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Image Not Available for Press release by the Australian Stevedoring Industry Authority
Press release by the Australian Stevedoring Industry Authority
Image Not Available for Press release by the Australian Stevedoring Industry Authority

Press release by the Australian Stevedoring Industry Authority

Date1970
Object numberANMS1369[009]
NamePress release
MediumInk on paper
DimensionsHeight: 335 mm, width: 200 mm
ClassificationsEphemera
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from Carol O'Connor
DescriptionNews release from the Australian Stevedoring Industry Authority regarding the threatened strike by Tasmanian Ports Waterside Workers. The press release states that the Tasmanian ports have voted to go on strike for four days in an attempt to get permanency status.HistoryThe Australian Stevedoring Industry Authority was set up in 1956 as a body corporate to regulate the performance of stevedoring operations. It comprised a chairman, an employer representative and a trade union representative. In 1970 the Authority was reconstituted with the addition of a Director. In 1978, after considerable reform of waterfront organisation, the Authority was terminated. Most of its functions went to the Association of Employers of Waterside Labour. Its assets and liabilities went to the Stevedoring Industry Finance Committee. Bernard James O'Connor had been Chief Legal Officer and Industrial Officer with the Stevedoring Industry Board, forerunner of the Authority, since 1954. He then became Solicitor to the Authority, and was appointed Director in 1970 when that position was established. He remained Director until the Authority was wound up in 1978. During this period the Australian waterfront industry underwent vast changes. In the 1950s and 1960s the Waterside Workers' Federation won many victories through industrial action, including control of hiring labour, while wharf labourers' awards and conditions were greatly increased and improved. In the 1970s with changing trade and the introduction of containerisation, the industry and its operations were reformed under the powers of the Australian Industry Authority.SignificanceThe Bernard O'Connor archival collection is an excellent research source for cargo management and labour relations in Australia. Bernard O'Connor had an integral role in the administration and regulation of the stevedoring industry in Australia through its period of greatest change and reform in the 1970s. The collection provides an account of the industry from the point of view of employers and governments, to compliment other historical accounts from the Unions' viewpoints.