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Abe Maddison

Courts closed, prisons in 96-hour lockdown over strike

Jails are in an extended lockdown and the courts system has closed due to a wage dispute. (Jono Searle/AAP PHOTOS)

Major courts have shut their doors and South Australia’s publicly run prisons remain in lockdown as an ongoing pay dispute escalates into widespread strike action.

More than 1000 corrections officers across the state voted to strike on Monday, and on Thursday they voted to extend it to 96 hours, calling on the government to increase pay rates, lift staff numbers and improve safety.

Sheriff’s officers (24 hours), crown solicitors and lawyers (one hour) and home detention officers (48 hours) voted to join the strike action on Thursday.

The corrections officers’ strike has plunged the prison system into a four-day lockdown, with more than 2000 prisoners confined to their cells since 7.30am on Monday.

Sa sheriff's officers at a rally
Sheriffs have joined corrections officers in a statewide strike over a pay deal. (PR IMAGE PHOTO)

All striking staff will reconvene on Friday morning to decide whether to take further action. 

Corrections officers are striking over what they say is an inadequate pay offer, a surge in violence in prisons and a crisis in staffing levels caused by low wages.

An inmate was bashed unconscious on Sunday at Yatala Labour Prison, where two other inmates were also seriously assaulted in November.

In October, a female inmate allegedly used a metal pole to inflict life-threatening head and neck injuries on another inmate, severing a finger, while a female corrections officer had her hand broken while disarming the inmate.

Sheriff's officers in Adelaide voting
Sheriff's officers in Adelaide voted unanimously to go on strike for 24 hours. (PR IMAGE PHOTO)

Public Service Association general secretary Charlotte Watson said the government was refusing to listen to their concerns.

“While the SA justice system system has been collapsing the Premier (Peter Malinauskas) has been jetting off to Sydney to strut on the national stage,” Ms Watson said.

“We’ve warned the premier the corrections officers, lawyers and sheriffs who keep this state’s justice system running have had enough of being ignored.

“If I were him, I’d get on the next plane home and come to our stop work meeting to hear directly from our members.”

City and suburban courts in Adelaide were forced to close and postpone all listed matters on Thursday.

The PSA says corrections officers have received one per cent rises annually for the past six years and are being offered 10.5 to 12.5 per cent over 18 months, but want more for lower-paid workers.

The Magistrate Court building in Adelaide (file image)
The court system in South Australia has ground to a standstill due to the strike. (Kelly Barnes/AAP PHOTOS)

Attorney-General and Industrial Relations Minister Kyam Maher said he had "never before seen the leadership of a union publicly celebrate that their industrial action is interfering with the operation of the justice system". 

"The PSA’s industrial action is deeply irresponsible, and the government calls on the PSA to put the interests of victims of crime first and end this action immediately," Mr Maher said.

The government's most recent offer to the PSA was significantly more generous than the deal they struck with the previous Liberal government, he said. 

"The PSA's demand for a 20 per cent wage rise over only 18 months is not consistent with responsible budget management and is significantly out of step with the wage rises most South Australians see in their own workplaces," he said 

Privately-operated prisons at Mt Gambier and the Adelaide Remand Centre are not affected by the strike action.

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