TECHNICAL AND SERVICES BRANCH WEEKLY BULLETIN 2025
Number
12
31 March 2025
NOKIA VOTE FOR MONTHLY PAY
We initiated action in the Court to stop Nokia from continuing monthly pay periods. The EBA that applied to a group of technical staff states that pay periods will be fortnightly unless employees agree otherwise. We say that Nokia did not obtain approval from the employees.
Nokia last week held a vote of the technical staff. 31 employees were eligible to vote. The Employees were employed by Nokia Services Pty Ltd at the time of the vote, being the only employees to whom the Optus EA applies. 30 out of the 31 participated in the vote. 67% (20) of the Employees who participated voted in favour of remaining on monthly pay
Nokia had offered an incentive of $1000 and an extra day's leave if the vote got up.
We are still continuing with our legal claim for an alleged breach.
OPTICAL FIBRE CASE
We expect to email a survey form this week for those who have registered with us. We will continue developing a list of members to join our claim for upgrading from CFW4 to CFW5. To register, simply email office@cwu.asn.au with a note.
US POSTAL UNION OPPOSES PRIVATISATION - UNI GLOBAL UNION
Thousands of workers across the United States hit the streets to say "Hell No!" to dismantling the postal service last weekend.
The National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC) organized rallies in cities throughout the country on Sunday in response to threats from the Trump administration to privatize the U.S. Postal Service (USPS).
NALC President, Brian Renfroe, declared the moves by the government as an assault on all 640,000 postal employees and on 8 million jobs attached to USPS. Speaking at a rally in Los Angeles, he called it an attack on an institution central to the U.S. economy, on 51.5 million rural households & businesses, and the 300 million Americans who rely on USPS.
The rallies come after outgoing Postmaster General Louis DeJoy agreed to work with Elon Musk's 'Department of Government Efficiency' to cut 10,000 jobs and billions of dollars from the USPS budget.
Politicians from all sides of the political spectrum turned up in support of postal workers at the protests as they brandished signs saying 'Fight Like Hell!, 'U.S. Mail Not For Sale' and 'Hell No! to privatization'.
NALC says it "opposes any plans to eliminate the USPS leadership, abolish regulatory oversight and carve up postal operations."
In a show of solidarity, Mark Dimondstein, President of the American Postal Workers Union (APWU), joined a rally with NALC members in Silver Spring, Maryland, along with AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler.
APWU held their own action day on 20 March with thousands upon thousands of postal workers taking part. In a rally in Washington D.C., Dimondstein said: "We're trying to alert the public the people of the country that our postal services are truly in danger. This is not a one-off day, this is the beginning of an ongoing fight."
Cornelia Berger, Head of Post & Logistics, at UNI Global Union said:
"Postal workers are the lifeblood of public service, connecting every home, no matter how remote. Attempts to dismantle the USPS aren't just reckless they're an attack on democracy itself. We stand united with NALC and every postal worker saying loud and clear: Hands off the USPS!"
See
Thousands of U.S. postal workers rally to stamp out privatization plans
CONTACT US - FOR HELP
0428 942 878 ddwyer@cwu.asn.au Dan Dwyer
Secretary/Lawyer - industrial matters & advice
|
CONTACT US - ADMINISTRATION
03 9663 6815 office@cwu.asn.au Administrative
eg payments, applications (Open 8am-4pm MTWT)
|
Authorised by Dan Dwyer Secretary
- CWU Telecommunications & Services Branches.
- Home Page