What have you blokes been doing?
- Details
- Published: Monday, 12 February 2024 13:08
Appointed on a Wednesday and my heart stood still, Do-do Ron Ron, do it Ron We can’t wait until he tables the Bill Do-do Ron Ron, do it Ron Yeah, my heart stood still He’s got nothing else to do But when he tables the Bill Do-do Ron Ron, do it Ron (with apologies and acknowledgement to the Crystals) You all know the story, it’s notorious. On 15 October 2021 the LGNSW Board, spurred on by a second recommendation from another ICAC investigation (Operation Dasha) to get rid of the “no reason” sacking of senior staff, unanimously resolved to do precisely that. LGNSW would now support the views we and the other unions have been expressing for decades. This was an historic consensus. The consensus was to amend section 340 of the Local Government Act 1993 to ensure that the only Senior Staff positions, on term contracts and denied access to the Industrial Relations Commission would be the general manager. And to amend the Industrial Relations Act 1996 to lift the remuneration level for access on unfair dismissals. All we needed was the OLG and Government to cooperate. That was close enough to two and a half years ago. There was some venal opposition from the usual suspects, but the policy was overwhelmingly reaffirmed at the LGNSW Special Conference on 1 March 2022. That was close enough to two years ago. In April 2023 a Labor Government was elected in NSW. We all had a reasonable expectation they’d be more supportive of employment changes that reduced the risk of corruption and provided fairer working conditions. They say they are. We know it’s been in the Minister’s office but nothing’s happened. We’ve put a clock on our homepage so we can count how long since 5 April 2022, when the Government was appointed following the election, and the Hon Ron Hoenig was appointed Minister for Local Government. www.depa.au and you can also count the days. As an aside, the CBD column in the Sydney Morning Herald on Wednesday this week, in an article about who NSW politicians had been meeting with, said this: Finally, a shout out to Local Government Minister Ron Hoenig, who held just 16 meetings in the final quarter 2023, the fewest of any government Minister. It’s not good enough, this is a burning issue.