Govt amends workplace transition billThe Rudd government has put forward numerous amendments to its workplace transition bill in response to a Senate inquiry's criticisms.
The
24 separate amendments were circulated in the upper house on Tuesday during the committee stage of Senate debate on the first plank of Labor's industrial relations legislation.
Climate Change Minister Penny Wong told parliament the amendments addressed "technical" issues with the Workplace Relations Amendment (Transition to Forward with Fairness) Bill 2008.
"The government has circulated some amendments which I'm advised are technical amendments arising in part from the Senate committee process," she said.
A report on Monday by the Senate's education, employment and workplace relations committee
found some important aspects of Labor's transition bill needed clarifying.Liberal senator
Eric Abetz questioned why Labor had criticised the previous government for having to amend its original Work Choices legislation, when Labor was behaving similarly now it was in government.He questioned
why the government needed to move 24 separate amendments with a 15-page explanatory memorandum.
"Why the delay in presenting us with these very detailed and lengthy amendments," he asked.
Earlier,
Senator Abetz challenged Labor to guarantee that no worker would be worse off as a result of its changes to the previous government's Work Choices laws.
"We as a government didn't give that guarantee (about Work Choices)," he told parliament.
"We were castigated from the Torres Strait to Tasmania, from Sydney to the Swan, for not being able to give that guarantee."
Some workers would inevitably be worse off as a result of Labor's legislation, he said.
Senator Wong would not give the guarantee sought by Senator Abetz.
But she said the Rudd government's workplace laws would provide far more protection to workers than the Howard government's Work Choices regime.
Labor's workplace bill bans the creation of new Australian Workplace Agreements (AWAs), initiates changes to the award system and provides for transitional individual agreements for employees on existing AWAs.
The bill entered committee stage on Tuesday shortly after the upper house resumed, having been read a second time.
A second-reading amendment moved by Family First senator Steve Fielding, which noted the absence of guaranteed meal breaks and penalty rates in the bill, failed on the voices.
During the committee stage the Senate will consider several amendments from the minor parties as well as from the government.
Australian Democrats senator Andrew Murray said the government needed to address a contradiction in the bill identified by witnesses who gave evidence to the Senate inquiry into the legislation.
The bill pledges that in the process of standardising industrial awards, the process will not disadvantage employees or increase costs for employers.
But,
in the committee report, academics Professor Andrew Stewart and Dr John Buchanan raised concerns that this was impossible."Has the government understood that that's a problem, because of the evidence raised?" Senator Murray asked the government.
"Will you have a look at it and try and find a means of dealing with what are regarded as irreconcilable, competing objectives?".
What!!! I though you had a plan Kevvy? Did you lie about your preparedness?