“It’s not the workers’, it’s not the businesses fault that we find ourselves back in lockdown. We’re at the end of the queue here, and we want to make sure that everybody gets through … There are opportunities up north, and if [workers] leave Victoria, our ability to bounce back is going to be highly compromised.”
Mr Pallas and acting Premier James Merlino savaged the Commonwealth on Sunday morning for refusing to provide wage subsidies to workers - especially casual employees - who face at least a week of uncertainty because of the Victorian government’s decision to plunge the state into a lockdown.
Mr Piper urged the state government to reflect on its decision to impose higher taxes for some businesses in this year’s budget in the wake of the latest coronavirus outbreak and the impact of the lockdown.
Michelle O’Neil, president of the Australian Council of Trade Unions, welcomed the support for business and urged the Morrison government to revive its JobKeeper scheme which she said should be expanded to support all affected workers.
“Workers in Victoria, more than half a million of them in casual and insecure work, are facing a week of not knowing whether they’ve got a job and whether they’ve got an income,” Ms O’Neil said.
“We welcome the fact that the Victorian Government has put in place a grant program for businesses that are doing it tough, but that does not replace a wage subsidy. The federal government needs to step up.”
Ms O’Neil, who wanted to see the JobSeeker payment should also be bolstered to support those forced out of work, said the government should never have ended JobKeeper before the population was widely vaccinated and quarantine leaks occurred.