“Nothing is off the table, including, I hate to say this, but including cancelling the fireworks or recommending that people don’t go to the city during New Year’s Eve,” he said on Monday.
“If you listen to the expert advice we’ve got from police and from crowd specialists, [it] is that we could have a situation where there’s panic in the city and there could be massive crowd problems.”
Minns’ remarks followed the government rejecting a late-night offer from the Rail, Tram and Bus Union (RTBU) and five other unions to temporarily cease major industrial action if it dropped its case inFair Work against the unions and offered free fares to commuters.
Minns said he was “drawing a line in the sand” and warned that, if he relented to the latest demands, the government faced the rail unions pulling similar stunts “over and over again”.
“It’s a trust issue. We don’t think we can trust the [unions] to follow through, to pull all their industrial bans,” he said. “At the end of the day, 8 per cent each year for four years – a 32 per cent increase in salaries – is something that we cannot afford.”
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RTBU state secretary Toby Warnes hit back, saying there was a trust deficit due to the premier’s actions.
“Every time we’ve taken him on his word that he will get this deal done, he has backflipped and filed against us in the Federal Court, or filed against us in the Fair Work Commission,” he said.
Warnes said there was “no chance” that the fireworks would be cancelled and, suggestions that they could, were just aimed at scaring people.
The government’s application to Fair Work that the industrial action is causing economic harm or poses a safety risk will rely on evidence from NSW Treasury, tourism agency Destination NSW, the City of Sydney council and a slew of big businesses including Laundy Hotels, Merivale, Luna Park and casino operator Star.
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The City of Sydney estimates New Year’s Eve fireworks result in $280 million in economic benefits to the city. Of that, Destination NSW calculates $32 million in spending by people who visit the city for the celebrations.
In its application to Fair Work, the government claims that major train delays on New Year’s Eve due to industrial action risk causing deadly crowd crushes and a spike in antisocial behaviour among large numbers of revellers frustrated by disrupted services.
In their offer late on Sunday night, the RTBU and the other unions said they would cease industrial action until January 7 if the government dropped its legal action and provided free fares across the public transport network.
As part of the demands, the unions wanted free fares to remain until a new pay deal for thousands of rail workers was approved by Fair Work. In rejecting those demands, the government estimated free fares would cost taxpayers $127 million a month.
The government also calculates that the compounding cost of meeting union demands for a 32 per cent pay rise over four years for rail workers would leave it facing an annual wages bill $720 million higher by the fourth year.
Sydney Trains said about 180 services were cancelled on Sunday, and a further 60-odd were delayed on Monday morning as a result.
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