Chapter 3 Schedule 3 – Anti-bullying measure
3.1
Schedule 3 of the Fair Work Amendment Bill 2013 (the Bill) amends the Fair
Work Act 2009 (the Act) to include a new Part 6-4B that implements the
Government’s response to this Committee’s report, Workplace Bullying: ‘We
just want it to stop’, (the workplace bullying report) specifically
recommendations 1 and 23.[1]
3.2
The workplace bullying inquiry heard extensive evidence that existing
criminal offences for breaches of work health and safety (WHS) laws, (matters
that for most employees constitutionally remain with state governments) can be
deficient in responding to instances of workplace bullying.[2]
3.3
Further, WHS laws do not provide an individual worker with a right of
recourse. Rather commencement of action under these laws is exclusively engaged
by state or territory regulators. The ability for an individual worker to concurrently
pursue recourse swiftly and inexpensively through workplace relations law was a
key recommendation of the workplace bullying report.[3]
3.4
The Bill proposes to allow a worker who has been bullied at work, to
apply to the Fair Work Commission (FWC) for an order to stop the bullying.[4]
This individual right to recourse will exist concurrently with actions to be
brought under WHS laws of each state and territory. [5]
The FWC may also refer matters to the appropriate WHS regulator.
3.5
Under the amendments, the FWC would be enabled to make any order it
considers appropriate (other than a pecuniary fine) to stop the bullying.[6]
The Explanatory Memorandum (EM) provides:
Orders will not necessarily be limited or apply only to the
employer of the worker who is bullied, but could also apply to others, such as
co-workers and visitors to the workplace. [7]
3.6
The EM states that ‘the focus is on resolving the matter and enabling
normal working relationships to resume’. [8] The types of orders that
the FWC may make include orders that require:
n the individual or
group of individuals to stop the specified behaviour;
n regular monitoring of
behaviours by an employer;
n compliance with an
employer’s workplace bullying policy;
n the provision of
information and additional support and training to workers; or
n a review of the
employer’s workplace bullying policy. [9]
3.7
A broad range of workers would be eligible to apply to the FWC under the
Bill. This includes any individual who performs work in any capacity, including
as an employee, a contractor, a subcontractor, an outworker, an apprentice, a
trainee, a student gaining work experience, or a volunteer.[10]
This mirrors the broad definition of ‘worker’ as established in the Work
Health and Safety Act 2011, and not the traditional ‘employee’ definition
used in industrial relations laws.[11]
3.8
The Bill would require the FWC to commence processing an application for
an order to stop bullying within 14 days of the application being made,[12]
which reflects individuals who have experienced workplace bullying expressed
desire for a swift resolution process.[13]
3.9
According to the Explanatory Memorandum, ‘commencement’ may include the
FWC ‘taking steps to inform itself of the matters…, conducting a conference…,
or deciding to hold a hearing’.[14]
3.10
When deciding if a worker has been bullied, it is proposed that the FWC
will use the definition developed by Safe Work Australia,[15]
adopted in the national model Code of Practice, and supported by this Committee:[16]
A worker is bullied at work if an individual or group of
individuals, repeatedly behaves unreasonably towards the worker, or a group of
workers, and that behaviour creates a risk to health and safety.[17]
3.11
In considering the terms of an order to prevent the worker from being
bullied at work, the FWC must consider:
n any final or interim
outcomes arising out of an investigation into the matter that is being, or has
been, undertaken by another person or body;
n the procedures, if
any, available to the worker to resolve grievances or disputes within the
workplace;
n any final or interim
outcomes arising out of any procedure available to the worker to resolve the
dispute at the workplace level; and
n any other matters the
FWC considers relevant.[18]
3.12
Importantly, this proposed new section would permit the FWC to ‘frame
the order in a way that has regard to compliance action being taken by the
employer or a health and safety regulator or another body, and to ensure
consistency with those actions’.[19]
3.13
An application for an order may be made by person affected by the
contravention, an inspector or an industrial association. An application may be
made to the Federal Court, the Federal Magistrates Court or an eligible State
or Territory court.[20]
3.14
The Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations (DEEWR) submitted
that a breach of an order made by the FWC will engage a civil remedy provision
attracting a maximum penalty of $10,200 for individuals or $51,000 for a
corporate entity.[21] According to DEEWR,
these penalties align with existing provisions for similar breaches of FWC
orders.[22]
Stakeholder feedback
3.15
The anti-bullying measures contained in Schedule 3 were strongly supported
by employee representative organisations and some legal practitioners.[23]
3.16
The Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) supported the Bill’s
definition of workplace bullying, as well as the nature of FWC proceedings and
the discretion and flexibility of the orders which FWC may grant following an
application.[24]
3.17
The Community and Public Sector Union (CPSU) expressed hope that the
individual-employee mechanism proposed in the Bill will have a corresponding
effect on employers and ‘encourage them to be pro-active at managing and
rectifying workplace bullying complaints’.[25]
3.18
Business and employer organisations were either reserved in their
support of the Bill’s anti-bullying measures or expressed clear opposition.[26]
3.19
The Australian Industry Group (AiG) was opposed to the Bill’s
anti-bullying measures, stating the Schedule would increase existing widespread
confusion as well as rates of disputation in workplaces.[27]
3.20
Though supporting the majority of recommendations in the workplace
bullying report, the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ACCI) opposed
the proposal to create a new jurisdiction within the FWC.[28]
ACCI was also concerned that the orders which the FWC could issue are too
broad, specifically with reference to the proposed new sections that would
allow the FWC’s orders to apply to third parties such as visitors and members
of the public.[29]
3.21
The Queensland Law Society commented:
It is contrary to the principles of procedural fairness and
natural justice to empower the FWC to make orders that would affect a person or
entity that is not a party to the application. [The Society] recommend that
[this proposed section] be amended so that the FWC is only empowered to make
orders binding the parties to the application.[30]
3.22
Broadly, stakeholder feedback can be categorised under the following
headings:
n opposition to the
Bill on the basis that workplace bullying should remain within the WHS space
only;
n questions regarding
the constitutionality of the measures;
n concerns regarding
projected costs to business, particularly small business;
n arguments for a
requirement that internal procedures of the workplace be exhausted prior to
applying to the FWC;
n recommendations that
improve the Bill’s clarity;
n state and territory
public service concerns;
n concerns that the FWC
be properly funded and resourced to meet its additional responsibilities; and
n concerns about a
perceived lack of consultation in the development of the measures.
3.23
Each of these is addressed below.
Jurisdictional character of anti-bullying laws
3.24
Business and employer organisations, opposing the Bill’s anti-bullying
measures, advocated that workplace bullying should remain exclusively within
the WHS jurisdictions.[31]
3.25
AiG stated that though bullying is an issue that employers take very
seriously, it ‘is not an industrial relations issue [rather] it is primarily a
work health and safety issue’.[32] As behaviour assessed as
a risk to WHS, the National Farmers’ Federation (NFF), Master Electricians
Australia (MEA), Housing Industry Association, Australian Mines & Metals
Association (AMMA), and Australian Motor Industry Foundation all argued that
workplace bullying should remain exclusively within the WHS jurisdiction.[33]
3.26
Australian Business Industrial (ABI) observed that individuals could
pursue complaints both in the FWC and through the WHS regulators’ mechanisms.[34]
The NFF commented that concurrent jurisdictions will ‘encourage forum
shopping’.[35]
3.27
The Northern Territory Government (NT Government) further commented:
Whilst it is important to provide this opportunities for
remedies for those workers who are bullied at work; it is equally important
that once a matter is heard in one jurisdiction that the matter be considered
resolved so that the parties can get on with their business.[36]
3.28
The NT Government added that concurrent jurisdiction would contribute to
already high-levels of confusion in the community.[37]
3.29
The Business Council of Australia argued that the Government’s focus
should be on prevention rather than providing new avenues of individual
recourse that are likely to make workplaces more divisive.[38]
3.30
In contrast, the Law Society of New South Wales, referring to previous
submissions and evidence given to this Committee in its inquiry into workplace
bullying, confirmed that the FWC is an ‘appropriate forum to deal with
complaints about bullying’.[39]
3.31
DEEWR stated that:
The provisions are designed to complement, not replace,
existing work health and safety obligations and the work done by work health
and safety regulators. A person can make an application to both the Fair Work
Commission and the relevant work health and safety regulator at the same time in
keeping with the different process and outcomes available in each jurisdiction.
The Fair Work Commission is working closely with work health and safety
regulators on protocols to inform its handling of applications.[40]
Constitutional jurisdiction
3.32
As noted above, WHS law is a matter that falls within the residual
powers of state governments under the Australian Constitution. The question
thus arises as to whether the Commonwealth Government can gain constitutional
authority to legislate on workplace bullying which has hitherto been considered
a WHS matter, simply by redefining it as an industrial relations matter.
3.33
ABI referred to evidence taken (and referenced in its report) during its
workplace bullying inquiry.[41] The workplace bullying
report stated:
It is, however, unclear whether the functions of Fair Work
Australia [now the FWC] could be expanded to enable them to make determinations
about all cases of workplace bullying, regardless of whether they fall under
the criteria of the current general protections or unfair dismissal provisions
of the Fair Work Act. Ms Bernadette O’Neill, General Manager of Fair
Work Australia commented that following the High Court’s decision in regards to
Work Choices it is very likely that the Commonwealth Government does have the
constitutional legal capacity to deal with workplace bullying under industrial
relations laws. However, she also acknowledged that it would be a monumental
change and the legal and constitutional capacity is only one of many factors
that would need to be taken into account.[42]
3.34
Responding to these constitutional questions, DEEWR explained that the
constitutional basis for the Commonwealth’s powers in this regard are already
established:
The definition of when a worker is bullied at work is—and
this is why it is drafted the way it is—‘while a worker is at work in a constitutionally
covered business’. That is, if you like, the constitution or the head of power
under which the Commonwealth can make these laws. We are not really relying on
anything other than basically the same laws that underpinned workplace
relations law since the Work Choices case. Just to expand on that, if a person
is employed in a constitutional corporation by the Commonwealth or a
Commonwealth authority, or a body incorporated in a territory, or the business
they are undertaking is conducted principally in a territory or Commonwealth
place, then you will be covered under this act—so it has got pretty broad
coverage. The exemptions would probably be if you are employed in a partnership
or not engaged in a territory—those kinds of things. … Those who would not be
covered by the definition of 'constitutionally covered business' would include
state government employees and employees of unincorporated bodies such as sole
traders, partnerships, not-for-profit associations, volunteer associations and
companies not significantly engaged in trading or financial sorts of
activities. That is a reflection of the extent of the Commonwealth's
constitutional powers in this area.[43]
Projected costs to business
3.35
Another key concern of business and employer organisations was possible
additional, unforeseen costs to business, particularly small business.
3.36
Business SA commented that
small businesses would not have the resources, time or
experience to be able to actively engage with [the various federal and state]
legal processes and provide a response if a complaint were allowed to be
hear[d] under multiple laws.[44]
3.37
Referencing its concerns that the Bill was not accompanied by a
Regulatory Impact Statement (see para 1.17.), Master Builders Australia (MBA)
expressed concern that the measures will require employers to:
establish procedures which demonstrate that reasonable
management action has taken place and that it has been applied in a reasonable
manner. The cost to employers of establishing these procedures in a
sufficiently formal manner to stand as proof in the tribunal has not been
considered and costed.[45]
Requirement that internal processes be exhausted
3.38
Some stakeholders recommended the Schedule be amended so that internal
workplace processes, where they exist, are exhausted prior to applying to the
FWC.[46]
3.39
For example, Mr Eric Windholz from the Centre of Regulatory Studies at
Monash University, recommended that the proposed section be amended to require
employees to seek to resolve the matter through internal workplace policies and
processes prior to making an application to the FWC, or to state in the
application why recourse via the internal processes is not appropriate.[47]
Godfrey Hirst Australia, MEA and AMMA had similar recommendations for
amendment.[48]
3.40
The Queensland Law Society submitted that ‘there may also be utility in
setting prerequisites that must be met in order for a worker to be eligible to
make an application’.[49] The Society therefore
recommended that a worker be required to notify their employer of the bullying
complaints and give the employer a reasonable opportunity to take action to
address the complaint, before an application to the FWC is made.[50]
3.41
In proposing this recommendation, the Society stated:
Such prerequisites would provide businesses with an
opportunity to resolve the issue without the need for third party intervention
and could also assist in the resolution of issues at an earlier stage and in
turn, reduce the level of disputes in this area.[51]
Clarifying terms of the Bill
3.42
The definition of workplace bullying adopted in the Bill was endorsed by
some stakeholders,[52] and this reflected the wide
support in the Committee’s previous inquiry. [53]
3.43
However, the Australian Nurses Federation (Victoria Branch) (ANF-Vic)
proposed that the Bill could be given greater clarity if examples of the types
of behaviours that might fall within the definition of workplace bullying were
to be included as a note to the proposed section. [54]
3.44
The ANF-VIC also recommended that further clarity be provided about the
types of orders that the FWC is able to make.[55]
3.45
Beasley Legal proposed that the Schedule be amended to provide clarity
to stakeholders as to what constitutes ‘reasonable management action’.
3.46
Beasley Legal further proposed that the employer carry the burden of
proof to discharge that the behaviour report was ‘reasonable management action’
under the following definition: action that was ‘commenced based on prima facie
evidence; was undertaken in a reasonable manner; and was genuine and not used
as an abuse of process against the employee or group of employees’.[56]
3.47
The Queensland Law Society also made recommendations to clarify terms of
the Bill. Specifically, that the Schedule be amended to clarify who an
application can be brought against.[57]
3.48
The Queensland Law Society also recommended that in most cases it would be
appropriate to include both the alleged perpetrator of the bullying conduct as
well as the employer:
without the participation of both of those parties it will be
difficult for the FWC to have a clear understanding of the issues involved and
identify ways to resolve the complaint.[58]
Funding and resourcing the Fair Work Commission
3.49
Employer and employee organisation, employers and an academic expressed
concern that the FWC is not currently resourced sufficiently to meet additional
responsibilities proposed in the Bill.[59]
3.50
The CPSU expressed doubt that the FWC’s existing resources (both
financial and human) would be able meet proposed additional responsibilities.[60]
3.51
ACCI expressed concern that members of the FWC do not currently have the
skills or experience to deal with workplace bullying matters,[61]
nor the resources to meet its required standard of commencing an investigation
within 14 days of receipt of an application.[62]
3.52
These concerns were raised by the FWC at a Senate Estimates hearing in
February 2013. The General Manager, Ms Bernadette O’Neill, commented that,
should the Bill be passed and the FWC received additional responsibilities to
hear bullying applications, it ‘would not be in a position to absorb the costs’.[63]
Ms O’Neill also indicated that there would be a need for professional
development of FWC staff.[64]
3.53
In the 2013-2014 Federal Budget the FWC was allocated $21.4 million over
four years to provide a legal remedy for victims of workplace bullying.[65]
3.54
The additional funds will be used by the FWC to work with relevant
parties to resolve complaints of workplace bullying. Where a worker has been
bullied and the matter cannot be resolved between the parties, the FWC will
have the power to make an order to prevent bullying in the workplace in the
future.[66]
Perceived lack of consultation
3.55
Chapter 1 referred to stakeholders’ concerns regarding a perceived lack
of consultation. The chapter also canvassed the consultations the Minister and
DEEWR have conducted in recent months with the National Workplace Relations
Consultative Council and its subcommittee, the Committee on Industrial
Legislation, as well as through other mechanisms.
3.56
Despite these consultations, employer representatives submitted that
they were not consulted in the development of the anti-bullying measures
proposed in the Bill. For example, the Victorian Employers’ Chamber of Commerce
and Industry stated:
There has been a pitiful lack of consultation with the States
ahead of these amendments and the Government has foisted this proposal on the
FWC without regard for whether or not it is either resourced or capable of
managing a bullying jurisdiction.[67]
3.57
ABI was also concerned by the apparent lack of consultation in the
development of the anti-bullying measures.[68]
3.58
ACCI recommended that ‘the best way forward is not to progress with
these proposals until all stakeholders and the social partners consider how
best to progress’.[69]
Committee comment
3.59
The Committee does not accept the concerns expressed by some business
and industry groups that the anti-bullying measure has been developed without
appropriate consultation. DEEWR noted that:
the Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations, Minister
Shorten, consulted with employer organisations and unions via the National
Workplace Relations Consultative Council. The department also consulted on the
details of the amendments at a number of separate meetings with the National
Workplace Relations Consultative Council committee on industrial legislation
and also with state and territory officials. In conclusion, I would note that
the bill represents a response to a further five recommendations of the Fair
Work Act review panel, meaning that the government has responded to 23 of the
panel's recommendations.[70]
3.60
Furthermore, this Committee consulted widely prior to making its
original recommendation to the Commonwealth Government that an avenue of individual
recourse be created within federal laws. The Committee travelled to every
capital city, held 11 public hearings and received in excess of 300
submissions.[71]
3.61
During this six month inquiry, the Committee specifically sought
feedback from key stakeholders – including business and industry – regarding
the possibility of the Parliament legislating new powers for the Australian
Government to respond to instances of workplace bullying within its
constitutional ambit.
3.62
Finally, the referral of this Bill to both this Committee and the Senate
Standing Committee on Education, Employment and Workplace Relations, are both
methods of consultation and opportunities for business and industry to provide
feedback.[72]