Skip to content
Agriculture Farming Rural, Industrial Relations

Grain handlers vote up pay deal

AWU 2 mins read

Grain handlers working at grain receival sites across NSW have voted to accept a proposed pay deal with their employer GrainCorp which will see their pay packets rise by 12% by July 1st next year, said the Australian Workers’ Union which represents the workers.

 

The deal comes after grain handlers backed each other and rolled out protected industrial action authorised by the Fair Work Commission after negotiations broke down with GrainCorp last month.


AWU members stood shoulder to shoulder during Industrial action at Boggabri, Narrabri, Moree, Parkes, Caragabal, and at many other sites earlier this month, including a stop work on Melbourne Cup day.

 

The workers have seen their pay go backwards in real terms over the last three years.

In 2021, 2022 and 2023 grain handlers received an annual increase of only 2% a year, despite inflation rising at a rate of 2.86%, 6.59% and 4.10% respectively, meaning real wages have declined by 7.5%.

 

The three year deal voted up today by a whooping 90% of the workforce offers annual increases of 6%, 6% and 2% plus a $1250 sign on bonus and back pay.

 

The first pay rise will be backdated to July 1st 2024, the second will kick in on July 1st 2025 and the final increase will arrive in pay packets on July 1st 2026.

 

Members began voting on the 18th of November (yesterday) at 6am with voting concluding on the 19th of November (this morning) at 6am.

“Grain handlers backed each other, stood shoulder to shoulder and now they’ve had a great result, they’re stoked,” said Australian Workers’ Union NSW Assistant Branch Secretary Ron Cowdrey.

“This is a huge win and it just shows if you work as a team and have each other’s backs you can achieve great things.

“Our members can now focus fully on getting in the winter harvest.

“It’s sad our members had to resort to industrial action as it caused unnecessary worry for farmers during the busy winter harvest season but GrainCorp just weren’t hearing what their workers were telling them.

Contact: Tim Brunero 0405 285 547

More from this category

  • Employment Relations, Industrial Relations
  • 18/12/2025
  • 06:00
Unions NSW

Warning issued to workers ahead of peak-season underpayments

New analysis from Unions NSW indicates that workers forgoing just one hour of penalty rates over the Christmas and New Year period could amount to more than $30 million in lost wages. A statewide compliance push over December and January is underway amid growing concerns employers will test the boundaries on pay and conditions during the Christmas rush. Assistant Secretary of Unions NSW Thomas Costa said the advice to workers is simple: in a cost of living crisis workers should not just know their rights, but enforce them. “Every year we see employers try to shave a little off public…

  • Agriculture Farming Rural
  • 17/12/2025
  • 14:03
Australian Firefighters Climate Alliance

Firefighters counter misinformation on battery storage risks

Anti‑renewables campaigners are increasingly weaponising community concerns about battery storage systems, spreading misinformation that threatens to derail Australia’s urgent energy transition. Australia, like other carbon‑intensive nations, must take decisive action to prevent climate change impacts from becoming irreversible. An important part of this action must include a rapid shift away from fossil fuels to renewables, storage, and energy efficiency. Sadly, the energy transition is increasingly bogged down in a culture war quagmire that isdriven by conservative media, politicians and vested interests. Misinformation is rife, and shared widely on social media. A common line of attack against renewable energy systems –…

  • Agriculture Farming Rural
  • 17/12/2025
  • 12:33
Rabobank

WA farmers weigh bumper harvest against economic pressures as they look to year ahead

Key Facts: Results at a glance: ■ WA winter crops on track for record yields, but economic pressures keeping a lid on confidence. ■ Farmers are cautious of rising input costs combined with softening commodity prices. ■ Investment intention in WA remains strong, with farmers investing in on-farm efficiency gains. Western Australian farmers are finishing 2025 with a somewhat cautious outlook on the year ahead, as the state celebrates another bumper harvest, but tempered by easing commodity prices and rising input costs, the latest Rabobank Rural Confidence Survey has found. The quarter four survey, released today, found net rural sentiment…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.