CFMEU’s fight for workers’ rights at Brisbane’s Cross River Rail is no crime

As Solidarity goes to press industrial action at Queensland’s biggest infrastructure project, Brisbane’s Cross River Rail, continues.

CFMEU members began another round of protected industrial action for a new Enterprise Bargaining Agreement (EBA) on 15 July with picket lines at all 16 site entrances.

This is a legitimate and lawful dispute, but the main contractor, CPB, and the right-wing media are trying to use it to embroil the union in allegations of criminality, to strengthen the case for administration of the Queensland branch of the CFMEU.

Shamefully the state Labor government has joined the smear campaign. The latest allegation is that the CFMEU are responsible for a pre-dawn assault with a metal bar on a strike breaker. The union denied all involvement and welcomed a police investigation, but even before police finished investigating, Premier Steven Miles was using this incident to reinforce his case for legislation imposing administrators.

CFMEU members want a subcontractors clause and better health and safety provisions. Their previous EBA, negotiated in 2019 before workers were on site by the Australian Workers Union (AWU), had no subcontractors clause, meaning work could be outsourced to subcontractors paying below union rates.

As a result, on a site of 2500 workers, only about 170 work for the principal contractor. Some traffic controllers were being paid a miserable $26.81 an hour while others were even paid below the Award rate.

An effective heat policy is another significant issue. Just this year, more than 32 workers have been hospitalised because of heat stress. Last year one worker tragically died, leaving a widow and three daughters behind. The CFMEU want their standard industry heat policy to apply.

Following the expiry of the AWU agreement workers on site turned to the CFMEU in droves to negotiate their next agreement and win better pay and conditions. This is their second round of industrial action.

CPB have attempted to stifle strike action by alleging “unlawful tactics” in the Federal Court, winning a disgraceful ban on CFMEU members going within 15 metres of entrances to all Cross River Rail sites. CFMEU members are also banned from photographing or recording any person or vehicle entering or exiting sites.

Not to be outdone, the CFMEU has set up picket lines 15 metres from the exclusion zones. Opposite the Roma Street entrance the workers have moved to a small park surrounded by three streets and christened it “Solidarity Island”.

Construction workers across Brisbane are contributing $100 a week for four weeks to support members on strike.

Defiant strike action is not corruption or criminality—it’s exactly what’s needed to fight for wages and workers’ rights.

By Mark Gillespie

Magazine

Solidarity meetings

Latest articles

Read more

Uni staff fight job cuts as Labor scapegoats international students

Hundreds of university staff in Canberra and Wollongong have rallied against job cuts, as universities across the country roll out attacks in the wake of Labor’s plans to slash the numbers of international students permitted to study in Australia.

Oppose Labor’s scapegoating of international students

Albanese’s plans to cap the number of commencing international students for 2025 have stalled, after the Senate rejected the legislation. But it will continue reducing international students through other measures to restrict visas.

Don’t rely on court case to end CFMEU administration

Rebel blue collar unions were set to meet in a “Trade Unions for Democracy Summit” as this was written, ahead of the opening of the unions’ High Court challenge to the CFMEU administration regime.