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Hundreds Rally To Fight Nippon Opel Paper Cuts (Read 180 times)
whiteknight
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Hundreds Rally To Fight Nippon Opel Paper Cuts
Feb 8th, 2025 at 7:20am
 
Hundreds rally to fight Nippon Opal paper cuts harming workers
February 6, 2025  ACTU.
ACTU President, Michele O’Neil has slammed Nippon Paper’s Opal management, demanding an immediate end to the lockout of over 300 production workers from its Morwell Paper Mill in the Latrobe Valley.

Local management of the paper manufacturer Opal, owned by Japanese multi-national Nippon Paper, locked out its production workforce indefinitely 21 days ago – leaving them without wages.

With the lockout in its third week, hundreds of Nippon Paper Opal mill workers travelled to Melbourne today for a rally outside the multi-national’s headquarters in inner-city Richmond.

They protested at the harshness of the lockout and the extreme action taken by the company.

The company ordered the lockout after seven CFMEU Manufacturing workers took six-hours of protected stop-work action; the first such action in two decades.

Addressing the rally, ACTU President Michele O’Neil said the lockout was an abuse of power by a multi-national seeking to crush its Australian workforce and called on Nippon Paper Opal local managers to sit down with workers and CFMEU Manufacturing for crisis talks to reopen the mill.

Quotes attributable to ACTU President, Michele O’Neil:

“The workers at Nippon Paper’s Opal mill have had the back of this company, so much so, that they voluntarily accepted a 5 percent pay cut to keep the mill financially viable in 2016. No managers took a pay cut.

“Now Nippon Paper Opal should have their workers’ backs. Instead of locking them out in an aggressive abuse of power, they should be sitting down with their loyal, skilled, long-term workforce to settle a new fair enterprise agreement.

“The paper mill is the biggest employer in the Latrobe Valley and the jobs at the mill keep local businesses and communities going. Every local school has kids turning up whose parents are not bringing in any wages. Not because their parents are on strike but because they have been locked out of the workplace.

“This is bullying on the part of Nippon Paper Opal and completely out of proportion with workers exercising their legal right to bargain for the first time in two decades.

“Nippon Paper Opal has deep pockets, but instead of reaching a fair deal, have adopted a strategy designed to starve mill workers into accepting severe cuts to pay and conditions so they can go back to work.

“Nippon Paper executives in Japan seem to fail to grasp the gravity of the hardship being caused. This is not a game; workers, families and Latrobe Valley towns need these 300 jobs and Nippon Paper Opal needs to end this flagrant abuse of power.

Quotes attributable to CFMEU Pulp & Paper Secretary, President Denise Campbell-Burns:

“Members at Nippon Paper’s Opal mill are standing strong and won’t be bullied into taking a pay cut. Their bills haven’t been cut—groceries, petrol, and mortgage repayments keep rising—why should their wages go backwards?

“This isn’t just about the 308 workers locked out of their jobs – it’s about the entire Latrobe Valley. Every local business, every family, every community that relies on this mill is being punished because a handful of executives won’t come to the table and negotiate in good faith.

“Nippon Paper Opal’s lockout is an attack on workers, an attack on families, and an attack on the Latrobe Valley. This company is showing complete disregard for the people who keep its operations running.

“If executives in Japan think Australian workers will roll over and accept pay cuts, they’ve got another thing coming. We don’t accept bullying, we don’t accept intimidation, and we won’t accept a deal that leaves workers worse off.”
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Frank
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Re: Hundreds Rally To Fight Nippon Opel Paper Cuts
Reply #1 - Feb 8th, 2025 at 8:04am
 
Not surprisingly, the ACTU puff piece is silent about the nature of the dispute or the reason for the strike action that prompted the lockout, or the union demands.

I bet it's pretty unreasonable. But who knows?
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Re: Hundreds Rally To Fight Nippon Opel Paper Cuts
Reply #2 - Feb 8th, 2025 at 8:56am
 
How wonderful it is to see these good union workers standing up for their rights.  Good on them, and good on the union.   Smiley 
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Frank
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Re: Hundreds Rally To Fight Nippon Opel Paper Cuts
Reply #3 - Feb 8th, 2025 at 9:57am
 
whiteknight wrote on Feb 8th, 2025 at 8:56am:
How wonderful it is to see these good union workers standing up for their rights.  Good on them, and good on the union.   Smiley 

What do they want?
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Re: Hundreds Rally To Fight Nippon Opel Paper Cuts
Reply #4 - Feb 8th, 2025 at 10:08am
 
Looks like they are after a new enterprise agreement.   Sad
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Re: Hundreds Rally To Fight Nippon Opel Paper Cuts
Reply #5 - Feb 8th, 2025 at 10:12am
 
Frank wrote on Feb 8th, 2025 at 8:04am:
Not surprisingly, the ACTU puff piece is silent about the nature of the dispute or the reason for the strike action that prompted the lockout, or the union demands.

I bet it's pretty unreasonable. But who knows?


Negotiations hit a standstill over Opal's plans to extend ordinary work week hours from 35 to 38 in a rolling roster that would include weekend work.

The CFMEU's manufacturing branch says this will mean more work for less pay, due to understaffing and the need for recognised overtime.
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Frank
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Re: Hundreds Rally To Fight Nippon Opel Paper Cuts
Reply #6 - Feb 8th, 2025 at 11:51am
 
greggerypeccary wrote on Feb 8th, 2025 at 10:12am:
Frank wrote on Feb 8th, 2025 at 8:04am:
Not surprisingly, the ACTU puff piece is silent about the nature of the dispute or the reason for the strike action that prompted the lockout, or the union demands.

I bet it's pretty unreasonable. But who knows?


Negotiations hit a standstill over Opal's plans to extend ordinary work week hours from 35 to 38 in a rolling roster that would include weekend work.

The CFMEU's manufacturing branch says this will mean more work for less pay, due to understaffing and the need for recognised overtime.




OH, HELLO, CFMEU!

And so now there is no work.  Good one, CFMEU.  Everything these goons touch turns to shite.


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Re: Hundreds Rally To Fight Nippon Opel Paper Cuts
Reply #7 - Feb 8th, 2025 at 12:51pm
 
Australian workers should be grateful these foreign Companies buy Australian businesses that can't cut the mustard and fail, keeping them employed in a country where self sufficient Business & Corporation enterprise domestically is a pathetic effort going by international standards.
Those workers should just take what they can.
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Re: Hundreds Rally To Fight Nippon Opel Paper Cuts
Reply #8 - Feb 8th, 2025 at 2:03pm
 
I was wondering where they got the trees to make all that paper...... just asking here.... for a friend...

Lucky they don't use Samurai swords on recalcitrant peasants these days...
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Re: Hundreds Rally To Fight Nippon Opel Paper Cuts
Reply #9 - Feb 10th, 2025 at 8:43am
 
So they ACTU is unhappy because they think they should be the ones to decide when and where to shut a business down, not the owners?
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Re: Hundreds Rally To Fight Nippon Opel Paper Cuts
Reply #10 - Feb 12th, 2025 at 8:14pm
 
When they say Rally will there be racing cars in paddocks?
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