Rail campaign Dunedin meeting attracts positive public response

A public meeting in South Dunedin on Monday 12 July to support the campaign to build new trains for Auckland in New Zealand workshops attracted around 50 people.

A pub­lic meet­ing in South Dunedin on Mon­day 12 July to sup­port the cam­paign to build new trains for Auck­land in New Zealand work­shops attract­ed around 50 peo­ple.

The mes­sage they heard was that Dunedin peo­ple will have to stand up and fight to make this goal a real­i­ty, with this years local body elec­tions and next years nation­al elec­tions pro­vid­ing an oppor­tu­ni­ty to apply polit­i­cal pres­sure.

Rail and Mar­itime Trans­port Union (RMTU) Hill­side Branch Sec­re­tary Les Ingram, who works at Hill­side, said an esti­mat­ed 500 to 1200 extra jobs and near­ly $500 mil­lion dol­lars in income were at stake.

“Dunedin can­not afford to let oppor­tu­ni­ties like this pass it by if we want to pro­vide jobs for local peo­ple in the future.”

The RMTU were con­tin­u­ing their cam­paign and want­ed to get across to the pub­lic how build­ing rail units local­ly would pro­vide a mas­sive boost in jobs and income.

The Mar­itime Union of New Zealand (MUNZ) is sup­port­ing the RMTU cam­paign and MUNZ Gen­er­al Sec­re­tary Joe Fleet­wood, vis­it­ing from Welling­ton, addressed the meet­ing on free trade issues.

He told the audi­ence that they need­ed to get behind the Hill­side work­ers cam­paign and demand that politi­cians lis­ten.

He said the push for free trade poli­cies was large­ly respon­si­ble for the sit­u­a­tion where jobs were threat­ened due to unbal­anced eco­nom­ic poli­cies.

Both speak­ers agreed that the notion that New Zealand did not have the exper­tise to do the rail work was dis­cred­it­ed non­sense.

Mr Ingram detailed pre­vi­ous work done at Hill­side and his view was backed up by a retired engi­neer in the audi­ence who recount­ed the many large scale projects oth­er Dunedin firms have under­tak­en in the past.

The meet­ing was chaired by Vic­tor Bil­lot of the Alliance Par­ty who said that high­ly skilled, high val­ue jobs that would be cre­at­ed through build­ing trains local­ly were exact­ly what was need­ed in New Zealand at the cur­rent time.

The approach of the Nation­al Gov­ern­ment was rep­re­hen­si­ble, he said.

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