Queensland Stolen
Wages Fact Sheet
Researched by Dr
Ros Kidd
INTRODUCTION
This fact sheet is
to provide affected Aboriginal people, concerned members of the general
public, and lobby groups with basic data upon which to assess the current
Queensland Government campaign to shut down all litigation on unpaid,
missing and misused wages, savings and trust funds during decades of government
control.
A glance at the underpaid
wages in any one year shows clearly that this buy-off is an insult which
nowhere near acknowledges the level of financial confiscation endured
by Aboriginal families. A glance at the legal data shows clearly the Queensland
Government was constantly warned of systemic failures and of active and
passive breaches of its duty as a legal trustee, but failed ever to implement
the necessary checks to prevent massive financial loss to its wards over
many decades. Aboriginal poverty is largely a construct of this system.
Queensland Premier Peter Beattie's scare tactic that litigation will take
many years and millions of dollars is solely determined by the government's
willingness or otherwise to provide promptly all information gathered
to date for independent or judicial assessment.
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
Since 1897 Protection Act Queensland government could declare
any Aboriginal a ward of state & control every aspect of their lives.
People were forcibly interned on reserves (1938: 7525; 1968: 8500). From
1904 all employment, wages & savings were controlled by government under
compulsory labour contracts. From 1904 workers’ wages went direct to police
protector apart from "pocket money" retained by employer for distribution
during work period. From 1910 government took levies from wages of people
living on reserves.
From 1919 government
took levies from wages of those not living on reserves. From 1919 government
set pastoral wages at 66% of white wage. "Every Aboriginal" on a reserve
must work for rations & shelter. In 1943 government set up Aboriginal
Welfare Fund to receive wages levies & profits from reserve enterprises,
to be used to develop enterprises on reserves. From 1950s government pays
few shillings to a few key workers on reserves.
In 1968 government
starts wage economy on reserves; workers paid 50% state minimum wage.
From 1968 equal wages in pastoral industry; forced contracting ceases.
From 1971 forced confinement on reserves ceases. From 1972 forced control
over wages & savings (bank books) ceases, although people have to request
to be free from financial management.
From 1979 government
knows underpaying reserve workers is illegal; wage 72% of state minimum.
In 1986 government paying reserve workers only 75% of award. In 1985 seven
Palm Island workers start action in Human Rights Commission for legal
wages. From 1987 government hands control of communities to Aboriginal
councils; budget insufficient to cover award rates.
In 1996 government
loses Human Rights Commission case on under award wages; refuses to pay
suggested compensation of $7000 to each of six workers. Workers commence
federal court action; government capitulates in 1997. In 2000 Beattie
government makes $25 million available to pay all workers after losing
several more cases on under award wages. Beattie government refuses to
include mission workers in above payout.
From 2000 Queensland
Aboriginal & Islander Legal Service Secretariat (QAILSS) collects testimony
from over 2000 people who want to take action against the government for
missing, unpaid and underpaid wages, misused trust funds, unpaid child
endowment, workers’ compensation, deceased estates. In 2002 Beattie government
makes offer of $55.6 million to pay $4000 to some people & $2000 to others
as settlement for all claims on any of these matters.
FINANCIAL DATA
(all amounts today's value)
Pastoral workers
- 1940: 1982 workers
received 40% of pastoral rate; each worker underpaid $2214 pa relative
to regulation or $5109 relative to award ·
- 1949: 4500 workers
at 31% of rate: underpaid $3931 (regulation); $7750 (award) pa ·
- 1960: 4600 workers
at 65% of rate: underpaid $4136 (award) pa
- 1967: 5000 workers
at 70% of rate: underpaid $4265 (award) pa·
- PLUS pocket money:
of the wages paid, up to 80% was retained by employers & much, possibly
most, not paid to workers (see legal evidence below) ·
- PLUS levy - Aboriginal
Provident Fund: 2.5% from married wage; 5% from single wages those not
living on reserves
Reserves workers
Have calculated that
50% of inmates worked pre 1968; post 1968 from files ·
- 1940: 3121 workers
each underpaid $9,950 (to state minimum wage) pa ·
- 1949: 3454 workers:
each underpaid $10,875 (to minimum) pa ·
- 1960: 4310 workers:
each underpaid $8,998 (to minimum) pa ·
- 1970: 2500 workers:
each underpaid $8,110 (to minimum) pa ·
- 1975: 2500 workers:
each underpaid $13,978 (to award) pa ·
- 1980: 1463 workers:
each underpaid $11,490 (to award) pa ·
- 1985: 901 workers:
each underpaid $5,923 (to award) pa ·
- PLUS levy - settlement
maintenance: by regulation 5% from married wage; 10% from single wage
of those working off reserves. (Separate data available only until 1938:
shows levy often averages over 13% & Palm Island levy at times over
25% of wage)
Bulk savings trust
account - Queensland Aboriginals Account
From 1933 government
froze most of savings in investments to earn extra interest ·
- 1940 $9.6mil invested
- interest bonus to government $119,652 pa ·
- 1950 $7.3mil invested
- interest $127,366 pa to Welfare Fund ·
- 1960 $10.4mil invested
- interest $286,673 pa to Welfare Fund ·
- 1970 $7.3mil invested
- interest $143,544 pa to Welfare Fund ·
- 1975 $2.7mil invested
- interest $97,419 pa to Welfare Fund
Trust funds generally
·
- Aboriginal Provident
Fund & Aboriginal Protection of Property Account
Listed separately only until 1938; after 1943 part of Welfare Fund:
(Misused by government & not recouped to 1938 (from data to hand) identifiable
amount: $10.33mil) ·
- Aboriginal Welfare
Fund
From data to hand (incomplete); between 1943-1889: (Spendings of doubtful
legitimacy or not recouped $93mil)
LEGAL EVIDENCE
Duty of financial
trustee ·
- must keep proper
books of account; must not profit from the trust or have conflict of
interest ·
- active breaches
of trust consist of intentional negligent or dishonest acts ·
- passive breaches
of trust consist of failure to act
Fiduciary duty
·
- occurs when one
person is in a position of trust to act for or on behalf of another
·
- a fiduciary must
act in beneficiaries' interest; must not profit from relationship; must
not act for own benefit; must have no conflict of interest or intent
to gain
Evidence of breach
Wages:
- government sold
Aboriginal labour cheaply, failed to secure even discounted amount ·
- government always
knew & was frequently warned pocket money riddled with fraud but refused
to pay for regular audit inspections ·
- government established
gross underpayment on reserves despite warnings insufficient for family
maintenance ·
- government deliberately
flouted law to underpay reserve workers after 1975
Savings:
- government always
knew & was frequently warned of police fraud
- government often
warned thumb print system corrupted ·
- government warned
1960s & 1970s system still open to fraud ·
- despite this knowledge
government refused to allow workers to check transactions ·
- over time the government
has seized bank interest, imposed a levy on savings, frozen vast amounts
of desperately needed cash in investments & retained surplus interest
Trust funds:
- prior to establishment
of Welfare Fund in 1943, government often warned re using trust monies
for government expenses ·
- often only a fraction
of Provident Fund legitimately allocated (ie for rations & relief) ·
- often only a fraction
of Property Account distributed to next of kin
Aboriginal Welfare
Fund:
- removals costs
often charged to AWF & only partly repaid, if at all
- 1940s: director
says cattle wages wrongly charged to AWF; also white salaries ·
- 1960s: director
says settlement wages wrongly charged to AWF ·
- 1960s: director
says dept liabilities wrongly charged to AWF ·
- 1970s/80s settlement
wages increasingly charged to AWF ·
- 1970s/80s: auditors
complain no effective accounting of cattle ventures ·
- 1975/90: massive
trade losses in cattle ventures ·
- 1970s commonwealth
housing funds wrongly streamed through AWF ·
- 1970s/80s: auditors
complain ineffective rent collecting causes massive arrears ·
- 1980s: auditors
complain no proper housing register so can't identify spending ·
- 1980s: rents wrongly
charged against AWF as 'administrative costs' instead of accruing to
housing pool
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