Australian News Today

Australia: 500 journalists at Nine Entertainment strike over jobs and pay

Australia: 500 journalists at Nine Entertainment strike over jobs and pay

Around 500 journalists at the Sydney Morning Herald, Age, Australian Financial Review, Brisbane Times and WAToday began a five-day strike on Friday, opposing recently announced job cuts and demanding a real-wage increase.

Nine Entertainment print journalists on strike in Sydney, Australia, on July 26, 2024.

The action was scheduled to coincide with the opening of the Paris Olympics, and some 15–20 journalists assigned to cover the sporting event are among those taking part in the strike.

The former Fairfax print and online newspapers now constitute the publishing division of Nine Entertainment, a media conglomerate that also encompasses television, radio and streaming video.

The company announced late last month that up to 200 of its 5,000 employees would be made redundant. Up to 90 of the planned cuts are in publishing, meaning more than one-sixth of the division’s staff face the scrapheap.

Earlier this month, more than 85 percent of the 456 Nine Publishing employees covered by the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance (MEAA) voted in favour of “an unlimited number of stoppages of all work for an indefinite duration.”

Journalists walked off the job at 11 a.m. Friday morning, after they overwhelmingly rejected a “new and improved” proposed enterprise agreement from management on Thursday afternoon.

The company, which previously proposed a 2.5 percent per annum pay “rise,” offered a nominal wage increase of 10.5 percent over three years, less than the current inflation rate of 4 percent. Even this meagre offer, which is a pay cut in real terms, would come with concessions: Nine is also demanding scheduling changes that would reduce the take-home pay of sub-editors.

Nine Entertainment print journalists begin five-day strike in Melbourne, Australia on July 26, 2024

At rallies outside Nine premises in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth last week, the MEAA did not advance a concrete wage demand, merely calling for a “fair” increase in line with the consumer price index (CPI).

The union has been similarly hazy in all public statements, although one striking journalist told the World Socialist Web Site workers had initially demanded a 7 percent increase this year. The Australian reported that the union is calling for a 20 percent rise over three years, but has provided no source for this claim.

The reality is that Nine journalists would need an immediate pay rise of 10 percent just to make up for real losses imposed since 2019 in enterprise agreements brokered by the MEAA.

Starting with a pay freeze in July 2020, the last two union-management deals have delivered nominal pay increases of 2 percent in July 2021 (with CPI at 3.8 percent), 4 percent in 2022 (CPI 6.1 percent) and 3.5 percent in 2023 (CPI 6 percent).

Journalists, artists and photographers starting as first-year cadets at Nine are currently paid just $1,018.71 per week. A more senior Grade Five employee can earn as little as $1,867.79 a week.

In addition to wages, the MEAA is seeking “a genuine commitment to better workplace gender and cultural diversity, improvements to grade progression, and adherence to the MEAA freelance charter of rights,” as well as agreements on the use of artificial intelligence.