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A Sweeping Review Of Fair Work Laws. (Read 440 times)
imcrookonit
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A Sweeping Review Of Fair Work Laws.
Feb 21st, 2014 at 6:07am
 
Business figure to help lead sweeping review of Fair Work laws

Date
    February 21, 2014


The federal government is finalising plans for a sweeping review of the nation's workplace laws, and could hand-pick an industrial relations expert from outside the Productivity Commission to help lead it.

Before the election, the government promised a ''genuine and independent review'' of the Fair Work laws by the economically dry commission, to consider their impact on productivity, the economy and jobs, with a view to raising flexibility in the workplace.

The review comes as Employment Minister Eric Abetz revealed plans to introduce new laws next week that would allow workers to trade off conditions such as penalty rates in return for more flexible hours. Fairfax Media has learnt former Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry chief executive Peter Anderson, a critic of the Fair Work laws, was informally sounded out late last year about participating in the review.      


Mr Anderson is a respected former industrial relations lawyer who has worked for both Prime Minister Tony Abbott and Howard government workplace minister Peter Reith on industrial relations policy, but he is said to have turned down the opportunity.

Sources familiar with the government's plans said at least one senior figure from the business world could be drafted in to assist the commission with the review, with the government seeking ''people with industry experience, not academics'' to review the laws.

The terms of reference for the review have not been signed off by cabinet but will be finalised before the government's self-imposed March deadline.

The move comes after Fairfax Media revealed the government urged SPC Ardmona to reduce workers' wages in exchange for government assistance and signalled it would give Qantas a debt guarantee while welcoming the company's tough stance on industrial relations.

Mr Abbott was heavily critical of Labor's 2012 review of the Fair Work Act, which he said was ''conducted essentially by the department and, naturally, the government reviewing the government has decided that the government doesn't have a problem''.

The commission has six other reviews under way and there is a view in government that it would benefit from one or more outsiders being brought in.

The commission has six full-time and six part-time commissioners, though the terms of two members - Siobhan McKenna and Wendy Craik - are due to expire in June. Industry and business figures suggested to Fairfax Media that the Australian Industry Group's Innes Willox, Australian Mines and Metals Association chief Steve Knott and former Liberal MP Sophie Mirabella could be brought in, though government sources dismissed all three.

Speaking at Melbourne University on Thursday, Senator Abetz said his new bills were likely to be brought to Parliament next week, implementing the Coalition's pre-election promises on industrial relations.

Among them would be changes to the Fair Work Act's ''individual flexibility arrangements'', brought in under former workplace relations minister Julia Gillard.

The laws dictate how employers and their staff negotiate conditions, and Senator Abetz said changing them would allow employees ''to be able to work hours that suit them and their family-life balance''.

Senator Abetz confirmed, when asked about the changes, that they would allow workers to trade off penalty rates for family time.

He stressed it would be employees who decided if this trade-off suited them, and not employers dictating that penalty rates be signed away. ''If the worker is better off overall as determined by the worker, why should some collective agreement seek to deny the individual that right?''

The union movement leapt on the proposed changes, saying they were the first sign the Abbott government would restore the sort of individual contracts that were the hallmark of the Howard government's WorkChoices laws.      Shocked

ACTU president Ged Kearney said the government had given employers the green light to cut wages, under the guise of greater flexibility.      Angry

''This is a blatant attempt to cut pay and conditions … despite all the pre-election promises,'' she said. ''Minister Abetz talks about imaginary workers that want to give up penalty rates for nothing. We're yet to find a worker that thinks this is a good deal.''   Sad

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/business-figure-to-help-lead-sweeping-review-of-fair-work-laws-20140220-334db.html#ixzz2ttVcjNwL
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Armchair_Politician
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Re: A Sweeping Review Of Fair Work Laws.
Reply #1 - Feb 21st, 2014 at 6:27am
 
This is a timely review, as there has been thousands of job losses under Labor's disastrous industrial relations regime that has also given unions far too much power. Keep in mind that the closure of the car manufacturing plants over the next few years has been announced while we are all working under Labor's industrial relations regime, not the Coalition.
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Kat
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Re: A Sweeping Review Of Fair Work Laws.
Reply #2 - Feb 21st, 2014 at 6:31am
 
Armchair_Politician wrote on Feb 21st, 2014 at 6:27am:
This is a timely review, as there has been thousands of job losses under Labor's disastrous industrial relations regime that has also given unions far too much power. Keep in mind that the closure of the car manufacturing plants over the next few years has been announced while we are all working under Labor's industrial relations regime, not the Coalition.


More rubbish from Mr Clueless....

The Con-alition has no idea when it comes to industrial relations.

And it never has.
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Armchair_Politician
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Re: A Sweeping Review Of Fair Work Laws.
Reply #3 - Feb 21st, 2014 at 6:35am
 
Kat wrote on Feb 21st, 2014 at 6:31am:
Armchair_Politician wrote on Feb 21st, 2014 at 6:27am:
This is a timely review, as there has been thousands of job losses under Labor's disastrous industrial relations regime that has also given unions far too much power. Keep in mind that the closure of the car manufacturing plants over the next few years has been announced while we are all working under Labor's industrial relations regime, not the Coalition.


More rubbish from Mr Clueless....

The Con-alition has no idea when it comes to industrial relations.

And it never has.


I invite you to look up the current industrial relations code. You'll be pleasantly surprised to see I am right and you are wrong, as usual!  Smiley
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Kat
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Re: A Sweeping Review Of Fair Work Laws.
Reply #4 - Feb 21st, 2014 at 6:43am
 
Armchair_Politician wrote on Feb 21st, 2014 at 6:35am:
Kat wrote on Feb 21st, 2014 at 6:31am:
Armchair_Politician wrote on Feb 21st, 2014 at 6:27am:
This is a timely review, as there has been thousands of job losses under Labor's disastrous industrial relations regime that has also given unions far too much power. Keep in mind that the closure of the car manufacturing plants over the next few years has been announced while we are all working under Labor's industrial relations regime, not the Coalition.


More rubbish from Mr Clueless....

The Con-alition has no idea when it comes to industrial relations.

And it never has.


I invite you to look up the current industrial relations code. You'll be pleasantly surprised to see I am right and you are wrong, as usual!  Smiley



The ONLY time you've ever been 'right' is in your political leanings.
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