Day 120 - 03 May 95 - Page 04
1
2 MR. MORRIS: If somebody amongst the crew was a member of a
3 union, or wished to be a member of a union, they would not
4 be allowed to collect subscriptions, would they, from other
5 people in the store?
6 A. No, no.
7
8 Q. They would not be allowed to put any notices on the notice
9 boards?
10 A. No.
11
12 Q. They would not be allowed to inform the union about
13 conditions inside the stores?
14 A. I do not know how we could stop that. If we found out
15 about it, yes.
16
17 Q. If you found out about it, sorry. Informing outside
18 organisations about instore conditions is in the Gross
19 Misconduct ---
20 A. That is right.
21
22 Q. -- summary sackable offence?
23 A. Yes, it is.
24
25 Q. Are crew members at McDonald's allowed to organise a
26 meeting, union meeting ---
27 A. No.
28
29 Q. -- on store premises?
30 A. No.
31
32 Q. Would they be allowed to organise a meeting for staff to
33 discuss conditions at the store without management being
34 present?
35 A. On the premises?
36
37 Q. Yes.
38 A. No.
39
40 Q. So, what union type activity could anyone do in a
41 McDonald's store openly that you can think of?
42 A. Well, having just admitted that I do not know a great
43 deal about union activity, I find that rather a difficult
44 question to answer, unless you could be more specific.
45
46 Q. I cannot think of any. So, I was asking you if you could
47 think of anything an active union member -----
48
49 MR. JUSTICE BELL: You are someone who, I surmise, knows
50 something about union activities.
51
52 MR. MORRIS: I was Branch Secretary.
53
54 MR. JUSTICE BELL: Yes, you obviously know something about union
55 activities; you cannot think of one and yet you are asking
56 a witness who knows nothing about union activities whether
57 he can think of one.
58
59 MS. STEEL: The reason for that, though, is because
60 Mr. Nicholson and the Company say that they are not