LaborNET Workers Health Centre
Search   
Home | Ask Neale | Calendar | Links 

  LaborNET Sites

Workers Online
ACTU
NZCTU
Unions NSW
VIC Trades Hall Council
Vic Union Health & Safety Network
Unions WA
UNIONSAFE
Union Teach
Bosswatch
Unions on LaborNET
Evatt Foundation
South Coast Labor Council


  

Union Positions
Media & Political Leader
Membership Officer
Data Analyst
EMPLOYMENT & INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS IN-HOUSE COUNSEL
Submit a Job

UNIONSAFE
Latest News
Safety Helpdesk
Shoptalk
Youthsafe

Union Teach
Lesson Plans
Resources
Factsheets
Glossary
Feedback
Links

IR Resources
IR Commissions
IR Departments
Legal Resources

LaborNET Calendar

APHEDA: Union Aid Abroad
Latest News
Current Campaigns

Websites for Unions
Organising Online
Publish your own content

Chifley Financial Services
Home Loans
Financial Planning
Insurance

Union Shopper

 

Changing of CFMEU guard

Date: 20 October 2010

A new generation of union leaders has taken charge at the NSW branch of the Construction Forestry Mining and Energy (Construction and General Division).

After 16 years as the State Secretary Andrew Ferguson has retired and Malcolm Tulloch has been elected to replace him.

Tulloch, who officially started as CFMEU State Secretary yesterday, is the first Indigenous person to hold the top job in Australia's largest building union.

Rebel Hanlon, 36, will move into Tulloch's previous role as Assistant State Secretary.

Tulloch, 48, a former Holroyd City Council mayor and tradesperson, traces his indigenous heritage through his paternal grandmother.

Tulloch said he was "honoured to be following a long line of great leaders of this building union".

The 48-year-old said his commitment to labour and indigenous policies complemented each other.

"Whether you are a building worker or part of your community, it is about a strong sense of social justice and it is about people being treated fairly and with dignity and respect," he said.

Tulloch and Hanlon were elected by the CFMEU Committee of Management with the decision endorsed by the union's delegates.

Hanlon is also Indigenous through his paternal side. His great-grandmother was an Aboriginal woman from Junee, NSW, in Wirradjurie country.

Hanlon said he was "blown away" by his election and hoped it would be an inspiration not just to young Indigenous people, but young people in general to become active in the union movement.

Ferguson, who has led the union since 1994, said Tulloch's election signalled a generational change at the union.

"It is also fitting that with Mal's appointment we are continuing the CFMEU tradition of making labour history by electing our first Indigenous leader," he says.

"However his endorsement by the delegates shows this is not some gratuitous appointment, but rather is the result of the hard work and success Mal has achieved in improving conditions for building workers in NSW."

Ferguson is retiring from the CFMEU executive and will contest the 2011 State election as a Labor candidate for the Legislative Assembly. He will be continuing to work for the union in the interim after 30 years of service.

For further information

Contact: Mal Tulloch
Union: CFMEU NSW
WWW: http://www.cfmeu-construction-nsw.com.au/default.htm


Live News Feed
Current Stories | Yearly Archive | Organisation Indexes | Topic Index
Privacy | Disclaimer | Sitemap |Feedback | Links  
© 1997-2002 LaborNET is a resource for the labour movement
provided by the Labor Council of NSW
10th Floor, 377-383 Sussex Street, Sydney NSW 2000
Ph: (02) 9264 1691 Fax: (02) 9261 3505

http://www.labor.net.au/news/1287553915_3496.html
Last Modified: Wednesday, 20-Oct-2010 16:54:40 EST

LaborNET is proudly created, designed and programmed
by Social Change Online for the Labor Council of NSW
[Credits] [Site Matters]

Workers OnlineLabor Council of NSWLaborNET
Powered by APT Solutions