Progressive Enterprises Wins Roger Award
For The Worst Transnational Corporation Operating In Nz In 2006
Telecom A Very Close Runner Up
The 14 page Judges’Report can be read at www.cafca.org.nz. Follow the Roger Award Links.
For photos of the March 21 Wellington event to announce the winner, go to www.scoop.co.nz
The seven finalists were:
Telecom, Toll, ANZ, British American Tobacco, Progressive Enterprises, Contact Energy and ABB.
The criteria for judging are by assessing the transnational (a corporation which is 25% or more foreign-owned) that has the most negative impact in each or all of the following categories:
The judges were:
For full details of the Roger Award, go to www.cafca.org.nz and follow the Links.
The Roger Award is organized by the two Christchurch-based groups, Campaign Against Foreign Control of Aotearoa and GATT Watchdog, with the support of Christian World Service.
Previous winners; BNZ/Westpac (joint), Telecom, Tranz Rail (3 times), Juken Nissho, Carter Holt Harvey, Monsanto & TransAlta. The winner was announced at a Wellington event on March 21.
Because of her obvious conflict of interest, the Chief Judge, Laila Harre, played no role whatsoever in the judges’ final vote to pick Progressive as the winner. She accepted the position long before the lockout by Progressive. It is no surprise that Progressive won the Roger because of that September 06 national lockout of its supermarket distribution centre workers, an all-out attack on its own workers, a naked attempt to smash the unions representing them and to starve those lowpaid workers into submission. The Australian transnational failed completely and had to back down after one of the biggest union fightbacks in recent NZ history. To quote the Judges’ Report: “Typical of the transnational culture, there was a willingness to act off-shore in a way that would not be acceptable under the nose of home-country investors and stakeholders… an award of this nature to Progressive is not a stamp of approval for its locally owned rival Foodstuffs. Indeed competitive pressure from Foodstuffs’s lightly unionized and generally lower paid workforce has contributed to Progressive’s tactics…
Telecom, having been a finalist every year since the Award’s inception in 1997, was the very close runner up because “in 2006… it continued to disappoint customers, argue every point with regulators, and so totally mismanaged the roll out of ‘faster cheaper broadband’ while frustrating its competitors that it probably cost NZ a fortune in lost opportunities…”
Murray Horton
for the organizers
CAFCA
Campaign Against Foreign Control of Aotearoa
Box 2258, Christchurch, New Zealand
cafca@chch.planet.org.nz
www.cafca.org.nz