Move to make Christmas Day a public holiday in SA passes Lower House but unlikely to proceed
ABC News.
Wed 17 Nov 2021
Union members protest at Parliament House to make Christmas Day a public holiday in 2021.(ABC News)
South Australia's Lower House of parliament has passed legislation to make Christmas Day a public holiday, but with a major amendment that could scuttle any chance of the bill passing into law.
Key points:
Christmas Day falls on a Saturday in 2021
The public holiday has been declared for Monday not Saturday
An independent MP has moved to make it a public holiday while removing the Christmas Eve half-day public holiday
With Christmas landing on a Saturday this year, the public holiday is instead declared for the following Monday, December 27 in South Australia.
It means most South Australians working on Christmas Day will not be awarded penalty rates, something Labor and the Greens have been lobbying to get changed.
Under the state's current arrangements, brought in under Labor, staff who work on Christmas Eve get penalty rates if they work from 7pm to midnight.
Independent MP Troy Bell today successfully moved a motion supported by Liberal members in the House of Assembly to get rid of the half-day public holiday this year but add Christmas Day as a public holiday.
"I just think we get the balance right between our small business owners and the employees," Mr Bell, a former Liberal, said.
"Our small business owners will be paying penalty rates for Christmas Day, the Sunday, Monday and Tuesday — so it's four days over that Christmas period."
Mount Gambier MP Troy Bell says workers will be better off under his amendment.
Mr Bell said his amendment brought South Australia into line with most other states.
"In actual fact, it's a net benefit to workers, because we go from the current situation, which is three-and-a-half days to four full days," he said.
"In my opinion, workers be better off overall."
The change will only come into effect when Christmas Day falls on a Saturday.
Move set to fail in Upper House
Opposition Leader Peter Malinauskas said the decision was incredibly disappointing, with the bill now in a very different format to its intention.
"For those people who are working on Christmas Eve, they are now worse off," Mr Malinauskas said.
"To say that is a poor outcome in the view of the Labor Party is a grave understatement."
"Parliament is now in an insidious position where it has to choose between Christmas Day and Christmas Eve.
"The Liberal Party think that somehow they've come up with an alternative arrangement — some slippery manoeuvre."
The bill will now have to go to the Legislative Council, but Labor and the Greens say they will not support the amendment, making it unlikely to pass.
That means the Christmas Eve half-day public holiday will remain, but Christmas Day will be treated like any other Saturday.
Shop Distributive and Allied Employees Association state secretary Josh Peak said workers affected would include people working in bars and restaurants, as well as supermarkets and department stores.
"There's going to be thousands of workers that as a result of this are worse off," he said.
Boxing Day is not a public holiday in South Australia; instead the state's founding is marked with Proclamation Day on December 28.