
Matt McCarten on the picket line last night. Picture / Derek Flynn
McCarten backs
'exploited' club workers
28.06.2003
By MATHEW DEARNALEY and REBECCA WALSH
Unionists
were already working Auckland's red-light district, even before the
Prostitution Reform Act became law overnight.
But
for Matt McCarten, director of the Unite union and Alliance Party president, a
picket last night of the Showgirls strip club in Customs St was a routine case
of looking after "exploited" workers in a dispute which he says is
coincidental to the new law.
Although
he has not ruled out representing prostitutes in future, he says his priority
for now is to win back the jobs of five cleaners sacked by Sante Fe Gold Ltd,
owner of a string of clubs including Showgirls and what he says is an
associated brothel upstairs.
Mr
McCarten and about 14 picketers, including three of the sacked workers, braved
the cold to voice their message but faced tough competition for attention from
a group of dancers from the neighbouring Coyote bar who used the opportunity to
put on an impromptu street performance.
Mr
McCarten says the company will face more pickets, and legal action already
begun in the Employment Relations Authority, unless it agrees to mediation.
The
company's lawyer, Paul Collins, denied in a letter to Unite that workers were
sacked for joining the union.
He
accused them of destroying a "necessary bond of trust and respect" by
clocking in several hours before starting weekend shifts at 6am.
But
Mr McCarten said they were called to a meeting and threatened with dismissal if
they joined the union, a day before a Unite organiser was due to visit
Showgirls.
He
said other cleaners were given a $2 pay rise, taking their hourly earnings to
$11, on condition they not join the union.
Mr
McCarten said the sacked cleaners, all Pacific people, were racially abused and
in one case assaulted by their supervisor.
He
accused the company of failing to pay sick leave to any staff, or even a week's
accident compensation to a worker he said was injured by cleaning chemicals.
Mr McCarten said he was not making any special effort to recruit prostitutes in anticipation of decriminalisation, but would represent any exploited workers, regardless of how they made their living.