More news - page 1784 of 2241

ACTU and ALP fail to halt $20m ad campaign

The High Court has today refused on technical grounds to issue an interlocutory injunction to stop the Howard Government continuing its spending on a $20 million advertising campaign to promote its second wave IR changes.

DEWR gives final tick to Victorian deal, CFMEU says NSW deal code compliant

The Victorian construction industry's go-early agreement has today been ticked off by DEWR as code compliant, while the CFMEU (NSW branch) has redrafted its latest pattern deal to address DEWR-identified breaches. In both states, the agreements retain provisions that the department warns "may cause breaches through their practical application".

SEIU freed up for more international alliances after AFL-CIO split

The USA's biggest union, the 1.8 million strong SEIU, is better positioned to build its international alliances - including in Australia - after its disaffiliation from the US labour movement's peak body, the AFL-CIO, yesterday.

News in brief, July 27, 2005

Inflation edges up to 2.5%; Family First raises concerns about adequacy of proposed new minimum standards; Craig Johnston now a CFMEU site delegate; Poll shows public opposed to dismissal changes; Nelson seeks feedback on $83m incentive package for workplace change in tertiary education; Textile union says prosecutions could be hampered by second wave; and One in five workers believes they could use sick leave to care for ill pets.

Pilkington back at full steam, as strike and bans end

Pilkington's automotive glass division has returned to full production, ending supply threats to domestic car manufacturers, after workers yesterday ended a four-day strike yesterday and today lifted bans that had been imposed in pursuit of a new redundancy deal.