Julia
In Memoriam
- Joined
- 10 May 2005
- Posts
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I have to echo your somewhat sarcastic tone here, Kennas.Yes, my comment was slightly unthoughtful. How would aboriginies from northern Australia get down to the grape and fruit growing areas? And, how would they cope with being with their families? Impossible.
Sorry, touching on sarcastic now, and should be in another thread maybe. Or, perhaps it's linked. Pacific Islanders cross the shore to pick fruit, while aboriginies stay in Arnham Land, etc.
Maybe I'm not looking at this clearly right now, sorry.
Well Julia we have tried to get work at mines and fruit picking and do not even get to interview stage.
So jobs are not there for taking. Certainly not enough to cover expenses while on the road. I did it for nearly 3 years and though partly covered by the road show we did ,we still spent an obscene amount of our own money.
Believe me , the works there m8 , its just these days it pays to show initiative and go to the employers directly , ... that dont appear at the job offices , its there m8 ya just gotta want it and be willing to go direct and ask
No wonder they can't find employees then...why don't they use all these new technologies for advertising vacancies, like newspapers and internets etc.?
i think they do use these services too spagetti , i dunno , just through personal experience im quoting , i too travelled round oz for a few years but didnt have a problem finding work even on my last trip 6 /7 years back i was offered work but id seen the light by then and ran as fast as i could . i havent got an answer , just know that theres a lot more work out there if you bypass the agencys in that line of work
Robert Tom : Some growers are not good at growing or maintaining a crop ,and they do not attract workers...these are the ones that will benefit most from the guestworker scheme.
One practice that goes on is for groups of workers to get together and contract to take off the whole crop for a farmers.Thats OK ,but their structure leaves a lot to be desired.They are usually Cambodian or similar ethnic groups with limited English.They have a boss man with passable English that negotiates with the farmer....the Boss man gets his cut off the top and workers are paid varying rates according to their experience etc...two years ago some were being paid as low a $8 an hour...not one was earning the minimum hourly rate...No superannuation either.
These groups seem to have most of the picking,pruning etc in Adelaide Hills ..some in Sunraysia that I knew about.
Good for the boss man and the grower...no good for the workers.
I know that there are plenty of local workers that are excluded from seasonal picking by these arrangements.
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