PLEASE NOTE : “TOLing”
means temporarily CLOSING Fire Stations for entire shifts or longer indeterminate
periods.
Inside this issue:
·
TOLing: the Empire strikes back?
·
TOLing: so what is the Union doing?
·
Standing Union advice regarding outduties, stand-bys and safe and
effective minimum staffing
·
FBEU fined $11,000 for LSV dispute
·
Easter Sunday public holiday dispute update
TOLing: the Empire strikes back?
The Union’s
officials have spent the past fortnight since the last edition of SITREP
considering our response to the funding crisis in FRNSW caused by the O’Farrell
Government’s budget cuts.
The situation, in
short, is this:
·
O’Farrell has ordered that FRNSW management cut employee-related costs
by $25M per annum;
·
The only way this can be achieved is by cutting overtime, wages,
conditions and/or jobs;
·
The savings required exceed the entire FRNSW overtime bill, so even the
complete elimination of all overtime (an impossible goal) would still not be
enough to avoid job cuts.
Management’s answer
The Department has
developed a number of strategies to respond to this crisis, the centrepiece
being to extend TOLing (Taking stations Off Line) from the 30 so retained
brigades listed in In Orders 2008/22 to any station in the state – retained or
permanent. And contrary to Commissioner Mullins’ repeated and very public
assurances, the Department has also jettisoned safe and effective minimum
staffing of four by preparing to order crews of only two to respond on pumping
appliances. Stand by for bag-loads of management spin about safe crewing levels
being needed on the fireground, but not on a truck.
But bad as all this
is, it will at least save jobs right? Wrong. Unless the Government changes
course then even these radical measures will not prevent firefighter job cuts
by 2015. Who in NSW voted for that?
And the Union’s response
Commissioner
Mullins has urged us to work with him “to avoid the prospect of workforce
reductions”. While we’re prepared to consider different ways of doing
things, the Union’s officials have already ruled out cutting existing award
wages or conditions. This leaves a reduction in overtime as the only option
left before jobs cuts.
The Union supported
a reduction of overtime via extra permanent and retained firefighter jobs and a
reduction in firefighters’ sick leave before this budget crisis
hit. We will continue to do so. The Union also opposed the introduction of
TOLing of retained brigades in 2008 and will continue to do so.
Commissioner
Mullins argues that we need to commence TOLing permanent stations to avoid
forced job losses. The Union’s officials have no reason to believe that Mr
Mullins is being anything other than sincere on this point. We also believe
that he is dead set wrong. Once started, where does TOLing stop? Does anyone seriously
believe that the Department will continue to run with 630 permanent relieving
staff when it can simply close a station instead? TOLing is not the answer – it
is the start of a race to the bottom and a guarantee of more job cuts, not
less.
All of this is
explained in considerably more detail in the correspondence from the Department and theUnion’s response.
TOLing: so what is the Union doing?
The Union’s
officials have developed a number of responses to O’Farrell’s attack on
firefighters, much of which will not (for obvious reasons) be detailed here. As
confirmed in the previous item, the State Committee is flatly opposed to any
extension of TOLing or reduction of safe and effective minimum staffing levels.
In the short term:
·
the Union has notified the Industrial Relations Commission of a dispute,
with the matter listed before Justice Backman this coming Monday at 0930 hrs;
·
I will be meeting the Minister next Thursday, 2 August and have
requested that no action be taken by FRNSW in the interim; and
·
the Union has written to the Department inviting further discussion over
a series of possible cost saving initiatives.
Preparations are
well advanced in the event that the Department does commence TOLing and
separate Union notices and instructions will be issued to members if and when
required. More to follow…
Standing Union advice regarding outduties, stand-bys and safe and
effective minimum staffing
Members are
reminded that the following, well established arrangements remain in place and
should continue to be observed, irrespective of any direction or order to the
contrary from FRNSW management, until advised otherwise by way of further Union
notice:
- No retained pumper is to
respond or remain on-line unless it is known that at least four retained
firefighters from the station are available to answer the call (see FRNSW
Standing Orders“Retained firefighter response coverage and
crewing levels”).
- No permanent pumper is to
respond or remain on-line without at least one Station Officer and three
firefighters (permanent or retained) present on the appliance.
- Only permanent firefighters
(ie, LF rank and below) can perform outduties or stand-by duties;
- No firefighter may be
directed to use their own vehicle, and the Department must provide return
transport for any permanent firefighter who is directed to perform an
outduty or stand-by duty without prior notice (see Permanent Award
subclause 12.12). To avoid doubt:
(a)
the term “prior notice” means prior to the conclusion of your last rostered
shift; and
(b)
nothing in this advice should be taken to mean that a member must either
request that the Department provide transport, or that they may not choose to
use their own vehicle.
- Station Officers cannot be
directed (or choose) to perform outduties or stand-by duties without
breaching the Award.
- An officer (Inspector or
above) who orders another officer (Station Officer or above) to perform an
out-duty or stand-by duty is (a) issuing an unlawful order and (b) exposed
to disciplinary charges for breach of Regulation 17(c) – “A
firefighter must not abuse the firefighter’s authority by acting
oppressively towards a subordinate”.
FBEU fined $11,000 for LSV Dispute
The
Industrial Court has fined the Union $11,000 for last October’s LSV dispute
industrial action (see SITREP 42/2011, 46/2011 and 9/2012).
Dispute orders were
made by the IRC during the LSV/injured firefighters dispute after the
Department walked away from our LSV staffing agreement and the Union then
responded with relieving bans. The prosecution proceeded despite the fact that
the Department eventually did agree to observe our agreement, but the day after
the dispute orders were made and with our bans still in place.
The Department
sought the current maximum penalty for the contraventions ($10,000 for the
first day, and $5,000 for the second day). Justice Boland instead ordered a
fine of $7,500 for the first day, and $3,500 for the second day. Whilst the
Union is obviously disappointed that any fines were imposed, Justice Boland did
make these observations with regard to the behaviour of the Department:
“However, in his letter to Mr Casey late on 21 October 2011 (and after
Ritchie C had made the dispute orders) Commissioner Mullins agreed to observe
the “status quo”, which he belatedly said was “essentially the same as the 2010
arrangements”. It is apparent that the applicant’s position outlined in the
Commissioner’s letter of 21 October 2011 could have been put to the FBEU at an
earlier time and any bans could have been entirely avoided.” (Para 32)
“Another mitigating factor is the applicant declining to acknowledge
there was any agreement of the nature claimed by the FBEU, only to accept on 22
October that it would accept a status quo that was essentially the same as the
2010 arrangements.” (Para 43)
Small wonder
they’ve got no money. This was (yet another) totally unnecessary dispute which
cost the Department, according to its own evidence, almost $200K only to end up
agreeing to observe the LSV staffing agreement anyway. Here is the link to the
full judgment.
Easter Sunday public holiday dispute update
Further to SITREP 25/2012 wherein we reported
on our Easter Sunday public holiday dispute win, the Department has now advised
that the additional consolidated leave for those members who worked on Easter
Sunday 2011 or 2012 was expected to be credited by the end of this week.
Permanent members
of Inspector rank or below should now check their consolidated leave balances
to ensure that they have now been adjusted as follows:
For those who
worked on Easter Sunday 2011 (24 April):
·
A Platoon = 6 hours consolidated leave (1800 to 2400 hours);
·
B Platoon = 8 hours consolidated leave (0001 to 0800 hours);
·
D Platoon = 10 hours consolidated leave (0800 to 1800 hours) and
·
E Platoon = 12 hours consolidated leave (0600 to 1800 hours).
For those who
worked on Easter Sunday 2012 (8 April):
·
A Platoon = 10 hours consolidated leave (0800 to 1800 hours);
·
B Platoon = 6 hours consolidated leave (1800 to 2400 hours);
·
C Platoon = 8 hours consolidated leave (0001 to 0800 hours) and
·
E Platoon = 12 hours consolidated leave (0600 to 1800 hours).
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