On May 11th next month. I will be bestowed Life Membership of New South Wales Teachers Federation by Federation's Senior President Angelo Gavrielatos. It’s a great honour to achieve. I have in been a active teacher unionist for more than twenty-two years.
However,
I’ve been a unionist since December 1975 when I was a nursing assistant in
Melbourne’s Mount Royal nursing home and became a member of the Hospital
Employees Union. Then I went to work in the old Melbourne Railway Yards as
Labourer in the Australian Railways Union. After that I worked as a labourer on
the production lines for two years in General Motors Holden’s two Melbourne car
plants at Fisherman’s Bend and Dandenong as a member of the Vehicle Builders
Union. A railway fettler (track worker) on Sydney's railways in the Australian
Railways Union. I've also been a scaffolder, rigger, dogman, as a member of the
Builders Laborers Federation, Australian Workers Union, and Building Workers
Industrial Union and an Organiser with the BLF, and a Ship's Painter and Docker
at Sydney's Cockatoo Island Dockyard with my Life Membership signed by the
General Secretary of the Painters and Dockers Bob Galleghan.
There
are a few jobs and unions I’ve missed but my unionism can be defined as
twenty-five years blue collar & twenty two years of teacher unionism. It
has always had these general themes running through it of; touch one, touch
all, solidarity, united we win, divided we beg, dare to struggle, dare to
win!
We
stand on the gains won by unionists, going back generations before us that have
civilised the workplaces and industries I and many others have worked in.
I also did my ABC RN/Radio National documentary The Last Ship about the last ship built at Cockatoo the HMAS Success. The Navy gave me a ride on it from Hobart to Sydney. It served the Navy for thirty three years and ended up being cut up for scrap in Whyalla The were 21 trades involved in its construction. There would not be 21 trades in Australia now.
ABC press release
John
Tognolini ventures onto the high seas for the third in a series of radio
features about working life in Australia.
After
painting vivid aural portraits of volunteer firefighters and
scaffolder/riggers, John returns to his former workplace, the Cockatoo Island
dockyard in Sydney Harbour.
It
was at Cockatoo that the last big ship was built in Sydney -- the navy supply
ship HMAS Success. Cockatoo Island has a history stretching from the days of
convict labour to the intense industrial disputes over its closure by the Hawke
Labor government in the late 1980s.
Contrasting
stories of the lives of workers at Cockatoo with moments from the working life
of the Success as it steams from Hobart to Sydney, John narrates a social
history that was once a staple of Australia's port cities.
But
don't expect a completely sombre account of shipbuilding or life aboard a navy
ship. Togs uncovers plenty of funny stories, some great characters and one
especially terrifying encounter with sea-sickness.
ABC press release.
Over
the last few months, scaffolder and rigger John Tognolini and ABC Radio
National's Radio-eye show have made what is probably the first radio
documentary about scaffolding.
In
The Up and Downs of the Scaff Game, Tognolini, Brent Clough and John Jacobs
recreate the sound of 2000 tonnes of concrete and steel going down 180 feet.
“Why did we do that?”, says Tognolini. “So that people nearly 30 years later
would know about the Westgate Bridge disaster which killed 35 construction
workers on October 1970.”
Tognolini
interviews two survivors of that tragedy, Pat Preston and Paddy Hanopy, and
uses ABC Radio archives to describe what happened.
The
show is also about the present day lives of scaffolders and riggers: working in
chemical plants during shutdowns and putting up new buildings in central
business districts during the booms and busts of the Australian economy.
In 2018 I attended 48th West Gate Memorial and heard Sally McManus address it. I also attended the the the 49th Memorial in 2019 and would have attended the first since COVID last year but my train to Melbourne was cancelled because of the floods. This is Mark Seymour’s song Westgate with footage of the fall of the bridge. West Gate Bridge Survivor Tommy Watson gives candid account of the horror.
1 comment:
Well done comrade. You have served us well and always willing to fight for dignity and justice.
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