The New Zealand Herald

Journalist­s set to strike over Stuff pay offer

- Isaac Davison

Staff at media organisati­on Stuff will go on strike after rejecting the company’s latest pay offer.

Union members overwhelmi­ngly voted for industrial action in a secret ballot that concluded yesterday, the

Herald understand­s.

Details of the strike are yet to be determined, but previous proposals included two-hour strikes, which would escalate to 24-hour strikes if talks over pay were not resolved.

Stuff’s stable of mastheads includes its namesake news website,

The Dominion Post, The Press, and

Sunday Star-Times. It also publishes several regional and community newspapers, including the Manawatu Standard, Nelson Mail, Taranaki Daily News and Waikato Times.

Stuff and E tū Union have been in negotiatio­ns for several weeks.

The sticking points have been over pay rises and the structure that determines how future pay rises are decided.

Members were seeking an increase in line with inflation, which is at a 32-year high of 7.3 per cent.

The company’s latest offer was understood to be a 5.5 per cent pay rise and higher earners were offered a 3.5 per cent pay rise. The company had also offered to introduce a new pay scale for union journalist­s.

That offer was overwhelmi­ngly rejected by Stuff’s 150 union members in a vote last week. They then proceeded to a further ballot on industrial action, which was concluded yesterday.

Stuff’s chief content officer Joanna Norris said the company had not yet been provided with the outcome of the ballot, but said it was understood that members planned to begin rolling strike action yesterday.

She said the company believed the salary increase it had tabled was in line with offers accepted by journalist­s at other media organisati­ons, and was made up of an overall increase and a new stepped pay scale.

It is understood that this offer would, on average, increase pay by 7 per cent.

“Our aim is always to negotiate constructi­vely and we have strong interest in continuing to provide fair pay and conditions for all staff, including those who belong to E tū ,” Norris said.

A strike would affect less than half of Stuff’s journalist­s, but it would be “challengin­g” for the company’s operations, she said.

Like all businesses, Stuff was facing rising costs and pressures of inflation, and needed to balance its desire to pay staff as much as it could with these pressures.

“For example, all publishers are grappling with a 30 per cent increase in the price of newsprint,” Norris said.

She added: “We look forward to getting back to the negotiatin­g table.”

Newsroom strikes in New Zealand are relatively rare.

TVNZ took industrial action in 2006, and NZ Herald and New Zealand Press Associatio­n staff went on strike in 2001.

Members told the Herald that Stuff’s latest offer was “insulting” and “feels like a slap in the face”.

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