Port Botany Workers Sacked via Text Message

August 7, 2015

 Infuriated workers have formed picket line at Hutchison Ports in Botany, NSW after 97 employees from Sydney and Brisbane were sacked by email.  Hutchison Ports Australia operates as Brisbane Container Terminals in Queensland.

 
Brisbane port workers woke Friday morning to discover they had been sacked overnight, with Hutchison Ports Australia alerting them to the news via text message.
 
The sent out a message to more than 40 workers just before midnight, stating the worker had been sacked and there would be "no redeployment opportunities".
 
"You are not required for your allocated shift, please disregard your most recent work orders, you are not required on shift until further notice," the text message sent to 41 Brisbane workers said.
 
It pointed affected staff to an email which went into further detail.
 
The Maritime Union of Australia described as "unconscionable", "barbaric" and "unAustralian" and Opposition Leader Bill Shorten called it "heartless, callous and stupid". 
 
The MUA has sought a Federal Court injunction against the sackings and says a small group of workers who were not made redundant were occupying the company’s Brisbane terminal in protest.
 
"We are going to be here until all our members, all our workers get justice" said Paul Keating, deputy branch secretary of the MUA Sydney branch. An MUA alert declared "War on the waterfront".
 
 The union believed a hidden agenda for automation on the waterfront was at play. "We say automation without negotiation is anti-union and won't be tolerated". 
 

Logistics News

Port of Oakland Moves 174,239 TEUs in November as Exports Increase

Port of Oakland Moves 174,239 TEUs in November as Exports Increase

CMA CGM Vessels Navigate the Suez Canal, Hinting at Easing Tensions

CMA CGM Vessels Navigate the Suez Canal, Hinting at Easing Tensions

Oil Loading in Venezuela Crawls After New US Interceptions

Oil Loading in Venezuela Crawls After New US Interceptions

FMC Investigates Spain’s Restrictive Port Practices

FMC Investigates Spain’s Restrictive Port Practices

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Venezuela passes law against piracy, blockades amid US oil ship seizures
TankerTrackers.com reports that a loaded supertanker returned to Venezuelan waters after US interceptions.
Malaysia's Petronas signs a LNG supply agreement with China's CNOOC