Seven West Media is planning to drop its employee agreement covering penalty rates, rosters and redundancy provisions back to minimum conditions after negotiations with the unions reached a stalemate.
A month after 82% of staff voted against the enterprise agreement offered by Seven, human resources boss Katie McGrath sent an email to staff on Friday, seen by Crikey, telling them the company was preparing to apply for the current agreement to be terminated entirely, should conciliation with the Fair Work Commission fail. The agreement covers about 800 permanent staff and 500 casual staff.
McGrath said the “impasse” was down to two changes to the current agreement: one related to redundancies and another to the “exclusion of arbitration from the internal grievance procedure”. Redundancy provisions are of particular concern to staff given Seven’s current cost-cutting plans.
Ominously, there is also the threat to terminate the existing agreement, dropping employees to award minimums and undercutting their ability to negotiate a better deal.
The Community and Public Sector Union, which represents technical and operations staff at Seven, told Crikey that Seven’s plan amounted to corporate bullying.
Acting CPSU director Emma Groube said in a statement that Seven’s profits depended on the skills and expertise of its workers. “Our members at Seven feel cheated and betrayed by this hard-ball push to strip them of gains they’ve taken years to secure around things like redundancy provisions, shift rosters and penalty rates for working those shifts,” she said. “We sadly believe that Seven was angling for an excuse to terminate this agreement from the very beginning. They told us at the start of the negotiating process that they would accept nothing less than a wholesale capitulation from workers on their existing pay and conditions.”
Groube said the CPSU would argue before the Fair Work Commission that it should reject the push for termination. “Our members won’t be lying down and taking this dodgy treatment by their bosses, with strikes and other industrial action now being put on the table,” she said.
The Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance represents journalists, and its media section director Katelin McInerney said Seven’s move was “extraordinary”.
“Seven network journalists and editorial staff right around the country work long hours to deliver the news to their audiences,” she said. “MEAA condemns this move by Seven management to bin long-standing, collectively negotiated terms and conditions in a move that effectively grabs savings for this company … from newsroom staff’s hip pockets. Newsroom staff — and their audiences — deserve better.”
Loophole in the bargaining process
The tactic being employed by Seven, exploiting a loophole in the bargaining process, is increasingly common. Agreements have a nominal expiry date, after which the conditions continue to apply until it is terminated or replaced. Traditionally, these agreements stay in place while a replacement is being negotiated between the workforce and the business. But if a workforce won’t accept a new set of conditions, an employer can unilaterally apply to terminate the agreement, and, if successful, employees have to negotiate a new agreement on the basis of award minimums, rather than the usually far more generous provisions of the current agreement.
Under the Fair Work Act, the Fair Work Commission must terminate an expired agreement on application from a party to that agreement if the FWC is satisfied that it would not be contrary to the public interest, and it considers it appropriate, taking into account the views and circumstances of the parties covered by the agreement and the likely effect the termination would have on each of them. And Seven can make the threat of applying to terminate the agreement in the knowledge that there are more or less no circumstances under which the commission would say no.
The number of applications to terminate agreements across industries has exploded in recent years — in 2017-18 it was 388, up from 161 in 2014-15. Time and again, where employers have sought to improve their bargaining position by terminating an existing agreement, and unions have argued it is contrary to the public interest to imbalance employer-employee relationships in this way, the union has invariably been unsuccessful.
As the tactic has proven so successful, it has spread. Initially, it was only prevalent in manufacturing, with Griffin Coal in the Western Australian mining town of Collie, as well as Aurizon, Esso, AGL, Parmalat using the tactic. But it has spread to education and now, apparently, the media. It’s unlikely to stop there.
Commercial trouble
The negotiations come as Seven West continues its cost-cutting across the board. Just this month, it has closed its Quokka classified business, West Australian editor Brett McCarthy has resigned after working on a “newsroom restructure” and the company has announced it would double its cost-cutting target from between $10 and $20 million to between $20 and $30 million. It will find more savings from moving its Sydney headquarters from Pyrmont to Technology Park in Redfern.
Seven West is facing renewed pressure in the stock market — its shares fell 9% on Monday to 59 cents, wiping out the last of the gains for 2018. The price has now lost 46.8% since its peak of $1.11 a share in August.
A Seven spokesman said in a statement that negotiations had reached an “impasse” after the unions didn’t attend a scheduled meeting. “It has always been our strongest preference to work with staff and the unions to find a solution that is fair and sustainable,” he said.
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