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6155 articles are classified in All Articles > Jurisdiction > Federal


Employer, host won't oppose first same-job, same-pay bid

The ACTU has withdrawn its request to intervene in a MEU "same job same, pay" test case aiming to lift the pay of Workpac labour hire mineworkers after the employers, host employer and Ai Group confirmed they do not oppose the application.

Loopholes spurs Victorian retreat on gig advice, wage theft

Victoria's Allan Labor Government intends to repeal its wage theft offence and shut its gig worker advisory service, following the passage of the federal Closing Loopholes legislation that covers the same field, according to papers for the State's 2024-25 Budget.

ALAEA's IBD bid seeks to thaw "unjust" Qantas pay freeze

The Australian Licenced Aircraft Engineers Association is at the pointy end of a bid for an intractable bargaining declaration to break an alleged "impasse" in negotiations on behalf of Qantas engineers in Tamworth, with the Flying Kangaroo and the union due to report back to the FWC this morning.

500% of award rates a bit rich: FWC bench

Employers have succeeded in varying an award clause a FWC full bench agrees could produce the "absurd" result of workers receiving five times the prescribed minimum rates.


FWC slams "dishonest" portrayal of meeting site

A FWC presidential member has taken exception to a HSU official's description of a clinical handover area as a meal room suitable for conducting meetings, dismissing it as a "self-serving label. . . border[ing] on dishonest".

Union fails to pull plug on bid for demark orders

The principal contractor on Australia's largest energy transmission project has been cleared to continue its pursuit of orders blocking the ETU's expansion into the renewable energy sector, as the union engages in alleged "guerrilla" tactics of disruption and delay.

Worker sacked for leaving his shift for five hours

The FWC has upheld the sacking of a supervisor for changing the ratio of carers for an NDIS participant without permission and leaving a colleague in an unsafe situation.

Employer "disingenuous" in reprising PABO objections

The FWC has found two types of proposed industrial action against an employer unlawful because they lack specificity, but has also labelled the company "disingenuous" for objecting to the original PABO, withdrawing its concerns and then re-ventilating them a month later.

Crypto manager's award claim lacks substance: FWC

The FWC has observed that an employer "is not a charity", in rejecting a claim from a former risk manager for an insolvent cryptocurrency trader that his award-covered role did not change despite successive $50,000 promotions over just 15 months.