DARK DAY
FOR SA
AS
WORKERS
WEAR
DOUBLE
WHAMMY
5
June 2008
The
combined
impact
of the
state
budget
and the
dreadful
WorkCover
laws
marks
June 5,
2008 as
a dark
day for
SA,
according
to SA
Unions
Secretary,
Janet
Giles.
"Mike
Rann
proudly
describes
himself
as being
a "pro
business
Premier",
but he
fort to
add
"anti
worker"
to the
equation",
Ms Giles
says.
"This
budget
reinforces
the
business
windfall
announced
last
year,
and
comes at
a time
when
vulnerable
injured
workers
are
being
stripped
of
entitlements."
The
facts
speak
for
themselves
:
-
$106
million
payroll
tax
cut
for
the
08-09
financial
year
-
$150
million
reduction
in
business
costs
due
to
regulation
changes
-
$3
million
reduction
in
WorkCover
levies
-
$2
million
saving
in
minimum
wages
if
the
government
insists
on a
$20
week
increase
for
the
low
paid,
instead
of
the
union
claim
of
$26
a
week.
= total
bonus to
business
$261
million
this
financial
year
Contrast
that
with an
injured
worker :
-
3,000
people
set
to
be
kicked
of
the
Work
Cover
scheme
losing
a
collective
$78
million
in
08-09
-
$22
million
in
lost
wages
due
to
the
10%
and
20%
step
down
in
WorkCover
entitlements
after
13
and
26
weeks
= total
loss to
workers
$100
million
this
financial
year
"This is
a state
that has
the
lowest
wages
and
lowest
business
costs in
Australia
- but
also has
the
lowest
skills
level
too."
"A
forward
looking
constructive
government
would
invest
in
skills,
undertake
an
infrastructure
program
that
provides
employment
while
building
state
asset
wealth,
and
embrace
new ways
of
boosting
workforce
participation."
"A
generous
Paid
Maternity
Leave
scheme
utilising
just $30
million
of the
business
windfall
of $261
million
would be
a far
more
productive,
employment
boosting
approach
with
lasting
benefits
for the
state."
"Sadly
however,
this
government
is
prisoner
to the
old
fashioned
thinking
of the
business
lobby.
It has
sacrificed
social
responsibility
on the
altar of
business
profit,
and the
working
families
who
voted
Labor
are
being
let down
by the
party
that
promised
them
plenty
but
failed
to
deliver.
Now
injured
workers
stand to
lose
their
income
and lose
their
houses
as a
result
of these
draconian
WorkCover
laws."
"This is
a dark,
dark day
for SA
when the
vulnerable
injured
are
robbed
of their
rights,
and
business
gets all
the
breaks",
Ms Giles
says.