By James Thomas and Xanthe Kleinig
Staff at one of Australia’s busiest airports have been setting up camp and sleeping at work, which they say is because they cannot afford to go home between shifts.
Secret footage obtained exclusively by 7.30 revealed bed rolls and dirty sheets next to the baggage carousel in the staff-only area of Sydney Airport’s international terminal.
Napping between shifts is a result of the “Americanisation” of the Australian workforce, according to the Transport Workers Union (TWU).
Split shifts that start early and finish late and limited guaranteed hours mean it is not worth workers’ while — financially or timewise — to return home when they are rostered off, according to the union.
Workers have voiced concerns that fatigue levels are putting safety at risk.
‘We end up sleeping under the terminal’
Driver George Orsaris believes he will lose his job for speaking with 7.30, but wants to expose working conditions at his employer, Aerocare.
“We get pushed to our limits. Our pay doesn’t match it. We don’t get rest breaks and we get given a four-hour shift in the morning and then we have a four-or-five-hour break and get a four-hour shift in the afternoon,” he said.
“It is barely enough time to sleep by the time you get home, get up and have to go to work again. So we end up sleeping under the terminal where all the baggage goes between.”
Most of Aerocare’s workers are permanent, part-time with a guaranteed minimum salary of about $16,000 per year under a collective agreement approved by Fair Work in 2012.