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Coles staff urged to vote ‘No’ to proposed enterprise agreement

Nathan SchmidtNCA NewsWire
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Camera IconNot Supplied Credit: News Corp Australia

Coles staff are being urged to vote down a proposed enterprise agreement promising better wages and contract hours as the supermarket giant faces fallout from nationwide walkouts and increased government scrutiny.

The Retail and Fast Food Workers Union on Wednesday urged about 120,000 Coles and Coles Liquorland staff to vote no to the agreement, which requires majority support from employees before going before the Fair Work Commission.

In a message to its members, the union said the agreement did not guarantee real wage increases that would keep up with inflation and failed to protect workers from abuse amid increasing attacks on supermarket staff.

“Coles has cut a wage stealing deal with the SDA and workers are fighting back. There are many reasons to vote no, including that it sees bosses make better offers. Don’t get railroaded into the sellout deal,” the union said.

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Camera IconThe proposed enterprise agreement will require majority approval of staff. NCA NewsWire / Roy VanDerVegt Credit: News Corp Australia

The proposed agreement comes after protracted negotiations between the supermarket giant and the Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association, or SDA, which said the deal would deliver a raft of changes.

Among the proposed benefits of the deal, according to the SDA, is an allowance increase and a sign-on bonus digital gift card, as well as an increase to the minimum part-time contracted hours from nine to 12.

Those promises were rubbished by staff who took to social media to vent frustration at the proposed new enterprise agreement, which they said was “bulls--t” and “an insult” after refusals to bargain with the RAFFWU.

“This enterprise agreement offer is nothing but an insult from a company who refused to bargain for as long as they could, and then refused to listen or compromise on any points,” one staff member said on Reddit.

WOOLWORTHS and COLES WORKER STRIKE
Camera IconTens of thousands of Coles and Woolworths walked off the job late last year. NCA NewsWire / David Crosling Credit: News Corp Australia

“If SDA tries to convince you it’s a good deal, ask them where the improved conditions and pay are. Ask them how much their support is based on their being given a section labelling them as the union for Coles.”

Key to staff complaints was a claim by Coles and Liquorland leadership in an email to staff that “all team members covered by the 2024 agreement will continue to be paid more than the award at all times”.

Staff claimed the rate above the award amounted to just 37c for a “part-time level 1 team member” for a three-hour shift when taking into account a lack of laundry allowance for that role with Coles.

The deal comes amid increased scrutiny on both Coles and Woolworths after they posted record multibillion-dollar profits in recent years as Australians battled rising costs.

Coles has been contacted for comment.

Originally published as Coles staff urged to vote ‘No’ to proposed enterprise agreement

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