One of the most important and potentially divisive issues in the transition to “living with COVID” is the willingness of businesses outside the immediate health and caring professions to require their workers to be vaccinated.
Food manufacturer SPC decided to take the lead with a vaccine mandate to come into force over the next two months for its workers. Its legal authority to do that, however, is contested, and there’s no clear advice from the Fair Work Commission or Safe Work Australia. Safe Work Australia tells employers: “You must do all that is reasonably practicable to minimise this risk and vaccination should be considered as one way to do so in the context of a range of COVID-19 control measures” but “it is unlikely that a requirement for workers to be vaccinated will be reasonably practicable”.
As Crikey forecast — albeit in a much shorter timeframe than we expected — businesses are calling for clarification by the government on what they rightly term a “grey area”. The SPCs of the industry can afford litigation brought by workers or unions, but smaller firms can’t, and need something a bit better than “is unlikely”.
The prime minister had an opportunity to provide that clarity yesterday after he was invited to reflect on SPC and the issue of mandating vaccines. In response he offered this all-you-can-eat word salad:
People will make a choice to get vaccinated or not vaccinated. Businesses have to make choices. And on SPC, you’ve indicated, the choice that they’ve been making, Qantas have been making similar noises about the choices they’ll be making, about how they run their business, because remember that in a business, that business at the end of the day will bear the costs of having to do the cleaning down the facilities and the various other things that could happen as a result of an outbreak or or something like that of that nature in their premises. So I understand businesses looking to make choices. Now the legal basis for that, I’m sure they’ve taken advice about that. And that could be, that that will be an issue that we watch very closely. So where people are taking decisions that they believe are dealing with their concerns and their interests, then that’s something that the Coalition governments, Liberal governments have always been supportive of. But that’s always subject to the rule of law.
The appropriate response from business to this would be: “FFS!”
“That could be, that that will be an issue that we watch very closely,” says Morrison, as if he weren’t prime minister and makes the legislative framework for industrial relations. As if he gets to determine what the rule of law means in these circumstances. Morrison promises to hit the ground watching on one of the most important economic and health issues of the next six to 12 months. It’s almost as if Morrison wanted to confirm the stereotype of him as a man incapable of providing leadership.
It’s true that Morrison is somewhat stymied by the horse-punchers in his party room who invoke Nazi Germany at the first mention of vaccine passports. But that’s, erm, what leadership is supposed to be: persuading people of different views to cooperate, or minimising the capacity for disruption of those who won’t.
But clearly Morrison is so worried about the possibility of becoming a minority government that he won’t do anything to upset his noisier, and generally rather noisome, backbenchers. Andrew Laming is allowed to flout Morrison’s demands with impunity; George “I swear I will cross the floor and this time I really really mean it” Christensen can undermine virus suppression efforts without censure.
These don’t have much impact in the real world. Morrison’s refusal to provide leadership on vaccine mandates, however, is making an already difficult time for business even more challenging. The prime minister needs to get off his arse, stop watching and worrying about his backbench, and start leading for the sake of business.
He has large currupt businesses to worry about too. The ones paying the bribes and potentially the post political $1million a year sinecures. Its tough trying to satisfy those people when your day job is in conflict with their demands. Keep up the pressure and see if we can put this stinking govt in jail.
Dont vote LNP.
Clennell: “Why is Bunnings closed in QLD but not in NSW?”
Berejiklian: “Next question!”
Later, Clennell tweeted an article about the hardware giant written by a staff member who said staffers at Bunnings in Sydney have been asking the same question as he had for weeks.
One of the most corrupt and dangerous are the Murdoch/Stokes/Costello media outfits
Greens senator Mehreen Faruqi has contacted the Australian Federal Police after receiving some “pretty bad hate mail” on Wednesday night following a segment on Paul Murray Live which featured a video of the senator talking about Sky News.
“People have to realise that this channel regularly emboldens its viewers to go out and spew hate and vitriol,” Faruqi told Weekly Beast.
“It has real consequences for its targets. I’m certainly not the first person to be targeted by Sky News and I won’t be the last. There are serious problems with this poisonous channel. I’m glad Sky is finally in the spotlight and being held accountable for what it broadcasts.”
In response he offered this all-you-can-eat word salad:…The appropriate response from business to this would be: “FFS!”
But clearly Morrison … won’t do anything to upset his noisier, and generally rather noisome, backbenchers.
On fire today BK. Thanks heaps. I am really pleased to read such clear takedowns of the PM and his truly talentless cabinet.
Bernard Keane is doing some of his best fearless journalism.
Morrison’s performance on the first sitting day was ragged and nasty. He accused the Labor leader of “thought bubbles without thought” and claimed Albanese hadn’t “bothered to speak to Lieutenant-General Frewen or to seek a meeting with him. He cancelled his meeting even yesterday.”
Albanese called “Liar” across the dispatch box and was asked to withdraw by the speaker.[Frewen later had the decency to agree with Albo later]
Morrison’s use of Frewen in this crass piece of politics realised the fear many have, including some in the military, that this appointment could damage the reputation of our defence forces.
Could? It already has! And Frewen has not helped avoid that damage
“hit the ground watching” made me laugh!
‘Watching’ would be preferable to the usual “hit the ground waffling”.
‘Horribly exposed’: ACT chief minister attacks Gladys Berejiklian’s handling of NSW Covid crisis
Exclusive: Andrew Barr says NSW premier is not just making decisions for her own state, but for Australia’s entire east coast
This has been the NSW and Federal Coalition’s aim all along, to live with covid, for the sake of their coffers and donations boxes, brown paper bags and their large arses on leather seats, with not a shred of accountability to those idiots that vote conservative. Welcome to the contagion that is the Coalition.
ACT Barr said: ” he was “realistic there is going to need to be an adjustment point” as vaccination rates increased and the country moved to Covid-normal, but not “when we, one of the best vaccinated jurisdictions in the country, are still sitting at 33%”.
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2021/aug/20/horribly-exposed-act-chief-minister-attacks-gladys-berejiklians-handling-of-nsw-covid-crisis
“The only two jurisdictions that can conceivably protect themselves from NSW’s decision to a certain degree are Western Australia and Tasmania.”
Barr said that if the ACT could successfully stamp out the current outbreak, there would then need to be a “a range of settings in place that assume constant incursion of the virus from NSW”.
If “providing a safe workplace environment” doesn’t include taking all reasonable possible steps to ensure staff don’t come into contact with a contagion as potentially devastating, and even lethal, as Covid, what does it cover?
How about compo for “catching Covid from the cluster at work”?
How’s about just getting let go and have no work…
ACT Barrr: “The only two jurisdictions that can conceivably protect themselves from NSW’s decision to a certain degree are Western Australia and Tasmania.”
Barr said that if the ACT could successfully stamp out the current outbreak, there would then need to be a “a range of settings in place that assume constant incursion of the virus from NSW”.
If anyone votes Coalition I have not one shred of empathy or sympathy for their plight or that of their loved ones, as they own this disaster brought upon our nation by Berjiklian, Morrisin and the ratbag ragtaggle brigade chanting freedom MAD, must be time for another let it rip article from your mates schwabbler
You of course don’t give a rat’s ars…so concerned are you about your own pathetic little world and so called freedom to cause death and suffering to others.
Barr said he was “realistic there is going to need to be an adjustment point” as vaccination rates increased and the country moved to Covid-normal, but not “when we, one of the best vaccinated jurisdictions in the country, are still sitting at 33%”.
“I just see young people being horribly exposed by the decision of another government and I don’t know what I can do to protect my community against that.”
Since the government has done the absolute minimum in terms of getting people vaccinated – leaving it as opt-in and putting the onus on each individual to sort it out themselves (bar a few select groups), the confusing messaging on AstraZeneca both with and without ATAGI, and doing the bare minimum to encourage uptake even in the midst of an outbreak – it’s no surprise the government is leading with a coherent message on this issue.
It’s inconvenient to close borders until the voters say it works. It’s important we get AstraZeneca until the voting public turns away after a concerted scare campaign by the media. It’s unnecessary to lockdown until the “gold standard” in tracing fails an outbreak. And so on.
I don’t think Morrison et al. are going to pick a side on this issue until doing so matters electorally-speaking. Thankfully we have states taking leadership in this vaccine crisis because the federal government doesn’t seem willing to take that role. i.e. “I don’t write the laws, mate”