Auckland bus drivers set to protest

Bus drivers will protest outside Auckland Transport offices tomorrow against roster changes they claim could leave them fatigued and put passengers at greater risk.

The changes are proposed by their employer, NZ Bus, but driver unions say the company is imposing them in response to new weekend schedules the council body intends introducing on July 19.

They have filed an urgent claim in the Employment Relations Authority, alleging a breach of the drivers' collective contract with the company after a failed mediation bid.

Despite a planned protest outside Auckland Transport's offices opposite Britomart at noon tomorrow, the council body says the dispute is an operational matter between the drivers and NZ Bus on which it does not intend commenting.

NZ Bus chief northern operating officer Shane McMahon said the company had a set amount of weekend work it was contracted to perform, and wanted to share it across all drivers to be fair to all.

That will end a seniority exemption now extended to those with longer service.

"We believe sharing that weekend work across all employees is fairer and means that some of the younger drivers with families are not required to work an excessive number of weekends," Mr McMahon said.

"We appreciate there will be vocal resistance from a few drivers who are seeking to maintain their position, but it is about doing what is right for the majority of our people."

But Tramways Union president Gary Froggatt said the changes would affect about 600 drivers at all levels of seniority from five depots, requiring them to work clusters of up to five weekends in a row rather than one in three as many do now.

"It means they may not be able to go to church - a lot of drivers have religious affiliations," he told the New Zealand Herald.

He said the company also intended increasing unpaid time in the middle of daily split shifts to four hours, from three hours now.

First Union organiser Rudd Hughes said the company had consistently ignored feedback from drivers, who needed rosters "which will keep passengers safe and provide a decent work-life balance."

He said the two unions had provided alternative roster proposals, but the company had rejected those.

Mr McMahon said the company was willing to consider the cases of drivers with exceptional circumstances, and had made an offer to the unions accordingly..

He said NZ Bus was committed to "transforming" transport in Auckland, as attested by an improvement in punctuality to 94% of buses leaving their origin stops no more than five minutes late last month, compared with just 83% two years ago.

Mr Froggatt said tomorrow's protest demonstration from 12 noon to 12.30pm will be by drivers either on lunch breaks, or otherwise off-duty, and is not aimed at disrupting passenger services.

 

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