Drop Bear wrote:LMA wrote:I have been a member of a union practically my whole work life. Depending on the industry you are in I'd encourage people to join, I've been involved with 4 instances directly and indirectly where the union has been of benefit. It's not only limited to workplace disputes, if you get injured at work or injured to and from work they can help too, a bloke I worked with had a motorcycle accident on the way to work and was off for a year and the union payed his wage.
Isn't that what WorkCover is for?
Having been involved as a doctor in WorkCover cases in both SA and Victoria, and done assessments and reports, and occasionally given evidence in court, I have been forced towards the conclusion that WorkCover in both states is fundamentally about cost containment. In that, it resembles the public health system where all the money goes to the major conditions that may attract media attention if neglected, and more subtly life prolonging and quality of life issues are heavily economised on.
I've also seen situations where unions have left workers high and dry in negotiations with WorkCover where there is another benefit to the union, or one of the union's friends in parliament.
In Adelaide in the late 1980s and early 1990s, I referred about 6 different patients to one private law firm after their union and their union's solicitors had been urging them to take a cheap settlement.
In each case the new lawyer got them something like triple what they had been being urged to accept by their union and its lawyers.
[There were stories about he traps that WorkCover were paying "bonuses" to those unions and their lawyers for assisting "early settlements". It looked like it was probably true to me.]