logo
PSA Welcomes Mayoral Candidate's Commitment To Pay Equity

PSA Welcomes Mayoral Candidate's Commitment To Pay Equity

Scoopa day ago

The union representing library workers at Wellington City Council welcomes mayoral candidate Andrew Little's commitment to pay equity, and encourages all local body candidates to make the same commitment.
"This is just the latest example of people across the political spectrum recognising the Government's vandalism of the Equal Pay Act as an unjust attack on women," said Fleur Fitzsimons, National Secretary of the Public Service Association Te Pūkenga Here Tikanga Mahi.
"We call on the Council to fix the undervaluation it knows is there, and deliver pay equity to these workers."
"Local body candidates around the country have the chance to do the right thing and recognise the true value library workers bring to their communities."
"But this is no substitution for legislation that guarantees pay equity in full, with provisions for maintaining it. We will keep fighting to reverse the Government's changes."
The PSA lodged the library workers' pay equity claim with Auckland, Tauranga, Hamilton, Wellington, Christchurch, and Dunedin councils in 2019.
Since then, the PSA worked with the councils in good faith to reach a settlement.
Library workers were one of the pay equity claims that was close to being settled before being cancelled by last month's amendments to the Equal Pay Act.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ACT Responds To Legislation To Restrict Farm-To-Forest Conversions
ACT Responds To Legislation To Restrict Farm-To-Forest Conversions

Scoop

time17 minutes ago

  • Scoop

ACT Responds To Legislation To Restrict Farm-To-Forest Conversions

Press Release – ACT New Zealand The Government is moving to address legitimate concerns in rural communities. Forestry is swallowing up productive farmland because the current system is rigged against those who feed the world. Responding to the introduction of legislation to restrict farm-to-forest conversions, ACT Rural Communities spokesperson Mark Cameron says: 'The Government is moving to address legitimate concerns in rural communities. Forestry is swallowing up productive farmland because the current system is rigged against those who feed the world,' says Mr Cameron. 'Red tape and distorted incentives make it more profitable to plant pine trees than to run a farm. 'There is more the Government could do to address the root of the problem. It could start by letting Kiwis offset their emissions overseas. There's no reason we should be covering our own productive land in carbon farms when planting is cheaper and more efficient in other parts of the world. 'It's also time for a wider conversation about whether New Zealand's Paris climate commitments are worth the cost. 'Right now, our only options to meet these targets are blanketing the countryside in trees, or driving up costs on fuel, electricity and everyday goods. Neither of those is acceptable. We need to ask whether the pain is worth it. 'Kiwi farmers are the best in the world at what they do – the freer they are to compete and grow, the better. ACT will keep backing farmers and rural communities.

Primary Sector-Government Partnership To Boost Rural Health And Resilience
Primary Sector-Government Partnership To Boost Rural Health And Resilience

Scoop

time17 minutes ago

  • Scoop

Primary Sector-Government Partnership To Boost Rural Health And Resilience

Press Release – New Zealand Government The establishment of this fund is a result of advocacy by Federated Farmers Chair, Wayne Langford, who has been a long-time champion of rural wellbeing and mental health. Minister of Agriculture Minister of Forestry The Government is stepping up support for rural New Zealand with a $4 million Rural Wellbeing Fund to expand investment in community-based initiatives, Agriculture and Forestry Minister Todd McClay announced today at Fieldays. 'The establishment of this fund is a result of advocacy by Federated Farmers Chair, Wayne Langford, who has been a long-time champion of rural wellbeing and mental health,' Mr McClay says. The contestable fund to drive rural health and community resilience will prioritise initiatives that have strong local backing and secure co-funding from industry or regional partners. It will support new and existing initiatives like Surfing for Farmers, Farmstrong, NZ Young Farmers, FirstMate and many more. A five-member panel with representation from the primary sector will be established to assess project applications. Projects must demonstrate strong local delivery, provide clear benefits to rural people, and ability to attract co-investment from industry and sector partners. 'We're backing the people on the ground who are already doing great work—this fund is about scaling up, reaching further, and removing barriers for rural communities to lead their own wellbeing efforts,' Mr McClay says. This fund brings the Government's total investment in rural resilience and mental health to more than $11 million over the next four years. 'This package is about ensuring the farmers and growers who generate our export income, create jobs, and sustain our regions have the support they need to thrive,' Mr McClay says. 'When rural New Zealand is well, New Zealand does well,' Mr McClay says. In addition to the Rural Wellbeing Fund, the Government has confirmed: $6 million over four years for Rural Support Trusts across the country; An extra $1 million in 2025 for frontline rural mental wellbeing services; $400,000 in grants for A&P shows that foster rural connection and pride; and $250,000 to support the expanded outreach work of Rural Women New Zealand in 2025/26. Expressions of interests for project funding are now open. For more information, visit

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store