Women discuss trade unions
Women discuss trade unions
By Leslie Warne
WOLLONGONG — Women are still under-represented in trade unions, though the situation has improved because of affirmative action programs, Victorian Trades Hall Council representative Martina Nightingale told a conference on women in unions here on March 21. The gathering was organised by the Wollongong Women's Centre and the South Coast Labour Council.
A recent VTHC survey found that "the largest gaps occur in the senior positions of branch officials ... and in the federal sphere, while the most notable achievements appear to have been made in the middle level positions on branch councils and executives, as shop-floor representatives, as organisers and as specialist officers". Specific programs are needed to change the situation at the top, Nightingale said.
The general decline in unionism could be redressed if unions adopted programs to increase the participation of women, Nightingale added.
NSW upper house MP Meredith Burgmann addressed the meeting on the Greiner government's Industrial Relations Act, saying the NSW style of enterprise bargaining will undermine women's progress towards equal pay. Currently, women earn 84.1% of the average male wage.

By now we all know that the rich get richer under capitalism. But many are astounded at the incredible pace this takes place.
"Without Green Left Weekly, freedom of press and public truth-telling in Australia would be gravely ill."
John Pilger 



Recent comments
2 hours 21 min ago
3 hours 27 min ago
7 hours 13 min ago
12 hours 11 min ago
12 hours 51 min ago
16 hours 41 min ago
19 hours 30 min ago
20 hours 8 min ago
20 hours 10 min ago
23 hours 9 min ago