Employment: Ford Geelong – Grievance Speech delivered in Parliament 29 May 2013
Mr Pallas (Tarneit) — I grieve for the people of Geelong, and I grieve for the people of the western and northern suburbs of Melbourne. I grieve for the manufacturing workers at Ford, Broadmeadows, whose plight does not even warrant the immediate attention of the Premier of the state of Victoria, the Pontius Pilate of Victorian politics, a man who would wash his hands of responsibility and spend most of his time trying to work out how he can exculpate himself from any responsibility to deal with these issues. These are the new forgotten people of the Liberal Party. But they have not been forgotten so much as abandoned by this government. They have been abandoned by a government that is in equal measure arrogant and deluded. Some 34 000 Victorians have lost their jobs and joined unemployment queues in this state.
In this Parliament only yesterday we heard the Premier tell us, ‘We have a track record of delivery of more jobs for Geelong’. What is that record for Geelong? What has this Premier done for Geelong? If it is a track record of delivery, it is a dodgy delivery, a Frankston-type delivery of jobs. Because we know that in the Barwon-western region nearly 2000 more people have become unemployed since this government came to office in December 2010. As jobs are lost in Geelong, opportunities for the future are also being compromised and lost by this government. We know that 89 trainers at Gordon TAFE have effectively lost their jobs. This is an example of a government that is compounding bad fortune with bad choices. This government has made choices that work against the interests of people who are trying to get their lives together, people who should be able to reasonably expect that government is going to be a force for change for the better and not intent on effectively absolving itself of responsibility.
When youth unemployment has reached staggering proportions — indeed it is the worst in the nation at 21 per cent — what action would you expect from this wrong-way government? This year marks the 75th anniversary of ‘Wrong Way’ Corrigan’s infamous flight from New York to Ireland. In fact it is within the next month. Old ‘Wrong Way’ took off in New York 75 years ago, supposedly heading for California, in an old, beat-up plane. He claimed that he took a wrong turn and headed east instead of west by accident. The difference between old ‘Wrong Way’ Corrigan and ‘Wrong Way’ Premier Napthine is that whilst both headed east instead of west, it only took the aviator 28 hours to realise his error.
By contrast, the vet from the Western District would circumnavigate the globe before he would concede, in the face of the weight of evidence to the contrary, that he went the wrong way. He went the wrong way when workers expected to see him in Broadmeadows and Geelong at Ford factories.
He went to the New South Wales border, perhaps seeking some form of political asylum, because this Premier could not bear to bring himself to look these workers in the eye. He could look Black Caviar in the eye, through teary eyes, but when these workers were looking for their future to be assured by a government that could lend a helping hand and have some words of comfort and support and a strategy for the future, this government went missing. It was a missing-in-action government.
Having spent 15 years working in the Australian union movement, I might say that the Premier, by happenstance, may have bumped into a union member while he was there.
That this Premier thinks the amazing connection made between organised labour and organised crime is automatic, is clearly a demonstration that this Premier is more intent on political attacks than he is on his responsibility of governing this great state. We know, for example, that two years ago this Premier came out with a thought bubble rather than a plan about creating jobs in Geelong. The people of Geelong need substantive action, not posturing and not promises that come to nothing. He proudly announced in a media release headed ‘Coalition government’s massive jobs boost for port of Geelong’ that bringing the car trade to Geelong would bring thousands of new jobs and $200 million into the local economy, but he was subsequently forced to quietly admit he had got it wrong. A year later he had to admit that the scheme was not viable, as the opposition had told him over and again in this place. This was despite our warnings.
The Premier claimed only yesterday that he had not promised jobs at all and that what he had promised was a study. The people of Victoria can sit back and look at the pretend announcements of jobs that will ultimately disappear like an apparition when the studies fail to demonstrate job creation. The people of Doncaster no doubt understand what an apparition that creates jobs looks like; it is the Doncaster rail extension. There is also the Rowville rail extension, which is another wondrous apparition of jobs creation that disappeared. This is a government intent on stunts, not substance, and the people in the manufacturing industry in this state deserve a lot better than that.
In the meantime of course in the Geelong region we have had announcements of enormous job losses — jobs that are going or under threat — at Shell and Holden, not to mention Qantas, Alcoa, Toyota, Boral and now Ford. What is effectively happening is we have a government that refuses to acknowledge the enormity of the problem. To overcome this problem, what do we see? A government that is saying, ‘We’ve got a strategy, and our strategy is today’s stunt’. Some time ago that stunt was the relocation of the vehicle trade.
When substantive issues are put to this government, issues about which it could actually do something and show confidence to the community, like looking at a serious analysis of the development of the Bay West port option, when the captains of the freight and logistics industry say it should happen and when the government has delayed its preferred alternative at Hastings from 8 to 15-plus years, you would have thought the people of Geelong at least deserve to have the arguments about the location of a proper port — a port capable of handling the state’s freight logistics needs for decades to come — considered in a substantive way, but that has not happened. What they hear from this government is, ‘We’ve made our mind up’.
The government has made its mind up despite the advice of its own department that the Bay West option should be looked at, and it has hidden reports because it is afraid of what those reports might say to the public. When the opposition seeks to get access to those documents, what do we hear?
It would cause unnecessary debate in the community. When the Premier goes to Geelong and holds his round table, he might want to have a debate with the community about his plan to create jobs. This is an issue of national significance. The people of Geelong deserve a credible analysis of the issues that are of substance to them — matters that require a government of good intent and genuine hardworking character to sit back and analyse what they mean for the community.
I represent the electorate of Tarneit, which borders the local government area of Greater Geelong, and that community is also suffering substantially as a consequence of job losses. In fact the highest increase in unemployment in metropolitan Melbourne has occurred in the local government area of Wyndham, and you can marry that with what is happening in Geelong at the moment. The labour market in the Barwon-western region continued to deteriorate over the year to April 2013.
The level of employment has fallen, and the unemployment rate has risen by 0.2 per cent. Of even greater concern is the fact that the participation rate in Geelong has fallen by 1.1 per cent. That means people are just giving up, and that is a stinging indictment of what is happening in this community. Nearly 2000 more people have become unemployed in this region over the term of this government, and the Premier talks about a good track record of delivering jobs in Geelong.
The facts and the real examples of this government’s indifference put proof to that lie. Victorians know that there are 17 000 fewer jobs and 15 000 fewer full-time jobs in the manufacturing sector in this state compared to November 2010. We have seen those jobs disappear. We know where they are. These are highly skilled workers who, more likely than not, dare I say, were members of unions, but they did not deserve to be pejoratively dismissed as being part of some sort of covert organised crime type of community.
I wonder what the Premier will do every time he meets a worker in the future. Will he entertain in his own mind the guttersniping we heard from him at the Liberal Party conference which effectively equated organised labour with organised crime? Is that how low we have fallen in this state, that we reflect upon the character of organised labour as if it were a one-size-fits-all, lowest common denominator approach?
This is a lowest common denominator government that cannot lift its eyes above the guttersniping that it participates in to start looking at the needs of the community, which are quite evident and genuine, and deliver a jobs plan. It should hold itself to account to the community and tell the community what its strategy is, whether it is in procurement, whether it is in skills development or whether it is in recognising that there are communities of disadvantage that require particular assistance and effort — but, no, what we see are thought bubbles and blame shifting from this government.
But there are many, even in the Geelong community, who are prepared to acknowledge that there is a problem. There are at least some who are prepared to acknowledge that problems do exist in the labour market. Of course we heard from one commentator in our region that:
- In our region, thousands of jobs have been lost or are under threat. Manufacturing is in rapid decline …
Who said that? That was Ms Sarah Henderson, the Liberal Party candidate for the federal seat of Corangamite, in the Geelong Advertiser on 15 April.
This cannot just be about trying to find a convenient political argument, about one side of politics pointing the finger of blame at the other.
You cannot have a convenient argument at a federal level and an inconvenient one at a state level. We have heard from our new Treasurer that he does not believe in blame shifting, but that is exactly what this government is about. You need to acknowledge the problem. You cannot deal with a problem unless you acknowledge that you have got one. At least Ms Sarah Henderson, the Liberal candidate for Corangamite, acknowledges that there is a problem, and as soon as you acknowledge that there is a problem then perhaps something more can be done.
We know that an extra 210 000 people will be living in the Geelong area by 2050. The Minister for Planning says he has a strategy to effectively create 80 000 jobs over that same period. Let me put it another way: with the population growing and the way jobs are growing we will have 1 job for every 2.5 new people moving into the area. That is a sign that this is a problem of national significance that the government should recognise.
It should look at substantive proposals about the development of the freight and logistics industry in this area. It should listen to its Department of Planning, Transport and Local Infrastructure about these things. It should not create myths, mythologies and nonsense about the capacity to create a port at Bay West.
If the department says the government is right, if the department says it is not feasible to develop ports and freight in the Geelong area, let the government produce the department’s reports. Let us see them. We have a grown-up society here populated, at least so far as the electorate is concerned, by adults who will actually decide whether we deserve to be in government or even in this place. Those people have a right to see what it is that the government says it knows but we are not grown up enough to see or understand. The reality is that this government is hiding secret reports about the viability of port development and freight development in the Geelong area, which could be a great jobs boon for this area.
It will not hold those reports up for transparent analysis, and that fails the people of Geelong profoundly.
We are seeing time and again population growth effectively outstripping the wellbeing of the Geelong community. The Premier needs to recognise that these are not issues of political partisanship but issues of substantial moment that directly affect the wellbeing of manufacturing sector workers in the Geelong area. The Premier needs to put together a comprehensive plan — a plan similar to the one produced by Labor.