By Jock Anderson
Friday 19th April 2002 |
Text too small? |
Latest Department of Statistics figures show there were 42 work stoppages in the December 2001 year, double the number recorded in 2000.
More teachers took industrial action than any other group - 65% of all involved employees.
Last year's stoppages - 17 of them in manufacturing - included 38 strikes, two partial strikes and two lockouts.
They involved 30,022 employees (previous year 2632) who lost an estimated $7.7 million in wages and salaries (previous year $2.3 million) and cost employers 54,440 lost work days (previous year 11,495).
Nearly half the work days lost - 23,394 ended in the December quarter.
Private-sector stoppages increased from nine in 2000 to 28 last year. Public-sector stoppages increased from 12 to 14.
The increase in stoppages has been blamed on the partial return of collective contracts under the Employment Relations Act.
No comments yet
July 17th Morning Report
Meridian Energy monthly operating report for June 2025
July 16th Morning Report
AIA - June 2025 Monthly traffic update
CHI - Q2 2025 Operational Update
July 15th Morning Report
BPG - Blackpearl Acquires US AI Platform to Accelerate Growth
TGG - Response to media speculation
ARB - Annual Meeting Date and Director Nominations
CNU - Q4 FY25 Connections Update