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Monday, October 01, 2012

Australias Union SCUM; Labors Union C***S and Financiers flex their Monthly's on QLD Childrens Hospital Construction.


Madame Gillards Financiers the Lowest of the Low... no wonder Australia has a drug Problem when one of the big two Political parties is financed by these OOPS SORRY ABOUT THE WORD THAT USED TO BE HERE,A DRAFT THAT SLIPPED THROUGH, how else could these THUGS raise money to fund their political party when they are not kicking sick children out of Hospital beds.
Pack of Poo Poking AND HERE the lot of yas, Union SCUM.
Cannot wait to se yas hanging by whats left of ya nuts from the nearest light pole.


I know one of these spineless gutless Union Pricks they are as weak as water pathetic BLUDGERS dedicated to sponging off Australians in anyway they can at any cost to the economy.
The most useless pack of Bludgers you could find,the same type that withheld food and ammunition to the Australian Military Forces during WW2 in exchange for MONEY as they HID from those determined to kill Australians and take over Australia, in the pathetic hope they would be spared the will of Australia's enemies in exchange for betraying and sabotaging Australia's Soldiers in New Guinea in WW2 .... Bastard Cowardly Bludgers fund the Australian Labor Party
 via COMPULSORY Union Dues.The Lowest of the Low a Unionist.

Hospital standoff sees subbies sidelined

BY: ANDREW FRASER 
From: The Australian 
September 06, 2012 12:00AM

UP to 2000 people have been affected by a month-long strike at the site of the new $1.4 billion Children's Hospital in Brisbane, despite the construction union being directed to resume work two weeks ago.

While 600 full-time workers have not been able to work for a month, Electrical Contractors Association Australia workplace relations manager Jason O'Dwyer said the dispute had worked its way along the supply chain.

"You've got the 600 people on site who are not able to work, but now it's got well beyond them, and possibly three times that number of people are also being affected," he said.

"In a lot of cases, the businesses that had contracts to supply to the hospital were able to shuffle other work around so they still had something to go on with, but we've had reports of the suppliers having to put some of their workers on notice that work's drying up."


Mr O'Dwyer claimed that because of a Construction Forestry Mining and Energy Union picket line many subcontractors were unable to access the site and complete work or get their tools so they could go on to other jobs.

"These are people who aren't even involved in the original dispute but are now not able to work because they can't get their tools."

The dispute at one of the biggest building projects in Queensland centres around an insistence from the union to renegotiate an agreement originally set to cover wages up to 2014.

This happened after a subcontractor allegedly went bankrupt after another firm undercut it for the gyprocking of internal walls at the hospital site.

Builder Abigroup was granted an injunction in the Federal Magistrates Court on August 16, which prevented the CFMEU from industrial action by banning union organisers from within 100m of the site. The CFMEU is believed to be arguing the picket is a "community protest" and not a formal strike.

CFMEU Queensland state secretary Michael Ravbar did not return calls, but when The Australian visited last week there was no activity and the only people on site were security guards.

Mr O'Dwyer said that subcontractors were further being pressured by the main contractor, Abigroup, which said they were free to work at the site because of the August 16 injunction. "But in practice the subcontractors' employees are just not prepared to take that risk, given that there have been threats to their physical wellbeing if they access the site."

The hospital is due for completion next year, and Abigroup is subject to fines that could exceed $100,000 a day if work is delayed.

A statement from Abigroup said it was "experiencing a CFMEU campaign of unlawful work stoppages and blockades as a result of resisting unsustainable union demands". "Abigroup is taking legal action . . . to prevent further stoppages and to protect its employees, clients and the company," it said.

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