Alcoa workers go on strike
Alcoa workers have walked off the job indefinitely after negotiations broke down between the company and Australian Workers’ Union officials representing the workers.
Union State secretary Mike Zoetbrood said 1600 workers from the Wagerup, Pinjarra and Kwinana refineries and the Huntley and Willowdale bauxite mines have spent 20 months trying to negotiate a new agreement with the mining giant.
“Workers will not accept an agreement that offers them zero in the way of job security,” Mr Zoetbrood said.
“Members won’t accept the company using the threat of termination as a means of pressuring the workforce into accepting sub-par working conditions.”
Alcoa corporate affairs director Jodie Read said the company had been working hard to establish a new agreement with the union for its WA operations.
“Alcoa wants to establish a modern agreement that provides employees with competitive pay and conditions, allows us to manage our operations efficiently and productively, and gives us the ability to respond to changing market and operating conditions,” Ms Read said.
Employees would be asked to vote on a new agreement later this month, Ms Read said.
“Our sites have contingency plans to ensure they can continue to operate during industrial action,” she said.
Through a new agreement, Ms Read said Alcoa sought to remain internationally competitive.
“The best way Alcoa can continue to be an important contributor to our economy and to provide well-paid local jobs now and into the future is to remain internationally competitive throughout the business cycle,” she said.
Mr Zoetbrood described Alcoa’s proposed alternative agreement as “one-sided and totally unfair”.
“If the company will not offer workers any job security then the agreement is not worth the paper it’s written on,” he said.
“People can’t work knowing that at any stage they could be shown the door.”
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