Who mediates the mediator? Ian McDonald skrifar 6. febrúar 2023 16:31 I write this article as a direct response by the courts, forcing Efling to hand over their membership lists to the state mediator, in order for him to facilitate a union-wide vote on a contract. The courts allowing the mediator to do this sets a terrifying precedent for any future negotiations and for workers rights in Iceland at large. We exist in a time where people around the world are engaged in strike actions and labor organising, because we understand that for far too long we have been given nothing but scraps while the richest in society grow fat from our labor. There is an understanding and a wider sentiment that asking nicely for a living wage does not work any more. Therefore we are forced to exercise our basic right to withhold our labor. It is the only leverage we have. And with that leverage comes the ability to not merely ask for a little more, just enough to tide us over until the next round of negotiations, all the while profits continue to skyrocket and we lose out. No. It means that we have the rare opportunity to ask for a meaningful, substantial, life-changing change to our situation. That is what we on the negotiations committee of Efling have been engaged with for the past 4 months or more. Our position from the outset has been that any agreement which is less than the current level of inflation is NOT a real-terms pay raise. We know this because we on the committee are workers and Efling members, who live every day seeing our wages get chipped away, and the profit from that ends up in the hands of somebody like Halldór Benjamín, who sits and tells us that we should accept less. And now, Aðalsteinn, the state mediator (who has a long and troubling history of working closely with Halldór Benjamín) has decided that we as a union should be forced to vote on the exact same contract which SA have been trying to shove down our throats since day one. Understand this. The scope and remit of the state mediators power means that he could have proposed a union-wide vote on anything. It could have equally been a vote on the first Efling proposal, or some kind of middle ground. But no. He is forcing a vote on something that ONLY favors SA and corporate profits, At the expense of the workers. This goes to show that the state mediator has had no plans to actually do as his job title suggests and find some middle ground which both parties can agree to. He has handed Samtök Atvinnulífsins everything they wanted on a silver platter. This would be bad enough on its face, but for the courts to now intervene and demand that Efling hands over confidential member information, in order to facilitate this sham? That should set off giant ringing alarm bells for anybody watching this who has a modicum of decency, shame, or empathy for working folk. Unfortunately, there are those in society who hate Efling, who despise it's leadership, and would see us fail. Put aside those feelings, and understand that if Efling loses, workers lose. It is as simple as that. We have a prime minister who is asleep at the wheel, we have a criminal for a finance minister who has made no secret of his desire to end union membership, and now we have a state mediator who has shown willing to undermine the one and only tool which workers have for protection. Stand with workers. Now more than ever. The author is an immigrant worker in manufacturing in Iceland and member of the Efling negotiations committee Viltu birta grein á Vísi? Sendu okkur póst. Senda grein Kjaraviðræður 2022-23 Kjaramál Mest lesið Öfgar á Íslandi Ágúst Ólafur Ágústsson Skoðun Virðisaukaskattur í ferðaþjónustu: Skattfríðindi eða röng túlkun? Eðli virðisaukaskatts, alþjóðlegt samhengi og hlutverk ferðaþjónustunnar sem gjaldeyrisskapandi útflutningsgreinar Þórir Garðarsson Skoðun Vöxtur inn á við og blönduð borgarbyggð er málið Ásdís Hlökk Theodórsdóttir Skoðun Borg þarf breidd, land þarf lausnir Ásta Björg Björgvinsdóttir Skoðun Rjúfum þögnina og tölum um dauðann Ingrid Kuhlman Skoðun Framtíð safna í síbreytilegum samfélögum Dagrún Ósk Jónsdóttir Skoðun Lífið sem var – á Gaza Israa Saed,Katrín Harðardóttir Skoðun Tilskipanafyllerí Trumps Gunnar Hólmsteinn Ársælsson Skoðun Óvandaður og einhliða fréttaflutningur RÚV af stríðinu á Gaza Birgir Finnsson Skoðun Flokkar sem telja almenning of vitlausan til að vita hvað sé sér fyrir bestu Þórður Snær Júlíusson Skoðun Skoðun Skoðun Lífið sem var – á Gaza Israa Saed,Katrín Harðardóttir skrifar Skoðun Vöxtur inn á við og blönduð borgarbyggð er málið Ásdís Hlökk Theodórsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Tilskipanafyllerí Trumps Gunnar Hólmsteinn Ársælsson skrifar Skoðun Öfgar á Íslandi Ágúst Ólafur Ágústsson skrifar Skoðun Borg þarf breidd, land þarf lausnir Ásta Björg Björgvinsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Framtíð safna í síbreytilegum samfélögum Dagrún Ósk Jónsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Rjúfum þögnina og tölum um dauðann Ingrid Kuhlman skrifar Skoðun Virðisaukaskattur í ferðaþjónustu: Skattfríðindi eða röng túlkun? Eðli virðisaukaskatts, alþjóðlegt samhengi og hlutverk ferðaþjónustunnar sem gjaldeyrisskapandi útflutningsgreinar Þórir Garðarsson skrifar Skoðun Fátækt á Íslandi: Áskoranir, viðkvæmir hópar og leiðir til úrbóta Friðþjófur Helgi Karlsson skrifar Skoðun Verndum vörumerki í tónlist Eiríkur Sigurðsson skrifar Skoðun Hann valdi sér nafnið Leó Bjarni Karlsson skrifar Skoðun Misskilin sjálfsmynd Finnur Thorlacius Eiríksson skrifar Skoðun Hvenær er nóg nóg? Ása Berglind Hjálmarsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Byggðalína eða Borgarlína Guðmundur Haukur Jakobsson skrifar Skoðun Úlfar sem forðast sól! Jóna Guðbjörg Árnadóttir skrifar Skoðun Aldrei aftur Halla Hrund Logadóttir skrifar Skoðun Tala ekki um lokamarkmiðið Hjörtur J. Guðmundsson skrifar Skoðun Hver á auðlindir Íslands? – Kallar á nýja og skýra löggjöf Einar G. Harðarson skrifar Skoðun Þétting í þágu hverra? Sara Björg Sigurðardóttir skrifar Skoðun Flokkar sem telja almenning of vitlausan til að vita hvað sé sér fyrir bestu Þórður Snær Júlíusson skrifar Skoðun Til hvers þá að segja satt? Pólitískt baktjaldamakk og upplýsingafölsun í Suðurnesjabæ Ari Gylfason skrifar Skoðun POTS er ekki tískubylgja Hanna Birna Valdimarsdóttir,Hugrún Vignisdóttir skrifar Skoðun Er niðurstaðan einstök? Ársreikningur Hveragerðisbæjar 2024 Friðrik Sigurbjörnsson,Eyþór H. Ólafsson skrifar Skoðun Hvað er verið að leiðrétta? Ægir Örn Arnarson skrifar Skoðun Loftslagsaðgerðir eru forsenda velsældar til framtíðar – ekki valkostur: Svargrein við niðurstöðum rannsóknar sem kynnt var á Velsældarþingi í gær Laura Sólveig Lefort Scheefer skrifar Skoðun Afsökunarbeiðni til fyrri kynslóða – og þeirra sem erfa munu landið Arnar Þór Jónsson skrifar Skoðun 75 ár af evrópskri samheldni og samvinnu Clara Ganslandt skrifar Skoðun Sigurður Ingi í mikilli mótsögn við sjálfan sig! Magnús Guðmundsson skrifar Skoðun Vetrarvirkjanir Sigurður Ingi Friðleifsson skrifar Skoðun Yfirgnæfandi meirihluti vill þjóðaratkvæði Jón Steindór Valdimarsson skrifar Sjá meira
I write this article as a direct response by the courts, forcing Efling to hand over their membership lists to the state mediator, in order for him to facilitate a union-wide vote on a contract. The courts allowing the mediator to do this sets a terrifying precedent for any future negotiations and for workers rights in Iceland at large. We exist in a time where people around the world are engaged in strike actions and labor organising, because we understand that for far too long we have been given nothing but scraps while the richest in society grow fat from our labor. There is an understanding and a wider sentiment that asking nicely for a living wage does not work any more. Therefore we are forced to exercise our basic right to withhold our labor. It is the only leverage we have. And with that leverage comes the ability to not merely ask for a little more, just enough to tide us over until the next round of negotiations, all the while profits continue to skyrocket and we lose out. No. It means that we have the rare opportunity to ask for a meaningful, substantial, life-changing change to our situation. That is what we on the negotiations committee of Efling have been engaged with for the past 4 months or more. Our position from the outset has been that any agreement which is less than the current level of inflation is NOT a real-terms pay raise. We know this because we on the committee are workers and Efling members, who live every day seeing our wages get chipped away, and the profit from that ends up in the hands of somebody like Halldór Benjamín, who sits and tells us that we should accept less. And now, Aðalsteinn, the state mediator (who has a long and troubling history of working closely with Halldór Benjamín) has decided that we as a union should be forced to vote on the exact same contract which SA have been trying to shove down our throats since day one. Understand this. The scope and remit of the state mediators power means that he could have proposed a union-wide vote on anything. It could have equally been a vote on the first Efling proposal, or some kind of middle ground. But no. He is forcing a vote on something that ONLY favors SA and corporate profits, At the expense of the workers. This goes to show that the state mediator has had no plans to actually do as his job title suggests and find some middle ground which both parties can agree to. He has handed Samtök Atvinnulífsins everything they wanted on a silver platter. This would be bad enough on its face, but for the courts to now intervene and demand that Efling hands over confidential member information, in order to facilitate this sham? That should set off giant ringing alarm bells for anybody watching this who has a modicum of decency, shame, or empathy for working folk. Unfortunately, there are those in society who hate Efling, who despise it's leadership, and would see us fail. Put aside those feelings, and understand that if Efling loses, workers lose. It is as simple as that. We have a prime minister who is asleep at the wheel, we have a criminal for a finance minister who has made no secret of his desire to end union membership, and now we have a state mediator who has shown willing to undermine the one and only tool which workers have for protection. Stand with workers. Now more than ever. The author is an immigrant worker in manufacturing in Iceland and member of the Efling negotiations committee
Virðisaukaskattur í ferðaþjónustu: Skattfríðindi eða röng túlkun? Eðli virðisaukaskatts, alþjóðlegt samhengi og hlutverk ferðaþjónustunnar sem gjaldeyrisskapandi útflutningsgreinar Þórir Garðarsson Skoðun
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Flokkar sem telja almenning of vitlausan til að vita hvað sé sér fyrir bestu Þórður Snær Júlíusson Skoðun