained…

Who the hell does Maxim Electrical think they are? Jesuit Social Services?

Union talk may cost man $22,000
Ben Schneiders
The Age
April 27, 2010

ELECTRICIAN Mirek Grzegorek was stunned to receive a letter from the building industry watchdog warning him he could be fined $22,000 for attending a couple of short union meetings.

Mr Grzegorek said the meetings were to discuss workplace entitlements, with claims his employer, Maxim Electrical, was trying to escape its award obligations to pay redundancy when its work finished at the ANZ project in Docklands.

”Obviously a lot of guys were concerned. We had a couple of union meetings in relation to that,” he said.

”At the time there was an understanding if you go on a union meeting during working hours then your employer rightfully can deduct up to four hours of your time, even if the meeting takes 10 minutes.”

But the letter warned that Mr Grzegorek could face a much bigger penalty for attending an unauthorised union meeting.

Mr Grzegorek said the two meetings ran only a short period into work time. He said it was after he had lost his job and had to visit his sick father in Poland that he received the letter from the Australian Building and Construction Commission.

He said he had ”some big expenses because we went to Poland”. He said the letter also wanted him to provide evidence of what was said at the meeting.

”Such things really upset me in a democratic country … I didn’t even realise such a law exists in Australia,” he said.

Electrical Trades Union assistant state secretary Troy Gray said the letters were aggressive. He said the union had tried to get an authorised meeting on the issue of entitlements but that had been rejected by the employer.

Unions will tomorrow hold a rally from Trades Hall in Carlton, as part of the International Workers Day of Mourning, accusing the commission of undermining safety standards.

Commissioner John Lloyd said the law prevented him from disclosing information on an ongoing investigation. But, he said, in general it was not unusual for unions to make inaccurate comments about the operations of the ABCC.

He said a ”code of silence” culture was perpetuated by unions telling their members not to co-operate. ”This culture often obliges the ABCC to rely on more formal means for conducting investigations and gathering information,” he said.

LOL. But honestly Commissioner: the Comedy Festival ended last week.

About @ndy

I live in Melbourne, Australia. I like anarchy. I don't like nazis. I enjoy eating pizza and drinking beer. I barrack for the greatest football team on Earth: Collingwood Magpies. The 2024 premiership's a cakewalk for the good old Collingwood.
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2 Responses to “Shut up!” they explained…

  1. Andrew says:

    BAN ME FROM THIS POOR EXCUSE FOR A BLOG! PLEASE! I BEG YOU!

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