Log in

View Full Version : Fix bus drivers lockout or lose contract, Auckland regional council says



RHIZOMES
13th October 2009, 05:29
Found this development in the Auckland bus drivers lockout rather interesting... Not only are all the major bourgeois newspapers on the side of the workers but now even the state (at the local level) is?

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/news/article.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=10602675


Fix bus row or lose contract, council says

2:01PM Monday Oct 12, 2009
By Edward Gay and Kara Segedin http://media.nzherald.co.nz/webcontent/image/jpg/111009NZHSRIBUS04_300x200.jpg
The deadlock between drivers and their employer NZ has taken 700 buses off the road. Photo / Sarah Ivey


Your Views How are you coping with the bus disruption?


Send us Your Views (http://blogs.nzherald.co.nz/blog/your-views/2009/10/12/how-are-you-coping-bus-strike/?c_id=3&objectid=10602675#message)
Read Your Views (http://blogs.nzherald.co.nz/blog/your-views/2009/10/12/how-are-you-coping-bus-strike/?c_id=3&objectid=10602675)



Register for Your Views (http://dynamic.blogs.nzherald.co.nz/users/register/)


Related links:

Affected services (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10601740)
Matt McCarten: Bus lockout a cynical move by bosses (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10602479)
NZ Bus rejects free rides (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/?objectid=10602533)
Editorial: Blame the bus company - not the drivers (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/?objectid=10602125)
Bus lockout sends commuters to trains (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/?objectid=10602239)
ERA steps into bus dispute - disruptions set to continue (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/?objectid=10602054)
Bus pass holders face financial hit over dispute (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/?objectid=10601827)
Company, union stand firm on buses (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/?objectid=10601739)



The Auckland Regional Council has delivered an ultimatum to the bus company at the centre of the industrial dispute - either fix it up or lose your contract.
Council chairman Mike Lee said Auckland has had enough.
"Auckland will not be held to ransom. If you can't deliver the services that the people of Auckland rely on, then we will have to find someone else who can," he said.
He said despite meetings over the weekend, it appears NZ Bus and the unions representing drivers have not made any meaningful progress.
"The Auckland travelling public have run out of any patience or sympathy for this on-going nonsense," said Mr Lee.
He said NZ Bus had breached its contract with the council to provide bus services around Auckland and the contract can be terminated for the company's failure to carry out their side of the agreement.
"Terminating NZ Bus contracts would be a drastic step. However, it is clear that the company is not responding to other normal commercial pressure, nor in my view does it take seriously its service obligations to the public.
"Perhaps the threat of NZ Bus's entire Auckland business being terminated will sharpen the minds of the negotiators and deliver the break through that is required," Mr Lee said.
NZ Bus general manager of operations Zane Fulljames said Mr Lee's comments were "not helpful".
"In fact, unwittingly, his comments may have exacerbated the issue. However we will not be entering into a slanging match with him via the media," Mr Fulljames said.
He re-iterated that NZ Bus would continue the lock-out of its drivers until they remove their work-to-rule notice.
This morning traffic was flowing as normal while trains were packed to capacity as the bus lock-out coincides with students returning from school holidays.
More than 9000 Auckland children started their first day back at school today without buses to get them to classes.
New Zealand Transport Agency acting Auckland State Highways manager Sumi Eratne said the traffic on Auckland's motorway was typical for a first day of term.
He said traffic volumes on the northern motorway were a little higher than normal but with the northern busway operating as normal, congestion was only slightly higher than normal.
Auckland Regional Transport Authority spokeswoman Sharon Hunter said the western train lines were 50 per cent busier than usual. She said the figures are still coming in but train staff reported huge increases in passenger numbers.
She said some of those on the Western line had to wait for the next train because of the passenger numbers.
Ms Hunter said it was only about a five minute wait because the trains were coming one after the other.
She said the Southern and Eastern lines also reported a 40 per cent increase.
Ms Hunter said the skeleton bus services have also been "packed to capacity". She said the Airport Bus has been picking people up who have been waiting at stops that they don't usually stop at.
Talks between NZ Bus and unions representing its drivers continued throughout the weekend, but ended last night without agreement.
As a result, 9289 children from 145 schools - from a total of about 80,000 daily passengers - will have to make other arrangements.
The unions had offered to provide school bus services from today, free of charge.
But NZ Bus rejected the offer (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10602533), dismissing it as "at best misguided and is at worst mischievous".
Auckland Regional Transport Authority spokeswoman Sharon Hunter said last night commuters should check maxx.co.nz for affected and alternative routes.
"Tomorrow will be a crunch problem with schools going back," she said. "We are going to squeeze everything out of our operators."
School bus routes run by other bus services, such as Ritchies and Howick and Eastern, will operate as usual, but NZ Bus provides the bulk of services.
Ms Hunter said if parents found a school bus was cancelled, they should find the replacement bus service running closest to their school.
Another option was to use one of the 200 walking school buses in the Auckland region. Details were on the Maxx website.
"They are a safe way of getting to school for young kids," she said.
Other forms of public transport - such as trains and ferries - had covered for the curtailed bus services, but Ms Hunter urged commuters to turn up early and be patient.
Replacement peak-time services have been set up for the Hibiscus Coast, New Lynn via Great North and Sandringham Rds, Dominion Rd, Mt Eden Rd and Manukau Rd.
Pay negotiations between NZ Bus and the four bus driver unions have been going for five months, and hit a deadlock last week.
Drivers were locked out after the unions issued the company with a work-to-rule notice, and 700 buses have been off the road since Thursday.
Union spokesman Karl Andersen yesterday said the offer to work still stood, but it was too late for today.
Mr Anderson said the offer of free school services had been repeated through the Employment Relations Authority on Saturday.
"They know the offer is a bona fide offer. I fail to understand why they would reject it."
The union's original work to rule notice would not have stopped children getting to school, and the matter could be resolved by NZ Bus lifting the lock-out, he said.
NZ Bus's general manager of operations, Zane Fulljames, said the union offer to make school runs without pay was a "media stunt" and "designed to be inflammatory".
"The unions know it's not logistically possible."
NZ Bus had contacted each school affected by the lockout and responses had been "generally understanding, but concerned".
- With NZHERALD STAFF

RHIZOMES
13th October 2009, 05:43
Ahahaha, the plot thickens.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10602951&ref=facebook


ARTA gives NZ Bus 5pm deadline Doc (http://media.nzherald.co.nz/webcontent/document/pdf/_1012190333_001.pdf)

Page 1 of 2 View as a single page (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10602951&pnum=0) 12:05PM Tuesday Oct 13, 2009
By Mathew Dearnaley (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/mathew-dearnaley/news/headlines.cfm?a_id=111) http://media.nzherald.co.nz/webcontent/image/jpg/A_091009NZHRGRBUS0003_300x200.jpg
NZ Bus has locked out its drivers and suspended bus services in a dispute over the drivers' contract negotiations. Photo / Richard Robinson




Doc (http://media.nzherald.co.nz/webcontent/document/pdf/_1012190333_001.pdf) Fergus Gammie's letter to NZ Bus (http://media.nzherald.co.nz/webcontent/document/pdf/_1012190333_001.pdf) (38 KB)

Your Views How are you coping with the bus disruption?


Send us Your Views (http://blogs.nzherald.co.nz/blog/your-views/2009/10/12/how-are-you-coping-bus-strike/?c_id=1&objectid=10602951#message)
Read Your Views (http://blogs.nzherald.co.nz/blog/your-views/2009/10/12/how-are-you-coping-bus-strike/?c_id=1&objectid=10602951)



Register for Your Views (http://dynamic.blogs.nzherald.co.nz/users/register/)


Related links:

Tempers run short as lockout drags on (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/?objectid=10602844)



Auckland's main bus company has until 5pm to come up with answers on how to resolve its conflict with 875 drivers and cleaners who have been locked out of their workplace since Thursday.
Auckland Regional Transport Authority head Fergus Gammie has written to the company threatening to start cancelling contracts worth over 58.5 million a year to Infratil owned NZ Bus.
"It is critical that this dispute now be resolved as soon as possible and that service levels be fully restored immediately. In addition to the impact on customers we need to restore the confidence in Auckland's public transport system," Mr Gammie said.
Mr Gammie also warned NZ Bus that it is in breach of fulfilling its contract with ARTA.
The NZ Bus fleet has now been off the road for six days.
Auckland Regional Council chairman Mike Lee said the effect of a lockout by NZ Bus has spread to harassed parents who had to take time off work to drive children to and from school on the first day of term.
Although roads remained largely uncongested, trains carried almost 50 per cent more passengers than normal yesterday morning, and transport officials fear disruption may worsen today as people who might have taken an extra day off to see how the bus dispute panned out return to work.
Attempts by the Employment Relations Authority since Thursday and through the weekend to "facilitate" a resolution have failed to break the impasse, leaving authority chief James Wilson considering whether to recommend terms for a settlement.
But any recommendation will be non-binding, apart from being used to exert moral pressure towards ending a five-month pay dispute.
Mr Lee has written to the Auckland Regional Transport Authority asking the authority - a subsidiary of his council - to issue a notice to NZ Bus to rectify its failure to deliver services for which the company receives $58.5 million a year in subsidies from ratepayers and taxpayers.
"As I understand it ... if the failure is not remedied within five days, ARTA can move to terminate the contract - this in our opinion needs to be done as soon as possible," he told authority chairman Rabin Rabindran.
Authority spokeswoman Sharon Hunter said it could take two months to terminate contracts according to dispute resolution processes, but the chief executives of the authority and bus company had begun talks yesterday on the crisis.
Mr Lee told the Herald the lockout was "nothing short of a disaster" for Auckland's campaign to develop public transport.
He feared lost public confidence would cause a decline in patronage, after a 7 per cent increase last year.
Asked how his council could find replacements for the company's 700 buses, Mr Lee said it was considering several possibilities, which he was not prepared to reveal.
"I have to admit it will not be easy but we will if we have to, and in the end a bit of short-term pain may be worth it to get rid of these people if they are going to behave in such an antisocial way."
NZ Bus operations manager Zane Fulljames said Mr Lee's comments were not helpful.
"In fact, unwittingly his comments may have exacerbated the issue," he said. "Our focus at this time is on working constructively in the facilitation process to resolve the issue and get buses back on the road."
Mr Fulljames said the 80,000 Auckland passengers who normally use his buses daily should keep making alternative plans for today, but if the unions were genuine about settling the dispute, they should lift their notice of work-to-rule strike action before 10am.
If that happened, "we will work around the clock with them to have all of our services inclusive of school services resumed on Wednesday".
Mr Lee's stand was praised by Newmarket Business Association chief Cameron Brewer, who early on challenged him to show leadership towards settling the dispute.
Transport Minister Steven Joyce said he was urging both sides to try to reach a resolution, although it was not appropriate for him to intervene beyond that.
But Mr Lee said the Government should reconsider its intention to amend new transport legislation giving regional councils greater control of public transport operators "because all it's doing is strengthening NZ Bus and facilitating them to get away with these sorts of tactics".
- With NZHERALD STAFF