Tug boat company Svitzer ordered to stop their employee lockout plan

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A slap in the face for the Danish-owned company that wanted to lock out tug-boat workers from Australian ports. The Fair Work commission ordered Svitzer to scrap the move. 7NEWS

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Fair Work Commission orders shipping company to end worker lockoutAlmost 600 maritime workers won’t be locked out of work today after the Fair Work Commission ordered global shipping company, Svitzer, to scrap its plans. The Fair Work Commission ruled the lockout of 582,000 workers would cause significant damage to the Australian economy. The commission heard that if the lockout were to happen, shipping would be reduced by 90 per cent at major ports that Svitzer operated out of. It’s yet to be decided whether the commission will suspend the industrial action for a certain amount of time or terminate it completely. So the workers can strike but the company can’t lock them out. So which knobs allowed one company to manage 17 of our ports and which knobs allowed China to lease the Port of Darwin?
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