All publications relating to ‘Workplace Health and Safety’
Closing Loopholes or Radical Change? The Fair Work Legislation Amendment (Closing Loopholes) Bill 2023
Earlier this week, the Albanese Government introduced the ‘Fair Work Legislation Amendment (Closing Loopholes) Bill 2023’ (Bill), which contains a number of significant reforms to the workplace relations landscape. If fully implemented in its current form, the Bill will lead to a number of implications in the way businesses and workers engage…
Landmark Statement on the Rights of Gig Economy Workers
Uber and the Transport Workers Union (TWU) have signed a joint Statement of Principles that calls for reform of the rights and conditions of workers in the on-demand transport industry who are not engaged as employees. The statement signals support for the Federal Government legislating for an independent body with the capacity…
‘Tis the Season to Avoid Folly: Workplace Christmas Parties (COVID-19 Edition 2021)
It’s that time of year. The ‘Silly Season’. For many organisations, the official employer Christmas party is imminent. But this year, 2021, it’s with a difference. Employer Christmas parties will be held against the backdrop of the ongoing global COVID-19 pandemic, including the newly emerging Omicron variant. The starting point for such…
Casual employment: Latest developments and where to from here?
It has been a big year for casual employees, with the law with respect to who a casual employee is, and what their entitlements are, appearing to be (finally) settled. Some key developments in this space from the last week alone are summarised below. Workpac v Rossato On Wednesday, 4 August the High Court handed…
Mandatory Workplace Vaccination: Some Myths
With SPC putting its head above the parapet by mandating COVID-19 vaccination for its workforce, and the National Cabinet Statement on 6 August, the topic of mandatory workplace vaccination has never generated such interest, analysis or debate. In discussion and reporting on the issue there are some regularly recurring myths. It is…
Qualifications a floor, but not a ceiling, for award coverage: FCAFC
In a decision that has affirmed what those working in the industrial relations space already knew – that fitting an employee’s role into an award classification is hard – a full court of the Federal Court in King v Melbourne Vicentre Swimming Club Inc [2021] FCAFC 123 has overturned a decision of Justice Wheelahan that…
Mandatory Workplace Vaccination: Reflections on Recent Developments
With the current troubling Covid-19 cluster in NSW, and a deep concern about the relatively low rates of vaccination of staff in some industries which deal with the sick and the vulnerable, most notably aged care, the issue of mandatory workplace vaccination has gone from being an interesting theoretical consideration to…
The implications of implying a term of reasonable notice
In a decision that demonstrates the need for employment contracts to clearly specify a term for notice of termination, Judge Obradovic in the Federal Circuit Court case, McAlister v Yara Australia Pty Ltd [2021] FCCA 1409, has implied a term of 9 months’ notice into an employee’s employment contract. Background The applicant had worked for her employer…
Government Introduces Bill in Response to Landmark AHRC Respect@Work Report
The Federal Government has introduced the Sex Discrimination and Fair Work (Respect at Work) Amendment Bill 2021 (the Bill) in response to the Respect@Work Report (the Report) presented to the Government by the Sex Discrimination Commissioner, Kate Jenkins, in March last year. As part of its ‘Roadmap for Respect’ initiative…
Deliveroo case delivers more uncertainty for the status of gig economy workers
In a decision that further muddies the waters regarding when a worker will be considered an employee for the purpose of accessing statutory entitlements and, in this case, the unfair dismissal régime, the FWC in the decision of Franco v Deliveroo Australia Pty Ltd [2021] FWC 2818, has made a finding that a Deliveroo delivery…