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Pacific unions urge Australia to protect rights of Pacific workers and prevent exploitation

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One of the SI seasonal workers in Australia. Pacific Unions call for fair treatment of its workers in Australia.
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SOLOMON ISLANDS COUNCIL OF TRADE UNION joined other Pacific unions through the Pacific Island Council of Trade Unions (PICTU), the peak union body representing national union centres from Pacific Island Countries, met on 11 November in Brisbane, Australia ahead of the 2024 Pacific Labour Mobility Annual Meeting (PLMAM).

PICTU represents all the workers in the Pacific region.

While noting the positive reforms the Australian Government has made to the Pacific Australia Labour Mobility (PALM) program that have been introduced since the last PLMAM, PICTU calls on the Australian Government to urgently make the following reforms to PALM to protect the rights of Pacific workers and prevent exploitation.

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Solomon Islands Council of Trade Union through PICTU calls on the Australian Government to ensure:

  • PALM workers should have freedom to change employers: PALM workers must have worker-driven mobility – currently workers are effectively tied to their employer-sponsor, which creates a power imbalance that can lead to exploitation. Workers must be able to easily change employers, just as local workers can. This will enable workers to leave exploitative situations, seek better pay and conditions, or a more suitable role.
  • Guarantee a minimum of 30 hours a week, each week for shortterm workers: PALM workers should not leave Australia in debt. Unfair deductions and no minimum hours will leave PALM workers in poverty and hardship. The implementation of the guaranteed minimum hours of 30 hours a week, each week for short-term PALM workers on 1 July 2025 to enable workers to earn enough money to support themselves in Australia and their families.
  • Accommodation must be decent and fair: Accommodation costs must be comparable to local market rates, and of a decent standard that enables to workers to live in dignity and safety.
  • Make super fair and accessible: Make it easier for workers to claim their superannuation, remove the tax on Departing Australia Superannuation Payments (DASP) for PALM workers, expand options to improve the portability of super, and ensure workers have the right to choose their own superannuation fund.
  • Access to the social safety net for PALM workers:Currently PALM workers have to take out private health insurance, which is a cost burden and deters workers from seeking health care – PALM workers must have access to Medicare and the social safety net.
  • Union involvement in pre-departure briefings and worker mobilisation: The Australian Government must urge Pacific Island Governments Pacific Unions must be invited to attend the pre-departure briefings, and must be consulted in the worker mobilisation process to mitigate ‘brain drain’.
  • Decent work for workers on return to their home country: The Australian Government must invest in skills development for PALM workers, and work with Pacific Island Countries to ensure that PALM workers are given support to reintegrate and given opportunities for engagement in decent work in the formal sector, and that Pacific Island Countries adopt a tripartite approach to worker reintegration.

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  • SICTU Press Release

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