Chapter 2 Schedule 1 – Family-friendly measures
2.1
Schedule 1 of the Fair Work Amendment Bill 2013 (the Bill) introduces five
new family friendly arrangements into the Fair Work Act 2009 (the Act) including:
n clarifying that any
special maternity leave taken will not reduce an employee’s entitlement to
unpaid parental leave (Part 1);
n providing further
flexibility for concurrent unpaid parental leave (Part 2);
n expanding access to
the right to request flexible working arrangements to more groups of employees
(Part 3);
n requiring employers
to consult with employees about the impact of changes to regular rosters or
hours of work (Part 4); and
n extending the right
of pregnant women to transfer to a safe job (Part 5).[1]
2.2
Some of these measures were recommended by the Fair Work Act Review
Panel (the Review Panel). Others have been developed through the consultation
mechanisms outlined in Chapter 1.
2.3
However, the Business Council of Australia (BCA) stated that there was
a significant lack of consultation with stakeholders on many of the provisions
in Schedule 1 (family-friendly measures). BCA submitted:
Significant aspects of
this part of the Bill have not been put through any consultation process and
tested. In fact, only two of the measures were raised in the context of the
Fair Work Act Review panel recommendations. As a result there are substantial
concerns about aspects of what is being proposed.[2]
2.4
Similar comments were made by ABI, which stated that:
Because of lack of due
process, ABI’s preferred position is that the schedule is not enacted. Had due
process, impact evaluation and proper consultation been followed, Schedule 1
would not be in the form it is.[3]
2.5
Each part of Schedule 1 is examined below.
Special maternity leave (Part 1)
2.6
Part 1 proposes to amend the unpaid special maternity leave provisions
of the Act so that any period of unpaid special maternity leave taken by an
eligible employee will not reduce that employee’s entitlement to unpaid
parental leave under s 70 of the Act.[4] The Part gives effect to
the Review Panel’s recommendation 4.
2.7
Unpaid special maternity leave assists employees’ management of
complications or unforeseen pregnancy related issues that preclude them from
continuing employment.
2.8
The Act currently provides for an entitlement to unpaid special
maternity leave for an eligible employee who is not fit for work while she is
pregnant, including because she has a pregnancy-related illness (s 80). Section
80(7) provides that any period of special maternity leave taken under s 80,
reduces the employee’s entitlement to 12 months of unpaid parental leave.[5]
2.9
The Bill repeals s 80(7) of the Act. [6] The effect of this is
that the taking of unpaid special maternity leave will not reduce an employee’s
entitlement to unpaid parental leave.[7]
Stakeholder feedback
2.10
The special maternity leave provisions in Part 1, Schedule 1 of the Bill
were supported by employee organisations and some legal advisory services.[8]
However, business, industry and employer organisations expressed varying levels
of concern about the amendments.[9]
2.11
The Australian Industry Group (AiG) submitted that ‘this provision would
appear to have few adverse impacts upon employers’.[10]
In contrast, the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ACCI) rejected
the proposal,[11] commenting that ‘the
costs to changing existing rules around unpaid parental leave have not been
quantified and it is unclear what exact impact this may have on employers’.[12]
Business SA commented that any additional leave should be capped to ensure that
an employee is not able to be absent from the workplace for more than two
years.[13]
2.12
Master Builders Australia (MBA) submitted that though it supports unpaid
special maternity leave being granted on compassionate grounds, it does not
believe that a legislative enactment is required, commenting that the matter
should be ‘dealt with between employers and employees at the enterprise level’.[14]
2.13
DEEWR stated that:
some organisations have claimed that the bill has introduced
new entitlements to special maternity leave … This is incorrect. The concept…
of special maternity leave … [has] been included in federal workplace relations
since 1996 and [has] had general application to all employees covered by the
federal workplace relations system since 2005.[15]
Parental leave (Part 2)
2.14
Part 2 amends parental leave provisions of the Act with the aim of
providing parents with greater flexibility when caring for children.[16]
This proposal was not canvassed by the Review Panel.
2.15
Currently, the Act regulates the taking of unpaid parental leave by both
parents where they are employed by the same employer (an employee couple). The
Act provides that members of an employee couple must each take unpaid parental
leave consecutively (not concurrently) and in a single unbroken period, subject
to limited exceptions.[17]
2.16
These exceptions include permitting the employee couple to take leave
concurrently for a period of three weeks from the date of the child’s birth or
adoption.[18] By agreement with the
employer, the three weeks concurrent leave may be taken earlier than the birth
and up to six weeks from the date of the child’s birth or adoption.[19]
2.17
The Bill amends these provisions by increasing the maximum period of
concurrent leave available under the unpaid parental leave provisions from
three to eight weeks. The amendments also enable the eight weeks leave to be
taken in separate periods (of at least 2 weeks or a shorter period if agreed by
the employer) at any time within the first 12 months of the birth or adoption
of a child.[20]
2.18
The Bill also amends the applicable notice period required of employees
to notify their employers of the taking of unpaid parental leave. Currently the
Act requires the employee to give at least ten weeks’ written notice or if not
practicable, the employee can provide the notice as soon as is practicable.[21]
The employee is then to confirm the intended start and end dates of the leave
at least four weeks before the intended start date.[22]
2.19
The Bill proposes to repeal these sections and substitutes a new subsection.
The new subsection would provide that an employee must give ten weeks’ written
notice of the taking of unpaid parental leave, except where a member of an
employee couple intends to take second and subsequent periods of concurrent
leave in accordance with the previous amendments (see above), in which case the
notice period is at least four weeks. [23]
2.20
The requirement to confirm start and end dates would also be amended, to
provide that this confirmation is not required in relation to second and subsequent
periods of concurrent unpaid parental leave.[24]
Stakeholder feedback
2.21
The parental leave provisions in Part 2 were supported by employee
organisations and some legal advice services.[25] For example, the
National Working Women’s Centres (NWWCs) commented on the efficacy of the
amendments:
These changes will cater to the needs of a more diverse group
of families and increase the bonding and relationships that are necessary with
the birth or adoption of a child.[26]
2.22
Business and industry groups provided divergent feedback on the
amendments contained in Part 2. AiG submitted that ‘this provision would appear
to have few adverse impacts upon employers’.[27]
2.23
However, ACCI did not support these changes on the basis of the
anticipated financial impact on employers.[28] Other business and
employer groups expressed similar concerns.[29]
Right to request flexible working arrangements (Part 3)
2.24
Currently, the Act provides that employees may request flexible working
arrangements to assist with caring responsibilities where the employee is a
parent or has responsibility for the care of a child, if the child is under
school age or the child is under the age of 18 and has a disability.[30]
2.25
These proposed amendments contained in Part 3 give effect to, and build
upon the recommendations of the Review Panel (recommendation 5).
2.26
The Review Panel noted that though employers are taking the right to
request ‘seriously’, the narrow scope of the Act’s current provisions
contributed to the low level of formal requests being made.[31]
2.27
Part 3 proposes to extend the right to request a change in working
arrangements to a wider range employees who have caring responsibilities and
other circumstances including where the employee:
n is the parent or has
responsibility for the care, of a child who is of school age or younger;
n is a carer (within
the meaning of the Carer Recognition Act 2010) encompassing all people
who provide personal care, support and assistance to individuals who need
support due to disability, a medical condition, mental illness or fragility due
to age;
n is 55 years or older;
n is experiencing
violence from a member of the employee’s family; or
n provides care or
support to a member of his or her immediate family or a member of his or her
household who requires care or support because the member is experiencing
violence from the member’s family.[32]
2.28
These proposed amendments were recommended by the Review Panel.
2.29
Part 3 also provides that an employee who is a parent, or has
responsibility for the care of a child, and who is returning to work after
taking leave in connection with the birth or adoption of the child, is entitled
to request to work on a part-time basis, to assist the employee to care for the
child.[33]
2.30
The Explanatory Memorandum states:
The terms of the [amendment] make clear that the reason the
employee would like to change their working arrangement is because of the
particular circumstances of the employee. That is, there must be a nexus
between the request and the employee’s particular circumstances.[34]
2.31
The amendment also provides a non-exhaustive list of what might constitute
‘reasonable business grounds’ for the purposes of refusing an employee’s request
for flexible working arrangements by their employer.[35]
These include:
n the excessive cost of
accommodating the request;
n that there is no
capacity to reorganise work arrangements of other employees to accommodate the
request;
n the impracticality of
any arrangements that would need to be put in place to accommodate the request,
including the need to recruit replacement staff;
n that there would be a
significant loss of efficiency or productivity; or
n that there would be a
significant negative impact on customer service.[36]
2.32
The EM states that the amendments do not limit the ‘timing or nature of
discussions’ about flexible working arrangements, rather the provisions are
drafted with the ‘intent of [promoting] discussion between employers and
employees about flexible working arrangements’.[37]
Stakeholder feedback
2.33
Extending the right to request flexible working arrangements provisions’
was strongly supported by employee organisations, legal practitioners, domestic
violence support services, carer organisations and the Australian Human Rights
Commission.[38]
2.34
The following passage from the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU)
typified the sentiments expressed by organisations that supported the proposed
amendment:
Extending the right to these groups acknowledges the positive
benefits workforce participation brings to these groups of workers as well as
the significant benefits to the labour market and the national economy.[39]
2.35
However, business and industry organisations expressed some reservation
at these proposals, and many did not support their inclusion in the Act.[40]
ACCI rejected the proposed amendments to the current rights of employees to
request flexible working arrangements, on the grounds that the costs to
employers has not been quantified.[41]
2.36
AiG questioned the necessity of the provisions, commenting that in
practice, many workers request and are granted flexible working arrangements
without using the right to request provisions currently in the Act.[42]
Similarly, MBA also opposed the proposed measures stating that workplaces
offering flexible arrangements should be on a voluntary basis.[43]
2.37
Stakeholder feedback (both in support and in opposition to the Part 3)
provided detailed discussion on the extension of the right to request flexible
working arrangements. Broadly, this feedback can be categorised under the
following headings:
n recommendations to
include a requirement that employers give ‘reasonable’ or ‘genuine’
consideration of a request for flexible working arrangements;
n recommendations that
an enforceable right to request be established with the FWC hearing employees’
complaints of adverse or unreasonable refusals by employers;
n discussions about the
12-months of service eligibility requirement; and
n evidentiary concerns.
‘Reasonable’ or ‘genuine’ consideration to requests
2.38
The ACTU, Community and Public Sector Union (CPSU), United Services
Union, Australian Nursing Federation and Carers Victoria recommended that the
Bill be amended to also require that employers give ‘reasonable’ or ‘genuine’
consideration to a request by an employee for flexible working arrangements. [44]
2.39
For example, the CPSU recommended to that the Bill be amended to:
place obligations upon an employer to give genuine or serious
consideration to the request [for flexible working arrangements] and also make
reasonable efforts to accommodate that request. [45]
2.40
The CPSU commented that such an amendment would give the Bill additional
clarity whilst also giving employees confidence that their request would be
appropriately considered. [46]
Creating an enforceable right to request in the FWC
2.41
Many organisations supportive of Part 3 recommended that the Bill create
an enforceable right to request flexible working arrangements. Under such a
proposal, if a request was refused an employee or their industrial
representatives could apply to the FWC for resolution.[47]
2.42
The Australian Human Rights Commission, advocated that the Bill
establish a procedural appeals process through the FWC for decisions related to
the right to request flexible working arrangements.[48]
2.43
Carers Victoria also expressed concern that neither the Act, nor the
present Bill, allow an employee to appeal to the FWC in the event of an
unreasonable adverse decision.[49]
2.44
NWWC was of the view that the provisions would leave workers with
‘rights on paper only’. NWWC observed that an employee currently has no
mechanism for appeal unless an agreement for flexible working hours is
specifically included in an enterprise agreement.[50]
Consequently, NWWC recommended that the FWC be granted powers to deal with
disputes and make orders where appropriate in relation to requests for flexible
working arrangements.[51]
2.45
The Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations, (DEEWR)
responded to some of these concerns when this issue was first raised in the
Review Panel’s inquiry of 2012. The Review Panel found that as employers are
giving serious consideration to requests for flexible working arrangements and
reaching agreements with their employees about these requests, a formal appeal
mechanism was not warranted.[52]
Removing the 12-months of service requirement
2.46
ACTU, Carers Victoria and the Australian Domestic and Family Violence
Clearinghouse recommended the removal of the eligibility requirement of 12
months prior service.[53]
Evidentiary concerns
2.47
The issue of employees providing evidence of their grounds to request
flexible working arrangements was the subject of comment from organisations that
both supported and opposed the Bill.
2.48
Though Carers Victoria supported the family-friendly measures, it expressed
concerns regarding the proof of an employee’s carer status, as some employees
may feel inhibited in ‘disclosing information about their family member’s
condition or level of disability because they wish to protect their privacy and
dignity’.[54]
2.49
Consequently, Carers Victoria recommended the development of guidelines
to assist employers and employees, and noted the Victorian Equal Opportunity
and Human Rights Commission’s Family Responsibilities – Guidelines for
Employers and Employees as a model example.[55]
2.50
The NFF stated:
extending the right to request flexible working arrangements
to (amongst others) employees with disabilities, who have caring responsibilities,
who are over 55 years of age or older, or who are experiencing domestic
violence from a family member could be easily exploited.[56]
2.51
Godfrey Hirst Australia expressed similar concerns regarding employees
subject to family violence and recommended that an employee be required to
provide
some form of proof, such as a document issued by the police,
a court, a medical practitioner or counselling professional, or a domestic
violence support service, with any such information provided be subject to the Privacy
Act 1988.[57]
2.52
Similar comments were made by MEA that stated that there should be a
legislated requirement to produce evidence to the satisfaction of the employer.[58]
Consultation on changes to rosters or working hours (Part 4)
2.53
Part 4 proposes to insert new content requirements for modern awards and
enterprise agreements that would require employers to ‘genuinely consult’
employees about changes to regular rosters or ordinary hours of work.
2.54
The amendments would require the employer to inform employees about a proposed
change to their regular roster or ordinary hours of work and invite employees
to give their views on the impact of the proposed change (particularly family
and caring responsibilities). The employer would be required to consider those
views.[59] These measures were not
canvassed by the Review Panel’s report.
2.55
The Explanatory Memorandum states that it is intended that the
requirement to consult will:
not be triggered by a proposed change where an employee has
irregular, sporadic, or unpredictable working hours. Rather, regardless of
whether an employee is permanent or casual, where that employee has an
understanding of, and reliance on the fact that, their working arrangements are
regular and systematic, any change that would have an impact upon those
arrangements will trigger the consultation requirement in accordance with the
terms of the modern award.[60]
2.56
DEEWR confirmed that:
The rostering protections will instead apply to all employees
with regular and systematic working hours, whether they are employed on a
permanent or causal basis. … the requirement to consult on a change to working
hours is not intended to apply to employees with irregular, sporadic or
unpredictable hours of work.[61]
2.57
As the amendments would ensure that employers cannot make unilateral
changes that ‘adversely impact upon their employees’ without consultation:
the intention of the amendments is to promote discussion
between employers and employees who are covered by a modern award or who are
party to an enterprise agreement about the likely impact of a change to an
employee’s regular roster or ordinary house of work, particularly in relation
to the employee’s family and caring arrangements.[62]
2.58
The Explanatory Memorandum clarifies that employers and employees will
still be able to negotiate a consultation term for inclusion in an enterprise
agreement that meets the requirements of their specific workplace. However, the
agreement must include a consultation term in accordance with this amendment.
If the enterprise agreement does not provide a consultation term, the model
consultation term (as set by this Bill) will be taken to be a term of the
agreement.[63]
2.59
The amendments will apply to modern awards in operation on or after 1
January 2014. The Bill provides that the FWC must make a determination varying
modern awards to include a consultation term which meets the new requirements
set out in the Bill, by 31 December 2013. The FWC will be able to vary existing
consultation terms to reflect the new requirements.[64]
Stakeholder feedback
2.60
Part 4 was supported by employee organisations and some legal advice
services.[65] However, ACTU
recommended that Part 4 be amended to require employers to give ‘genuine’
consideration to any views expressed by employees when engaging in consultation
about changes to rosters or working hours.[66]
2.61
ACTU also recommended that the Bill require employers to ‘make
reasonable efforts to accommodate the needs of the employee’ when making
changes to rosters or working hours.[67]
2.62
Business and industry groups rejected amendments proposed in Part 4.[68]
ACCI strongly disagreed with the measures stating:
There is no evidence that the provisions are warranted. These
proposals have not been the subject of an open consultative process… They
impose onerous new statutory obligations to consult employees and allow union
representation. They are not “light touch” regulation as any single breach of a
modern award may subject an employer to a [financial] penalty [between] $10,200
[and] $51,000.[69]
The
Business Council of Australia (BCA) stated:
The amendments leaves the way open to increased third-party
intervention in the management of businesses, and could (depending on the
content of dispute settling clauses) result in the imposition of arbitrated
outcomes in relation to what ought properly to be seen as matters for
management.[70]
2.63
NFF commented that the provision is ‘overly restrictive especially in
relation to an agriculture workplace where the workflow is unpredictable at
most times, depending on the weather and market’.[71]
2.64
DEEWR clarified these concerns:
In respect of rostering protections, there have been claims
that the consultations requirement for changes to rosters will apply to any
change of hours. This is not the case. The new requirements would only apply to
proposed changes to a regular roster or ordinary hours of work. Furthermore,
the requirements will not arise where an employee has irregular, sporadic or
unpredictable working hours.[72]
Safe job transfer during pregnancy (Part 5)
2.65
Part 5 provides a pregnant employee with an entitlement to be
transferred to a safe job regardless of whether she has, or will have, an
entitlement to unpaid parental leave.[73] These proposed measures
were not canvassed by the Review Panel.
2.66
Under the amendments, an employee would be required to provide evidence
(such as an medical certificate) of the kind that would satisfy a reasonable
person that she is fit for work, but that it is inadvisable for her to continue
in her present position during the risk period because of illness or risks
arising out of her pregnancy or hazards connected with the position.[74]
2.67
The Bill also proposes a new entitlement that where evidentiary requirements
are met, for the duration of the risk period, the employee must be transferred
to an appropriate safe job with no other change to the employee’s terms and
conditions of employment.[75]
2.68
The definition of an ‘appropriate safe job’ is retained. An ‘appropriate
safe job’ is a ‘safe job that has the same ordinary hours of work as the
employee’s present position, or an agreed different number of hours’.[76]
The current requirement that an employer pay the transferred employee at her
full rate of pay for the original position prior to the transfer, for the hours
that she works in the risk period is also retained.[77]
2.69
If there is no appropriate safe job available, the Bill provides that:
n where an employee is
otherwise entitled to unpaid parental leave, the employee will be entitled to
paid no safe job leave at their base rate of pay, as currently exists under the
Act;[78] and
n where an employee is
not entitled to unpaid parental leave, the employee is entitled to unpaid no
safe job leave.[79]
Stakeholder feedback
2.70
The provisions establishing a right for pregnant employees to request a
transfer to a safer job during their pregnancy was supported by all employee
organisations and legal practitioners.[80]
2.71
Though supporting the proposed amendment, the Law Society of New South
Wales was concerned that there is ‘uncertainty’ in the existing provisions
relating to safe-job transfers.[81] The Society submitted
that the Bill provide clarification on the following:
n whether written
notice needs to be provided to the employer by the employee in order to enliven
the access to transfer to a safe job or no safe job leave;
n whether there should
be a requirement for the employee to define what specifically they are advised
would be safe, and not safe, to assist the employer in determining whether
there is an appropriately safe job in the workplace; and
n the effect on the
employee’s entitlements if the appropriate safe job was a ‘higher duty’ rather
than the assumed lesser role.[82]
2.72
NFF highlighted similar concerns.[83]
2.73
Other business and employer organisations rejected the proposed amendment
on the grounds that they were unnecessary.[84] For example, ACCI
stated:
There is no evidence that these provisions are warranted and
that employers and employees are not able to come to suitable arrangements when
an employee requests a safe job despite not having a statutory right to unpaid
parental leave.[85]
2.74
Australian Business Industrial (ABI) commented that employers are
already obligated under work health and safety laws to ensure safe working
conditions for all employees. ABI stated:
These amendments are not about health or safety. They do not
go to the safety of the woman or her unborn child, they address industrial
entitlements. The employer’s responsibilities under [existing] health and
safety legislation mean that they must avoid exposing the pregnant employee to
work which presents risks to her or her unborn baby.[86]
2.75
MBA argued that the new entitlements should be costed and ‘other
mechanisms for social support of pregnant women considered, having regard to
the cost on businesses…. Hence, deferral of the Bill until this process has
been completed is recommended’.[87]
Committee comment
2.76
Clearly there is a balance of views on the provisions contained within Schedule
1 of the Bill. The Committee recognises the concerns of some employers but is
of the opinion that there are adequate safeguards in place to ensure that there
is a balance between the needs of employers and employees in respect to the
proposed schedule.