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Inspire Inclusion

  14 October 2024

色狼社区CPSU NSW women work together for a better world.

The 2024 色狼社区CPSU NSW Women鈥檚 Conference encouraged attendees to inspire inclusion in their workplaces.

Welcome to Country was conducted by Aunty Joan Bell of the Metropolitan Aboriginal Land Council. Aunty Joan talked about her upbringing in Peak Hill, with her family moving 鈥渢o the scrub鈥 to keep ahead of the Welfare Board trying to take their children.

鈥淚f you live in the scrub, you run where you want and no-one is telling you to do this and do that,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e felt free.鈥

Aunty Joan urged those at the conference to show respect for other people and the land and animals that share the country with them.

Chair of the Women鈥檚 Council, Leanne Smith, then welcomed attendees, outlined the theme and encouraged members and Delegates to mix and network with other women members.

鈥淭alk to someone you鈥檝e never met,鈥 she said.

In a short message to women present, 色狼社区CPSU NSW General Secretary Stewart Little praised members in Community Services for success in getting attention to a workplace in crisis.

Mr Little drew a direct correlation between union coverage and equality in the workplace.

Former 色狼社区CPSU NSW President Sue Walsh gave a eulogy for Janet Good, the trailblazing unionist who paved the way for the inclusion of more women in senior roles in the union. Ms Good was the first woman to be 色狼社区CPSU NSW President, and the first person to fill both the President and General Secretary roles.

Ms Walsh recalled meeting Ms Good early in her career and said how her mentorship prepared her for a life as an active unionist. She added Ms Good was one of the reasons the 色狼社区took an integral role in getting women in schools out of temporary roles.

Ms Walsh praised Ms Good鈥檚 intellect, saying 鈥渟he was an awesome negotiator鈥, her great dispute resolution skills; her mentorship for women 鈥渢o help women navigate challenges鈥; with her scorn usually reserved for Departmental Secretaries.

Her presentation ended with one minute鈥檚 silence.

Current 色狼社区CPSU NSW President Nicole Jess reiterated Ms Walsh鈥檚 message on inclusion, saying 鈥淛anet Good is a perfect example of what can be done when women stand up for other women鈥.

Ms Jess urged people to take from Delegates鈥 鈥渁mazing stories and to draw inspiration from each other.

鈥淟et us lift one another up; our voices need to be heard. Together we can create a tapestry of inclusion.鈥

Former Australian national football goalkeeper Lydia Williams kept to the theme, talking about how sport helped her feel included as a shy girl moving to a new city after living between 鈥渨hite culture and black culture鈥 as she was raised by an Aboriginal father and American mother who were missionaries in outback Western Australia.

Ms Williams took the audience through her 35-year path from junior football after her father鈥檚 death to the 2023 Matildas鈥 World Cup squad.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know what to do with myself during the grieving process,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 did the only thing I knew how to do, which was to put it into sport. Friends in football were there to support me. Eight months later I was called into my first Australian camp.鈥

It was as a national representative that Ms Williams saw that women were struggling with a role that required full-time commitment on less than a part-time wage. The Matildas at the time were paid $21,000 a year.

She was a leader in a strike leading up to a game against the better-paid American women鈥檚 team. Once a better pay deal was agreed to, she said, the team rewarded its employer, Football Australia, with better results, beating the US for the first time, qualifying for the 2019 World Cup, the 2020 Olympics and getting to a record-high semifinal place at the 2023 World Cup.

In 2019, the Matildas received equal pay with the national men鈥檚 team, the Socceroos.

Ms Williams talked about the women in the game who had inspired and included her in the family of players at the top level of the game, including the senior women in the Matildas and famed American player Abby Wombach.

She said at her national debut in 2005, even she had never heard of the Matildas. By the time she retired in 2024, her last game was in front of 75,000 people, and the Matildas are the country鈥檚 most popular national team.

General Practitioner Fiona Mackintosh from 色狼社区CPSU NSW partner Osara Health followed Ms Williams with a more sobering presentation about the type of cancers that typically affect women.

Anastasia Polites from Aware Super moved the discussion from physical health to financial wellbeing, covering Australia鈥檚 deplorable superannuation imbalance.

鈥淲omen in other disadvantaged groups, such as Aboriginal women, face further disadvantage,鈥 she said.

Ms Polites said the simplicity of super means it continues to reflect wage inequality through society, with hiring and pay decisions, insufficient flexibility and disproportionate levels of unpaid caring and domestic work all contributing to this imbalance.

She said the good news is that the gender pay gap is shrinking, something 鈥渁ttributable to some of the union wins we鈥檝e had in the past鈥.

鈥淲e want super on unpaid parental leave,鈥 said Ms Polites, adding the Queensland Government had plans to do this. 鈥淎nd we want to redirect savings to people with low balances.鈥

She said reporting requirements 鈥渉ave certainly shaken up the finance industry鈥, but more work is required in 鈥渇emale-dominated industries鈥 which are disproportionately lower paid, as well as addressing stratospheric housing costs.

Ms Polites was followed by a panel of members. Danielle Pinchas from Corrective Services talked about her charity From Me to You (www.frometoyou.com.au)donating blankets to comfort women who have experienced stillbirth, taking the audience through her own heartbreaking experience of losing children at birth.

Dilsat Seyis from Community Services outlined the PSA鈥檚 fight to keep the Mount Druitt Domestic Violence service open, as well as the trauma of working in such a harrowing field.

 

 

 

Charity Danquah from the Department of Education discussed her work on bodies such as Immigrant Women Speak Out and charities set up to combat domestic violence. She went into detail on how tough it is to operate on limited budgets.

鈥淓ven if we don鈥檛 have the money, we are still going to show up as there are people who rely on us,鈥 she said.

Gender Equity Specialist Monica Rose followed with a presentation on issues such as using a people-centred approach for those being sexually harassed at work. She advised Delegates dealing with sexual harassment in the workplace to refer people to professional services rather than taking on all the work themselves and encouraged support for carers and those with caring responsibilities.

Turning to the Status of Women 鈥渞eport card鈥 issued by the Federal Government, Ms Rose said there is much to do with closing the gap on how much unpaid caring responsibilities lie with women, who still on average do an hour a day more than men.

The last speaker on day one was motivational speaker and author Toni Powell, whose book The Yellow Car goes into strategies about letting go of stress and anxiety in a humorous way. In her presentation, she encouraged people 鈥渢o focus on the beauty, gratitude, the joy and the kindness that can transform your world in a matter of weeks.

鈥淭he more positives you notice, the more beautiful your life becomes. There is a role for stress 鈥 it helps us 鈥 but it needs to be controlled.

鈥淲hen we are in a negative frame of mind, every problem becomes about 30 per cent bigger.鈥

The following day, 色狼社区CPSU NSW Aboriginal Council member Shanice Leadbeatter talked about her childhood in the Riverina. She was taken from her mother straight after she was born, only to be given back several weeks later as 鈥渕y mother was not in a relationship with my Aboriginal dad, so the government decided I was to be returned鈥.

鈥淚 was one of the lucky ones,鈥 she said.

色狼社区CPSU NSW Industrial Manager Siobhan Callinan then chaired a forum of 色狼社区CPSU NSW Organisers about 鈥渂uilding structure and networks, getting new members and winning for the union鈥.

Belinda Tsikiris talked about how her inspiration to become a Delegate stemmed from an earlier women鈥檚 conference, then discussed how the Child Protection walkouts unfolded throughout NSW.

She said Organisers inspired each site鈥檚 participants by showing videos of previous walkouts. This action culminated in a statewide strike on the day before Women鈥檚 Conference.

鈥淲e had really great coverage throughout the state,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was about standing together and being hopeful about change.鈥

Ms Tsikiris said there had been 鈥渟maller wins鈥 on issues such as bullying and toxic workplaces, as well as the PSA鈥檚 prevention of the closure of the Mount Druitt Domestic Violence unit.

Regional Organiser Rebecca Reilly talked about the success of the Child Protection action in the Northern Rivers region, praising the high membership rate in the area.

She also discussed how recruiting took place when the privately run Clarence Correctional Centre opened. As a greenfield site, the CPSU NSW needed a majority of workers to sign up to get coverage of the site.

鈥淲hen Serco started, the Correctional Officers were on $21 an hour,鈥 she said, pointing out the campaign got this increased to $30 an hour.

Organiser Susan Chee Quee outlined challenge of recruiting members in schools across more than 2000 sites and talked about the pay equity decision as a huge win for working women in an increasingly professional section of the Public Sector.

鈥淓ducating a non-member is really important for recruiting,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 believe in talking about how the union has helped you.鈥

Organiser Kim Villanti discussed how the 色狼社区scored a massive with at the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions over unpaid overtime.

鈥淭he fight isn鈥檛 over yet,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e have recruited well in this campaign.鈥

She said the case will be used as a template for similar issues elsewhere in the Public Sector

鈥淭his campaign is a perfect example that proves the power of the union,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd we can鈥檛 do it without our amazing delegates.鈥

Fittingly for someone outlining a report on working from home and hybrid arrangements, University of NSW Associate Professor Sue Williamson delivered her talk remotely from Canberra.

鈥淩eturn-to-office directives don鈥檛 work,鈥 she said, citing the recent talk on the issue generated by Premier Chris Minns. 鈥淔orcing people back into the office just breeds resentment. It is a blunt instrument.鈥

She said employers 鈥渘eed to make offices more attractive鈥 and cited team-building activities such as axe-throwing and bowling that were popular in Canberra worksites.

鈥淲orking from home particularly suits women with disabilities and women carers.

鈥淪tereotypes about what a good worker looks like are slowly starting to change, with less focus on people spending a long time in the office.鈥

Professor Williamson said once they saw productivity was maintained during the pandemic when people worked from home in greater numbers, managers are becoming more accepting to the idea of people working from home.

鈥淢anagers are increasingly focused on outcomes rather than output or the hours worked,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey just want to know if things are getting done.鈥

Professor Williamson said 鈥渁utonomy and trust are key components of hybrid working鈥 and that there had been a surprising lack or surveillance of employees in Australia in hybrid working arrangement.

鈥淚nspire Inclusion was the theme of this year鈥檚 Women鈥檚 Conference, but I like to think every year our union inspires women to play a greater role in our workplaces,鈥 said 色狼社区CPSU NSW President Nicole Jess. 鈥淚nclusion benefits everyone on the workplace.

鈥淐onference once again gave us the chance to exchange ideas, hear from experts and support each other as women in the union movement.鈥

Closing the conference, Women鈥檚 Council Chair Leanne Smith urged attendees 鈥渢o go back to our workplaces to inspire inclusion鈥.

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