Eureka flag and union insignia banned
Sue Bolton, Melbourne
17 November 2007
A lot of workers would have been shocked to read the report in the November 14 Melbourne Age about the Australian Building and Construction Commission (ABCC) ordering construction companies to remove union posters and signs and anything with the Eureka flag on it.
Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (CFMEU) Victorian assistant secretary Tommy Watson told Green Left Weekly that the ABCC is conducting an audit of building sites to make sure that they are abiding by the National Code of Practice for the Construction Industry.
The code was introduced by the Howard government in 1996 to force companies to reject union agreements that had clauses preventing subcontractors without union agreements from coming on site. If companies didnt comply with the national code, they were excluded from bidding for federally funded jobs.
The freedom of association section of the code states that people have a choice to be or not be in a union and that people shouldnt be discriminated against on the basis of whether or not they are in a union.
This section was revised in 2005 to include a section banning no ticket, no start signs and other notices such as posters, helmets, stickers or union logos or flags that imply that union membership is anything other than a matter for individual choice.
Watson said that the audit of building companies is to make sure that they dont display any union material to give the impression that it might be a union site, be that hats, stickers, jumpers, stickers on shirts, stickers on walls, union flags, any paraphernalia thats to do with the union.
The ABCC has even targeted training leaflets. It has told companies that CFMEU leaflets on training have to be taken down because the leaflets have a union logo and union phone number on them.
Theyve also asked companies to take down anti-Howard and anti-Work Choices stickers, Watson told GLW. Its freedom of speech provided youre not a union member. But if youre a union member you cant explain that youre a member of a union by displaying a union sticker because by doing that, the government says that youre saying its a union site. So theres only freedom of speech if youre a not a union member, if youre anti-union. If youre a union member, theres no freedom of speech.
This is happening on building sites all over Australia, explained Watson. Any building company that does any work for the federal government, or tenders for any work for the federal government, or builds a project where the federal government might be linked into some of the floors to put an office in, is covered by the code.
At this stage, Watson said, the ABCC is mainly concerned about stickers on walls of sheds and the Eureka flag. But its also talking about hat stickers. He thinks that if PM John Howard gets re-elected, they will start talking about personal protective equipment and personal jumpers that have union logos on them.
The companies find it hard to resist the ABCC, said Watson, because if they dont comply, they get excluded from government projects and as you know those projects are worth hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars
If companies dont do as the ABCC says and the code says, then they get taken off projects, which is intimidation, he added. If the union did something like that, we would be charged with extortion and wed be considered criminals, but the ABCC can bluff people and blackmail people and get away with it.
Watson said that the CFMEU was asking members to put everything back up as soon as companies pull the material down. Were going to continue to fly the Eureka flag and union flags. Were just going to carry on as normal.
The ABCC is particularly targeting anything that displays the Eureka flag because they say its a union symbol. It claims that when a building site displays the Eureka flag it conveys a message that union membership is not a matter of individual choice.
Watson says that the Eureka flag is not a just symbol of trade unions, but a symbol of working-class struggle. If someone is a union member and is proud to be a union member, and wants to wear a sticker on their hat or on their jumper, then they should be able to do that, he said.
A protest against the banning of the Eureka flag will be held at 5pm on November 23 at the State Library, corner Swanston and La Trobe streets.