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KINLEITH '80 (1981, 38mins) 

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In 1980, workers at the Kinleith Pulp & Paper Mill in Kawerau formulated their claim for a 21% pay rise. They calculated this was required to maintain their traditional parity with workers at nearby Kawerau. Their employer, New Zealand Forest Products, was the largest company in the country and highly profitable. When it balked at the claim, a strike resulted. Led by rank-and-file delegates and employing canny tactics, the strikers received a decisive boost when the Federation of Labour swung in behind them. After eight weeks the company capitulated, but the National Government under Prime Minister Rob Muldoon used the Remuneration Act to cut back on the agreed increase. Defiantly, the strikers held out for another four weeks. Defeated, the Government withdrew its regulations and the workers received their 21% rise. They had won ‘the greatest worker victory he had ever seen’, declared FOL President Jim Knox. This film documents the factors crucial to the success of the struggle, including the involvement of women, the extensive welfare scheme, and the efforts of ‘roadrunners’ - delegates who spoke at stopwork meetings throughout the country to garner support.
credits
A film by:
GERD POHLMANN
ROD PROSSER
RUSSELL CAMPBELL
Music: ALISTAIR McQUILLAN, JOHN VESEY
Narrator: MERATA MITA
Library film: TELEVISION NEW ZEALAND
Photographs: SOUTH WAIKATO NEWS
© 1981 NZ Federation of Labour
Digital restoration:
This film was preserved in 2020 from the original 16mm master elements by Ngā Taonga Sound and Vision, with the support of Vanguard Films and E tū union.

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19 окт 2021

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Комментарии : 12   
@jansmith8994
@jansmith8994 Год назад
Excellent download , Kia Kaha NZ , Kia Koutou Katoa 🍻💪😎👍🍻
@citizenkane0014
@citizenkane0014 6 месяцев назад
When did Tokoroa (Kinleith) move to Kawerau? 2nd year of my apprenticeship when this went down, Tasman (Kawerau) had a long protracted strike as well.
@makhnovite
@makhnovite 6 месяцев назад
Were u involved in any industrial action during this time?
@citizenkane0014
@citizenkane0014 6 месяцев назад
@@makhnovite As an Apprentice we weren't allowed to strike and still had to attend work, we did not do anything though because Management feared a further strike from the use of non-union labour. We spent most days playing cards.
@kumamotop
@kumamotop 2 года назад
"We played silly buggers a little bit harder..." :) 7' 50"
@booth2710
@booth2710 5 месяцев назад
I remember being at Mangakino High School during this strike and the school announced that if parents did not have the money during the strike to buy school uniforms then students could come to school in their normal clothes ... the stirke had far reaching affects right across the South Waikato region ..
@geoffthompson6217
@geoffthompson6217 2 месяца назад
Remember tailing out and stacking timber off the band saws on frosty mornings in the seventies..excellent meals at the tokoroa mens hostel.was more interested in working and making money than striking.
@mikebarton
@mikebarton 3 года назад
Fascinating. Good piece. Bolger and Muldoon were pretty awful. IMHO.
@Spider-Man904
@Spider-Man904 Год назад
Piggy Muldoon ......this strike went on for 12 weeks over a pay issue ....in the end the government at the time ( national ....became the mediator after that I can't remember. 😊
@mikebarton
@mikebarton Год назад
@@Spider-Man904 such a long time back. It bothers me I remember that I recall it. 😉
@sebastianharker4892
@sebastianharker4892 5 месяцев назад
The good ol days when New Zealand was amazing beyond words. I miss Mr Muldoon so much.
@jackblair5957
@jackblair5957 4 месяца назад
Nice try troll Noone biting your hook? Womp womp