TO AID BUILDING
NEW UNEMPLOYMENT SCHEME
ITS PARTICULARS OUTLINED.
WELLINGTON, May 28,
Tile Minister of Employment (Mr Coates) has released the following statement which sets out the, particulars of a scheme that has been approved by the Unemployment Board for the assistance of the building industry.
The principle of this ischeme is to subsidise industry from the Unemployment Fund proportionately to the additional number of men engaged from the unemployment register. This is on the ground that it is better ultimately to subsidise an employer to keep a worker in industry than it is to pay a relief wage to the worker after his dismissal from industry. There is plenty of evidence at the present time that a large number of building contracts are held in abeyance for various reasons; sometimes it is a matter of finance; but in many cases now it is psychological. It is probable that the building industry has suffered more than any other,” says the. Minister. “The building industry in normal times, with the exception of the primary industry, employed more men than any other industry. To what extent this industry is suffering on account of the general depression may be gauged from the following figures: “In 1930, which was a normal year for building activities, the number of persons engaged in the industry was 11,312. On Decernbeaj - 31, 1931, of the, total registered unemployed 5536 were building tradesmen. If to this number is added allowance for the builders’ labourers who would be idle because the tradesmen were idle, the number would lie over 7000. It is more than probable that the position . has grown worse during this year. Officials in the industry allege than 90 per cent, of the workers normally engaged are at the present not so engaged.
SCOPE OF THE SCHEME,
“If building can be stimulated, not only the labour actually engaged on the building is affected, but employment is found for approximately the same number in indirect ways. It is not proposed to subsidise every building. The classes of buildings .proposed to come within the scope of this scheme are set out below:—
Class I.—Painting, renovating, repairing, modernising, or making alterations or additions to private dwellings where the occupier is the owner thereof or where the occupier is purchasing the dwelling. Class 2.—Painting, renovating or maintenance repairs of dwellings other than those in Class 1.
Class 3.—The building of dwellings for the bona fide owner-occupier. Class 4.—Painting or maintenance repairs of business premises or commercial buildings. Class s. —Building, rebuilding, .painting or renovating public or semi-pub-lic buildings. Class 6.—Building, makingl alterations or .additions to, and the painting, renovating or repairing of dairy factories, freezing works, storehouses for primary produce, or any new factories which would not be directly in competition with existing factories in New Zealand.
CONDITIONS OF SUBSIDY
The following conditions governing tlie payment of the subsidy will apply: I.—The building must be in one of the classes listed, and except in the case of those in Class 1, must first have been approved by the Minister of Employment, acting on the recommendation of the Unemployment Board.
2. —The amount of subsidy paid will' be 33 1-3 per cent, of the wages received, provided that it shall not exceed 22s Gel for any person in any one week. 3. ‘-—Construction work must commence between the dates July I, 1932, and December 31, 1932. This will not prevent the subsidy being paid after the latter date on labour which was engaged and actually started between the dates mentioned. Except that in the case of workers engaged under this scheme on work which will last over 12 months, in which case, commencing on July 1, 1933, the maximum subsidy will be reduced to 12s 6d per week. 4. —The labour on which a subsidy is to be claimed must he engaged through the nearest Labour Bureau.
Note. —This does not mean that any person sent by the Labour officer must be engaged. On receipt of a request for carpenters, painters or other workers, the officer in charge will advise a number of the tradesmen required where the vacancies are, and from those sent the employer will select. In the event of the employer knowing suitable registered men, he may nominate same to the officer in
charge. , 5 The normal working week on works engaging subsidised labour shall by the same as laid down jn the current agreement or award covering this industry. The board does not feel called upon to stipulate a shortening of hours as a general practice, hut suggests that in view of the unlikelihood of the full complement of builders being re-engaged in industry, that just so long, and whenever the number of registered unemployed building tradesmen ex-
ceeds 20 per cent-, of the- total, the weekly hours lx* reduced to 40, with the same rate of pay per hour applying. (s.—New Zealand materials am' products must he used wherever possible. 7.- The hoard will reserve the right to suspend the subsidy on any work when it is satsified that a regular employee has been dismissed f-.r the purpose of taking on subsidised labour.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HOG19320531.2.14
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Hokitika Guardian, 31 May 1932, Page 3
Word count
Tapeke kupu
855TO AID BUILDING Hokitika Guardian, 31 May 1932, Page 3
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
The Greymouth Evening Star Co Ltd is the copyright owner for the Hokitika Guardian. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of the Greymouth Evening Star Co Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.