I need to know....

Anything!

Re: I need to know....

Postby Booney » Tue Jul 16, 2024 11:32 am

RB wrote:
MW wrote:What is the lowest amount of money you would bend down to pick up off the street these days?
I saw a $2 coin on the footpath yesterday and must admit, thought twice about bothering to pick it up but did anyway but it got me thinking...is it folding money now or just leave it?
My first thought was gold coin - pick it up, silver - leave it.

But I think I'd have to pick up a 50c piece. There's just something about a dodecahedron that I don't think I could walk past.


Pretty sure a dodecahedron is 3 dimensional.
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Re: I need to know....

Postby dedja » Tue Jul 16, 2024 11:36 am

Pffft … dodecahedron, dodecagon … easy mistake to make :lol:
Dunno, I’m just an idiot.
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Re: I need to know....

Postby RB » Tue Jul 16, 2024 11:37 am

Booney wrote:Pretty sure a dodecahedron is 3 dimensional.


So is the coin, I hope.

But yes I think I meant 'dodecagonal prism' rather than 'dodecahedron'. My profound apologies.
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Re: I need to know....

Postby Brodlach » Tue Jul 16, 2024 11:37 am

Spargo wrote:
Lightning McQueen wrote:
MW wrote:What is the lowest amount of money you would bend down to pick up off the street these days?
I saw a $2 coin on the footpath yesterday and must admit, thought twice about bothering to pick it up but did anyway but it got me thinking...is it folding money now or just leave it?

I used to glue $1 coins to the ground on the walkway to our factory when I worked in the factory, it was hilarious seeing people try and discreetly pick it up or kick it along to somewhere less obvious.

When I worked in pubs we’d tear the corner off a $50 note & place it under a bar mat so it was just visible. You’d watch as people spotted it, looked around thinking they’d scored & then the look on their face when they slid it out… priceless

Adelaide Oval 1983, Test match. I was a kid, had a $2 note with fishing line attached, was a hilarious lunch break until an old guy threatened to kill us :lol:
July 11th 2012....
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Re: I need to know....

Postby MW » Tue Jul 16, 2024 1:25 pm

Booney wrote:Who really believes the CFMEU has links to organized crime?


my sarcasm meter is broken and in the shop, you kid no?
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Re: I need to know....

Postby dedja » Tue Jul 16, 2024 1:32 pm

MW wrote:
Booney wrote:Who really believes the CFMEU has links to organized crime?


my sarcasm meter is broken and in the shop, you kid no?


Definitely busted, time for a new one ;)
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Re: I need to know....

Postby Jimmy_041 » Tue Jul 16, 2024 6:07 pm

Booney wrote:Who really believes the CFMEU has links to organized crime?


Obviously no-one involved in the ACTU or Labor Party

Amusing watching all the Sgt Schultz impersonators
Even more amusing when people come out and say how the same people were warned and have proof

Even Turbo looks worried about the fallout and is in damage control overload

I haven't seen the AFR put up as many articles on the one subject since Qantas and Joyce
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Re: I need to know....

Postby Jimmy_041 » Tue Jul 16, 2024 6:12 pm

Allan, Albanese told of union thuggery in 2022

Detailed evidence was sent more than 18 months ago that CFMEU officials were threatening violence and banning non-union preferred firms from taxpayer-funded projects.

Nick McKenzie, David Marin-Guzman and Ben Schneiders
Jul 16, 2024 – 5.00am

Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese were sent detailed evidence more than 18 months ago that CFMEU officials were threatening extreme violence and unlawfully black banning non-union preferred firms from state and federally funded projects.

A letter from the directors of an Indigenous labour hire firm, which was emailed to Ms Allan, then premier Daniel Andrews and then opposition leader Mr Albanese, details serious threats of violence, intimidation and unlawful union black bans on the Monash Freeway upgrade project run by major contractor CPB.


Premier Jacinta Allan said on Monday she had asked Labor officials to suspend the CFMEU from her party’s state branch. Justin McManus

Leak to accused criminal
Government documents reveal Ms Allan, who was Victoria’s deputy premier and infrastructure minister at the time, took a year to respond and, even then, insisted industrial relations were a federal issue and suggested a call to state bureaucrats if there were any other concerns.

In a separate extraordinary development, it can be revealed that questions sent to the CFMEU from this masthead about the union’s links to organised criminals were leaked to an accused criminal in NSW with deep organised crime links.

The accused criminal’s syndicate has ties to CFMEU-backed labour hire firms winning work on Minns government-funded projects.

This masthead has confirmed that around 48 hours after questions were sent to the CFMEU, they were in the hands of the alleged criminal, who can’t be named for legal reasons but whose syndicate has a strong relationship with certain NSW union officials.

The revelations come as the crisis engulfing the union deepened on Monday. The CFMEU placed the Victorian branch into administration and announced its own investigation into claims of bikie and underworld infiltration and allegations union support is being traded for kickbacks.

Mr Albanese has said that action is insufficient and Workplace Relations Minister Tony Burke confirmed he was still considering deregistration.

Review flagged
Ms Allan pledged to suspend the CFMEU from the Labor Party and referred the matter to Victoria Police and the Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission for investigation. She said Labor in Victoria would stop taking the union’s political donations, but only until the investigation concluded.

Ms Allan also flagged a review of state government building contracts and a request to the federal government to assess all construction industry pay deals to ensure they were free of improper conduct.

At her Monday morning press conference, Ms Allan repeatedly insisted she had “zero tolerance” for the intimidating behaviour revealed by the investigation with 60 Minutes, but could not explain why it took a year to address the detailed evidence presented to her about serious CFMEU misconduct on state government Big Build sites.

Ms Allan was told at the time that the threats of violence and unlawful conduct were captured on video recordings that could be made available to authorities.

Where is the safe place? Why as an employer should we be threatened with violence, and why should this violence take place in front of employees?

Frustrated at the lack of response from Ms Allan, the firm wrote to Mr Albanese in October 2022 repeating their concerns. Asked about the email on Monday night, the prime minister’s office said it would check the records to see if the email was received. It is unclear whether Mr Albanese or his office received the letter, only that it was sent.

Ms Allan and Mr Albanese were also sent transcripts of the threats from two CFMEU officials. These included one that recorded a senior union organiser threatening to violently bash two directors of a small labour hire company, and another that captured a second organiser claiming the union controlled the Big Build and would ban non-favoured firms.

In the letter, the directors detailed how they faced “fear of retribution” and asked for government help.

“These are supposed to be government jobs for Victorians, free for tender and free of coercion where businesses are free to engage with other entities without fear of retribution,” the letter said.

“We can’t go to clients, they don’t want IR problems; we can’t discuss it with the union, or the bodies who are supposed to keep a leash on this behaviour out of fear of business collapse or personal ramifications.

“Where is the safe place? Why as an employer should we be threatened with violence, and why should this violence take place in front of employees?”

Ms Allan’s reply apologised for the delay but wrote that she was unable to help. She advised the firm to seek assistance from the federal government or the large state contractors who had earlier warned the directors not to complain.

In the letter dated April 17, 2023, Allan wrote “the management of industrial relations and subcontractor selection is the responsibility of our contracted construction partners”.

“As such, your correspondence has been forwarded to the relevant construction partner for appropriate action, and we have reinforced our expectation that they operate to the highest standard of lawful and ethical behaviour.”

She explained that the federal government was primarily responsible for employment legislation meaning “they will be best placed to address allegations of illegal behaviour and I encourage you to seek advice from the relevant federal department on these matters”.

Asked about the lengthy delay to respond to the CFMEU bullying on Monday, Ms Allan said she always took “immediate” steps to investigate claims.

“I have absolutely zero tolerance for any sort of bullying thuggish intimidatory behaviour on Victorian work sites, and where we had had issues raised with either myself or the relevant delivery agency we have moved to immediately investigate those allegations.”

Sources familiar with the dispute said CPB had raised the matter with the Major Transport Infrastructure Authority at the time but no action was taken. CPB declined to comment.

Fair Work Ombudsman probe
It is understood the Fair Work Ombudsman has recently started investigating the CPB matter.

Two months after receiving the firm’s letter Ms Allan was also briefed about another Indigenous firm that the CFMEU had allegedly kicked off nine government projects, including the state’s signature project the $200 billion Suburban Rail Loop, according to emails released under freedom of information.

Nick McKenzie has quizzed Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan after an investigation by this masthead, AFR and 60 Minutes sparked a construction industry crisis.

That Indigenous firm’s letter outlining its concerns was completely redacted in response to an FOI request last year.

However, a copy of the letter subsequently obtained by the Financial Review showed that the firm, which did not have a CFMEU-endorsed pay deal, detailed claims of the union’s repeated actions to black ban the firm from building sites mid-contract.

At the state government’s Suburban Rail Loop project, on the Greensborough to Diamond Creek upgrade, an Acciona manager had emailed the firm’s owner after 14 months of work to say “there will be no bookings going forward” and that he had been “instructed” to only use two traffic management companies that were not Indigenous.

Ms Allan responded to those claims by referring the alleged coercion to the Australian Building and Construction Commission, which the Albanese government was about to scrap.

In subsequent emails to the FWO, the labour hire owner alleged the Acciona manager had told him the CFMEU had threatened to close the site down every day until they were replaced and that would cost it more than $1 million a day.

Acciona did not respond to requests for comment.

Fair Work Ombudsman Anna Booth, whose agency has been investigating alleged coercion of indigenous firms for well over a year, said it had “active investigations into the conduct of the CFMEU, including into the Victorian branch, relating to possible Fair Work Act contraventions”.

“Improving compliance across the building and construction industry is a priority for the FWO, and we will investigate reports of non-compliance and hold to account those who act outside the law.”

Since it took over the building industry remit in 2022, the FWO has launched several legal actions against employers in the building industry but none against the CFMEU.

Read more on the Building Bad investigation
Part 1: Bikies, underworld figures and the CFMEU takeover of construction
‘It’s a cancer that spreads...we’ll all pay for it’: This is the investigation into CFMEU power that prompted union boss John Setka to quit.

Part 2: Caught on film: How Setka and the CFMEU wield their power
Videos show John Setka delivering a suitcase message to a rival’s home, and other officials issuing threats and boasting of the union’s total control.

Part 3: ‘Everybody eats’: secret recording exposes CFMEU kickback plan
Harry Korras was clear that to get a CFMEU EBA “there’s a fee. That’s business.” Meanwhile, police evidence mounts against John Setka’s anointed successor.

Part 4: ‘I just need this to stop’: Dead after first day on CFMEU site
A day before his 19th birthday, Ben Nash had no idea the t-shirt he was wearing would lead him to be bullied, humiliated and locked in a shed.

Years of wilful incuriosity have enabled the CFMEU
The latest expressions of shock and platitudes about “zero tolerance” by senior figures in the labour movement come across as utterly disingenuous.

Deregistering CFMEU won’t help clean out criminals: McManus
ACTU secretary Sally McManus says deregistering the CFMEU would be counterproductive, as the union’s national executive ordered the Victorian branch into administration to investigate alleged criminal links.

‘More action needed’: Albanese poised to move against CFMEU
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has cast doubt on the ability of the renegade union to clean up its act.

Comment: Fair Work Act isn’t much help dealing with the CFMEU
Stronger rules and safeguards are needed, along with an audit of the EBAs the union has signed, if proper governance is finally to be installed at the CFMEU.

Analysis: ‘The dam is breaking’: Setka resignation blow to culture of fear
The CFMEU boss’ departure was a shock even to his own officials, but it is a watershed moment for the culture of silence and intimidation that has ruled the construction industry.

‘Good’: PM welcomes Setka resignation after AFR investigation
Anthony Albanese slammed former CFMEU boss John Setka as calls emerged for him to take tougher action against the militant union after allegations reported today.

Setka quits CFMEU effective immediately
Powerful CFMEU boss John Setka has quit the union ahead of explosive allegations regarding misconduct involving himself and the union.

CFMEU deal helps add 10pc to apartment costs The CFMEU’s latest wages deal for NSW will increase labour costs by up to 19 per cent in the first year alone, a new analysis finds.

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Nick McKenzie is an Age investigative journalist who has twice been named the Graham Perkin Australian Journalist of the Year. A winner of 14 Walkley Awards, he investigates politics, business, foreign affairs, human rights and criminal justice. Email Nick at nickmckenzie@protonmail.com
David Marin-Guzman
David Marin-Guzman
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David Marin-Guzman writes about industrial relations, workplace, policy and leadership from Sydney. Connect with David on Twitter. Email David at david.marin-guzman@afr.com
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Re: I need to know....

Postby gazzamagoo » Tue Jul 16, 2024 6:21 pm

Nick McKenzie has big balls for such a little bloke.
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Re: I need to know....

Postby am Bays » Tue Jul 16, 2024 6:22 pm

CFMEU is basically a rebranded (corporate speak definitely intended) BLF, No?
Let that be a lesson to you Port, no one beats the Bays five times in a row in a GF and gets away with it!!!
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Re: I need to know....

Postby mighty_tiger_79 » Tue Jul 16, 2024 6:52 pm

gazzamagoo wrote:Nick McKenzie has big balls for such a little bloke.

There was a clip of him on radio with the Vic Premier which was just brilliant... not so for her :lol:
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Re: I need to know....

Postby Jimmy_041 » Wed Jul 17, 2024 12:16 pm

What could possibly go wrong...........
Who the **** do these people think they are

Outrage at CFMEU bid to get investigation and prosecution powers

Ronald Mizen
Senior reporter
Jul 16, 2024 – 6.33pm

Canberra builders have expressed outrage at a CFMEU bid to get powers to investigate and prosecute breaches of certain territory laws amid explosive allegations of serious misconduct in other union branches.

Under a proposed change to the ACT Labor Party platform, the construction union is seeking sweeping powers like those held by government agencies to investigate and refer matters to the ACT Director of Public Prosecutions.

Builders must inform union delegates which subcontractors are awarded work as soon as possible. Jessica Shapiro

The union wants to police a law known as the Secure Local Job Code, which is applied to construction, security, cleaning and traffic companies vying for government work.

An amendment to the platform put forward by the union and obtained by The Australian Financial Review would make it ACT Labor Party policy to expand “investigative powers to enable unions to investigate and prosecute suspected breaches of the code … similar to mechanisms within the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) and the Work Health and Safety Act 2011 (ACT).”

The CFMEU also proposes that it and other unions be consulted on firms seeking to be certified to receive government work under the code, which would strengthen its hand in deciding who gets to tender for lucrative projects.

A major investigation by The Australian Financial Review, The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and 60 Minutes found underworld figures have infiltrated major Victorian and NSW construction projects, with some securing jobs as CFMEU delegates.

It also revealed how outgoing CFMEU boss John Setka made a menacing nighttime visit to the family home of a fellow senior union official to dump a suitcase scrawled with a message attacking the official as a “dog”, as well as evidence of self-styled union fixers offering EBAs in return for payments.

Master Builders ACT on Tuesday said it “beggars belief that the [ACT] CFMEU would call for the union to have even more power”.

“It is especially galling in light of the recent allegations of bullying, intimidation and corruption by the CFMEU in Victoria, which have come as no surprise to our members,” the industry group said in a statement.

“This abhorrent conduct is experienced daily on construction sites around the country, and the ACT is no exception.”

The amendments will be considered at the party’s conference on July 27.

ACT Chief Minister Andrew Barr reiterated Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s statement that the alleged activity had “no place in the union movement” but no allegations had been made against the ACT branch.

Mr Barr played down the prospect the CFMEU would get the powers it called for, saying it was neither policy nor being considered by the government.

Union influence has been a feature of the ACT Integrity Commission’s first major investigation named Operation Kingfisher, which has been probing an overhaul of a local primary school.

When the project tender was released in 2019, there were two responses. One was from a business called Manteena, which did not have an enterprise agreement involving the CFMEU. That was costed at $15.1 million. The other was from Lendlease, a CFMEU-friendly business, costed at $16 million.

Manteena was deemed to be the preferred option.

But the commission heard the CFMEU then complained to the government, and subsequently Lendlease received the work.

In public hearings, the commission heard about a dispute between the CFMEU and the unsuccessful but lower bidder Manteena, which rebuffed union attempts to represent its workers.

There is no evidence before the commission that either Lendlease or Manteena were involved in any wrongdoing, and the commission is yet to hand down its final report.

Ronald Mizen reports on politics, economics, business and the law, with a focus on corporate regulators, lobbyists and investigations from Parliament House, Canberra. Connect with Ronald on Twitter. Email Ronald at ronald.mizen@afr.com
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Re: I need to know....

Postby Lightning McQueen » Wed Jul 17, 2024 1:18 pm

Jimmy_041 wrote:
Allan, Albanese told of union thuggery in 2022

Detailed evidence was sent more than 18 months ago that CFMEU officials were threatening violence and banning non-union preferred firms from taxpayer-funded projects.

Nick McKenzie, David Marin-Guzman and Ben Schneiders
Jul 16, 2024 – 5.00am

Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese were sent detailed evidence more than 18 months ago that CFMEU officials were threatening extreme violence and unlawfully black banning non-union preferred firms from state and federally funded projects.

A letter from the directors of an Indigenous labour hire firm, which was emailed to Ms Allan, then premier Daniel Andrews and then opposition leader Mr Albanese, details serious threats of violence, intimidation and unlawful union black bans on the Monash Freeway upgrade project run by major contractor CPB.


Premier Jacinta Allan said on Monday she had asked Labor officials to suspend the CFMEU from her party’s state branch. Justin McManus

Leak to accused criminal
Government documents reveal Ms Allan, who was Victoria’s deputy premier and infrastructure minister at the time, took a year to respond and, even then, insisted industrial relations were a federal issue and suggested a call to state bureaucrats if there were any other concerns.

In a separate extraordinary development, it can be revealed that questions sent to the CFMEU from this masthead about the union’s links to organised criminals were leaked to an accused criminal in NSW with deep organised crime links.

The accused criminal’s syndicate has ties to CFMEU-backed labour hire firms winning work on Minns government-funded projects.

This masthead has confirmed that around 48 hours after questions were sent to the CFMEU, they were in the hands of the alleged criminal, who can’t be named for legal reasons but whose syndicate has a strong relationship with certain NSW union officials.

The revelations come as the crisis engulfing the union deepened on Monday. The CFMEU placed the Victorian branch into administration and announced its own investigation into claims of bikie and underworld infiltration and allegations union support is being traded for kickbacks.

Mr Albanese has said that action is insufficient and Workplace Relations Minister Tony Burke confirmed he was still considering deregistration.

Review flagged
Ms Allan pledged to suspend the CFMEU from the Labor Party and referred the matter to Victoria Police and the Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission for investigation. She said Labor in Victoria would stop taking the union’s political donations, but only until the investigation concluded.

Ms Allan also flagged a review of state government building contracts and a request to the federal government to assess all construction industry pay deals to ensure they were free of improper conduct.

At her Monday morning press conference, Ms Allan repeatedly insisted she had “zero tolerance” for the intimidating behaviour revealed by the investigation with 60 Minutes, but could not explain why it took a year to address the detailed evidence presented to her about serious CFMEU misconduct on state government Big Build sites.

Ms Allan was told at the time that the threats of violence and unlawful conduct were captured on video recordings that could be made available to authorities.

Where is the safe place? Why as an employer should we be threatened with violence, and why should this violence take place in front of employees?

Frustrated at the lack of response from Ms Allan, the firm wrote to Mr Albanese in October 2022 repeating their concerns. Asked about the email on Monday night, the prime minister’s office said it would check the records to see if the email was received. It is unclear whether Mr Albanese or his office received the letter, only that it was sent.

Ms Allan and Mr Albanese were also sent transcripts of the threats from two CFMEU officials. These included one that recorded a senior union organiser threatening to violently bash two directors of a small labour hire company, and another that captured a second organiser claiming the union controlled the Big Build and would ban non-favoured firms.

In the letter, the directors detailed how they faced “fear of retribution” and asked for government help.

“These are supposed to be government jobs for Victorians, free for tender and free of coercion where businesses are free to engage with other entities without fear of retribution,” the letter said.

“We can’t go to clients, they don’t want IR problems; we can’t discuss it with the union, or the bodies who are supposed to keep a leash on this behaviour out of fear of business collapse or personal ramifications.

“Where is the safe place? Why as an employer should we be threatened with violence, and why should this violence take place in front of employees?”

Ms Allan’s reply apologised for the delay but wrote that she was unable to help. She advised the firm to seek assistance from the federal government or the large state contractors who had earlier warned the directors not to complain.

In the letter dated April 17, 2023, Allan wrote “the management of industrial relations and subcontractor selection is the responsibility of our contracted construction partners”.

“As such, your correspondence has been forwarded to the relevant construction partner for appropriate action, and we have reinforced our expectation that they operate to the highest standard of lawful and ethical behaviour.”

She explained that the federal government was primarily responsible for employment legislation meaning “they will be best placed to address allegations of illegal behaviour and I encourage you to seek advice from the relevant federal department on these matters”.

Asked about the lengthy delay to respond to the CFMEU bullying on Monday, Ms Allan said she always took “immediate” steps to investigate claims.

“I have absolutely zero tolerance for any sort of bullying thuggish intimidatory behaviour on Victorian work sites, and where we had had issues raised with either myself or the relevant delivery agency we have moved to immediately investigate those allegations.”

Sources familiar with the dispute said CPB had raised the matter with the Major Transport Infrastructure Authority at the time but no action was taken. CPB declined to comment.

Fair Work Ombudsman probe
It is understood the Fair Work Ombudsman has recently started investigating the CPB matter.

Two months after receiving the firm’s letter Ms Allan was also briefed about another Indigenous firm that the CFMEU had allegedly kicked off nine government projects, including the state’s signature project the $200 billion Suburban Rail Loop, according to emails released under freedom of information.

Nick McKenzie has quizzed Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan after an investigation by this masthead, AFR and 60 Minutes sparked a construction industry crisis.

That Indigenous firm’s letter outlining its concerns was completely redacted in response to an FOI request last year.

However, a copy of the letter subsequently obtained by the Financial Review showed that the firm, which did not have a CFMEU-endorsed pay deal, detailed claims of the union’s repeated actions to black ban the firm from building sites mid-contract.

At the state government’s Suburban Rail Loop project, on the Greensborough to Diamond Creek upgrade, an Acciona manager had emailed the firm’s owner after 14 months of work to say “there will be no bookings going forward” and that he had been “instructed” to only use two traffic management companies that were not Indigenous.

Ms Allan responded to those claims by referring the alleged coercion to the Australian Building and Construction Commission, which the Albanese government was about to scrap.

In subsequent emails to the FWO, the labour hire owner alleged the Acciona manager had told him the CFMEU had threatened to close the site down every day until they were replaced and that would cost it more than $1 million a day.

Acciona did not respond to requests for comment.

Fair Work Ombudsman Anna Booth, whose agency has been investigating alleged coercion of indigenous firms for well over a year, said it had “active investigations into the conduct of the CFMEU, including into the Victorian branch, relating to possible Fair Work Act contraventions”.

“Improving compliance across the building and construction industry is a priority for the FWO, and we will investigate reports of non-compliance and hold to account those who act outside the law.”

Since it took over the building industry remit in 2022, the FWO has launched several legal actions against employers in the building industry but none against the CFMEU.

Read more on the Building Bad investigation
Part 1: Bikies, underworld figures and the CFMEU takeover of construction
‘It’s a cancer that spreads...we’ll all pay for it’: This is the investigation into CFMEU power that prompted union boss John Setka to quit.

Part 2: Caught on film: How Setka and the CFMEU wield their power
Videos show John Setka delivering a suitcase message to a rival’s home, and other officials issuing threats and boasting of the union’s total control.

Part 3: ‘Everybody eats’: secret recording exposes CFMEU kickback plan
Harry Korras was clear that to get a CFMEU EBA “there’s a fee. That’s business.” Meanwhile, police evidence mounts against John Setka’s anointed successor.

Part 4: ‘I just need this to stop’: Dead after first day on CFMEU site
A day before his 19th birthday, Ben Nash had no idea the t-shirt he was wearing would lead him to be bullied, humiliated and locked in a shed.

Years of wilful incuriosity have enabled the CFMEU
The latest expressions of shock and platitudes about “zero tolerance” by senior figures in the labour movement come across as utterly disingenuous.

Deregistering CFMEU won’t help clean out criminals: McManus
ACTU secretary Sally McManus says deregistering the CFMEU would be counterproductive, as the union’s national executive ordered the Victorian branch into administration to investigate alleged criminal links.

‘More action needed’: Albanese poised to move against CFMEU
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has cast doubt on the ability of the renegade union to clean up its act.

Comment: Fair Work Act isn’t much help dealing with the CFMEU
Stronger rules and safeguards are needed, along with an audit of the EBAs the union has signed, if proper governance is finally to be installed at the CFMEU.

Analysis: ‘The dam is breaking’: Setka resignation blow to culture of fear
The CFMEU boss’ departure was a shock even to his own officials, but it is a watershed moment for the culture of silence and intimidation that has ruled the construction industry.

‘Good’: PM welcomes Setka resignation after AFR investigation
Anthony Albanese slammed former CFMEU boss John Setka as calls emerged for him to take tougher action against the militant union after allegations reported today.

Setka quits CFMEU effective immediately
Powerful CFMEU boss John Setka has quit the union ahead of explosive allegations regarding misconduct involving himself and the union.

CFMEU deal helps add 10pc to apartment costs The CFMEU’s latest wages deal for NSW will increase labour costs by up to 19 per cent in the first year alone, a new analysis finds.

Save

Share





Gift this article New


License article
READ MORE
Building Bad

John Setka

CFMEU

Trade unions

Jacinta Allan

Sally McManus

Subscriber exclusive

Investigation

Nick McKenzie
Investigative reporter
Nick McKenzie is an Age investigative journalist who has twice been named the Graham Perkin Australian Journalist of the Year. A winner of 14 Walkley Awards, he investigates politics, business, foreign affairs, human rights and criminal justice. Email Nick at nickmckenzie@protonmail.com
David Marin-Guzman
David Marin-Guzman
Workplace correspondent
David Marin-Guzman writes about industrial relations, workplace, policy and leadership from Sydney. Connect with David on Twitter. Email David at david.marin-guzman@afr.com


I've got 3 days annual leave in November, I'll read this then.
HOGG SHIELD DIVISION V WINNER 2018.
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Re: I need to know....

Postby dedja » Wed Jul 17, 2024 1:20 pm

:lol:
Dunno, I’m just an idiot.
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Re: I need to know....

Postby mighty_tiger_79 » Sun Jul 21, 2024 7:34 pm

Anyone engage in the Prime sales?
Matty Wade is a star and deserves more respect from the forum family!
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Re: I need to know....

Postby Kahuna » Sun Jul 21, 2024 8:11 pm

mighty_tiger_79 wrote:Anyone engage in the Prime sales?


Well I bought 2 prawn peeler/deveiners and a packet of small dinosaurs.
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Re: I need to know....

Postby dedja » Sun Jul 21, 2024 8:14 pm

Surely the discount would have been greater on the larger ones …
Dunno, I’m just an idiot.
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Re: I need to know....

Postby amber_fluid » Mon Jul 22, 2024 2:14 pm

What’s happening with the old Mick Skopos petrol station on Marion road at Parkholme?
Been vacant for 25+ years
There are no stupid questions, just stupid people.
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Re: I need to know....

Postby MW » Mon Jul 22, 2024 4:18 pm

amber_fluid wrote:What’s happening with the old Mick Skopos petrol station on Marion road at Parkholme?
Been vacant for 25+ years


Used to be the regular fill spot, cheapest fuel in the south. Strange it has never been redeveloped.
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Re: I need to know....

Postby amber_fluid » Mon Jul 22, 2024 4:26 pm

MW wrote:
amber_fluid wrote:What’s happening with the old Mick Skopos petrol station on Marion road at Parkholme?
Been vacant for 25+ years


Used to be the regular fill spot, cheapest fuel in the south. Strange it has never been redeveloped.


Not sure why the caltex(previously Cole’s express) didn’t open up there as it’s only 1/2km down the road.
There are no stupid questions, just stupid people.
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