Background
Introduction
2.1
This chapter sets the broader context to the inquiry by providing a brief
background to enterprise bargaining in the Australian Public Service (APS).
This is followed by a specific focus on the current bargaining round including
a timeline of the current bargaining dispute and a summary of the votes on
proposed enterprise agreements.
Enterprise bargaining in the APS
2.2
In the early 1990s, the Keating government promoted enterprise
bargaining in the private sector in order to facilitate greater flexibility in
the labour market and improve labour productivity and work practices.[1]
2.3
Concurrently, the Keating government introduced decentralised
agency-based enterprise bargaining in the APS in order to allow agencies to
improve productivity in ways that were difficult under single, centralised
bargaining agreements.[2]
2.4
However, commentators such as Mr Paddy Gourley have argued that the Keating
government did not intend the devolved system to operate for more than one or
two pay rounds.[3]
Indeed, the last APS bargaining round under the Keating government was a centralised
agreement: Continuous Improvement in the Australian Public Service
Enterprise Agreement: 1995-96: Agreement Between the Commonwealth Government
and the Public Sector Unions.[4]
2.5
Nevertheless, after the 1996 election, the Howard government reverted to
agency-based bargaining. Employment conditions were included within the
bargaining framework along with an attempt to link any increase in remuneration
to productivity gains.[5]
2.6
Subsequent Labor governments maintained essentially the same approach to
APS bargaining.[6]
Background to the current bargaining dispute
2.7
As this report details, the current bargaining policy differs markedly
from the bargaining policies adopted under previous governments.
2.8
Furthermore, the current APS bargaining dispute has taken place against
a backdrop of 17 000 job cuts across the APS since the election of the
Abbott Coalition government in 2013. As a consequence of these job cuts, the
Commonwealth government is expecting its employees to do 'significantly more
with less'.[7]
2.9
In March 2014, the Abbott government issued the Australian Government
Public Sector Workplace Bargaining Policy (the 2014 bargaining policy).
2.10
The 2014 bargaining policy stated that any remuneration increase must be
completely offset by productivity gains:
Agencies can only negotiate remuneration increases which are
affordable, consistent with Australian Government policy, and offset by genuine
productivity gains which satisfy the Australian Public Service Commissioner.[8]
2.11
Productivity was narrowly defined as:
...demonstrable, permanent improvements in the efficiency,
effectiveness and/or output of employees, based on reform of work practices or
conditions, resulting in measurable savings. Arbitrary reductions in staffing
are not considered genuine productivity gains.[9]
2.12
A 1.5 per cent per year pay cap was also applied under the 2014
bargaining policy. In November 2014, the Defence Force Remuneration Tribunal
approved the Abbott government's offer of a 1.5 per cent a year pay deal
until 2016 for the Defence Force.[10]
Following this decision, then Prime Minister Abbott stated:
I would be very surprised if anyone in the Commonwealth
public sector receives more than is received by our Defence Forces.[11]
2.13
After a significant backlash against the pay cap and associated
conditions cuts, the ADF was ultimately awarded a 2.0 per cent a year pay rise
and maintenance of existing conditions.[12]
2.14
In December 2014, the government announced in the Mid-Year Economic
and Fiscal Outlook 2014–15 a three year 1.5 per cent pay cap for the APS
along with a requirement for wage increases to be offset by productivity gains:
Given the position of the budget, the Government has
indicated its intention to keep average annual wage rises across the public
service to 1.5 per cent or less over the next three years. Wage rises will also
have to be offset by productivity gains, to ensure that they are affordable, sustainable
and in line with community expectations.[13]
2.15
In November 2015, the Turnbull government introduced the Workplace
Bargaining Policy 2015 (the 2015 bargaining policy) that superseded the
2014 bargaining policy.[14]
The 2015 bargaining policy retained most aspects of the 2014 bargaining policy,
but lifted the pay cap from 1.5 per cent to 2 per cent per annum. Some of the
key elements of the 2015 bargaining policy were that:
-
remuneration increases may be negotiated up to an average of 2
per cent per annum;
-
existing pay scales are not be modified to provide for new top
pay points, removal of existing pay points, or other mechanisms to accelerate
salary advancement;
-
remuneration increases are to apply prospectively;
-
remuneration increases must be offset by productivity
improvements. Productivity improvements can be achieved by ensuring that new
workplace arrangements do not contain clauses that restrict an agency's ability
to operate efficiently and effectively;
-
remuneration increases are to be affordable and funded from
within existing agency budgets, without the redirection of programme funding;
-
APS and Commonwealth employment conditions generally meet or
exceed community standards. An enhancement of existing conditions would only be
contemplated in exceptional circumstances. Ministerial approval of any
enhancement would be required;
-
Consultation and workplace relations arrangements in agencies are
to be balanced and agencies may make provision for consultative structures
including with employee representatives, regarding employment relations
matters;
-
enterprise agreements should only contain clauses that are
required by legislation to support the effective operation of the agreement and
provide entitlements to employees;
-
a draft enterprise agreement, or other collective workplace
arrangement, is to be provided to the Commissioner for approval prior to
tabling a final position to staff; and
-
where the Commissioner considers that a proposed workplace
arrangement is inconsistent with Government policy or there are unresolved
policy issues, the matter will be referred to the Minister Assisting the Prime
Minister for the Public Service and the portfolio Minister for consideration.[15]
Timeline of the current bargaining dispute
2.16
This section provides a brief timeline of the APS bargaining dispute and
a summary of the results of various votes on proposed enterprise agreements.
More detail about the lack of engagement of the government and the APSC can be
found in Chapter 8.
2.17
With APS enterprise agreements due to expire on 30 June 2014, the Community
and Public Sector Union (CPSU) wrote to the then Minister for Employment,
Senator the Hon Eric Abetz, and the APS Commissioner on 18 December 2013
seeking to commence the bargaining process for the new round as early as
possible in 2014.[16]
2.18
On 7 February 2014, the CPSU wrote to Minister Abetz raising concerns
about a lack of consultation about the bargaining framework and delays in its
finalisation. On 24 March 2014, the CPSU again wrote to Minister Abetz about
the delay to the start of bargaining and sought immediate discussions about
commencing bargaining.[17]
2.19
On 28 March 2014, the Abbott government released its Public Sector
Workplace Bargaining Policy. Agencies could not commence bargaining until the
policy was released.[18]
2.20
By the time that existing APS agreements expired on 30 June 2014, only 5
out of over 100 agencies had issued the Notice of Employee Representational
Rights (NERR), the Fair Work Act mechanism to allow negotiations to formally
commence.[19]
2.21
Four months after the government released its 2014 bargaining policy,
the first pay offer was released by the Department of Human Services (DHS).[20]
2.22
In December 2014, the first agreement under the 2014 bargaining policy
was put to a vote of staff in the Department of Employment. The proposed
agreement was rejected with a resounding 95 per cent no vote.[21]
2.23
In December 2014, the government's Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal
Outlook 2014-15 announced a three year, 1.5 per cent pay cap for the APS
along with the requirement that wage increase would be offset by productivity
gains.[22]
2.24
By February 2015, almost a year after the 2014 bargaining policy was
released, only 8 agencies had tabled pay offers (DHS, the Department of Employment,
Australian Financial Security Authority (AFSA), the Department of Veterans'
Affairs (DVA), the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (PM&C), the
Australian Tax Office (ATO), the National Health Performance Authority (NHPA), and
the Department of Infrastructure).[23]
2.25
On 2 November 2015, the Turnbull government issued the revised Workplace
Bargaining Policy 2015.[24]
Agreements accepted under the 2014
bargaining policy
2.26
Seven agencies accepted agreements under the 2014 bargaining policy.[25]
These agencies are listed in Appendix 3.
2.27
On 2 November 2015, the Turnbull government issued the revised Workplace
Bargaining Policy.[26]
Agreements accepted under the 2015
bargaining policy
2.28
As at 27 October 2016, 58 enterprise agreements had been made under the
2015 bargaining policy.[27]
The agencies that have accepted new agreements under the 2015 bargaining policy
are listed in Appendix 3.
2.29
According to figures from the APS Commissioner, the average 'yes' vote
in this bargaining round across enterprise agreements accepted in APS and
non-APS agencies is 67 per cent.[28]
2.30
However, the CPSU argues that 'even where agreements are being voted up,
it is with deep reluctance, a fact borne out by very close employee votes,
averaging 55 per cent 'yes', 45 per cent 'no' across these agencies'. The CPSU
also notes that since the 2016 federal election, 10 of the agencies that
secured a 'yes' vote had less than 100 staff.[29]
2.31
As at 21 November 2016, 25 per cent of APS employees (38 794
employees) were covered by a new enterprise agreement. However, only 9 per cent
of APS3 employees and 12 per cent of APS4 employees were covered by a new
enterprise agreement. This is compared to 41 per cent of EL2 employees that
were covered by a new enterprise agreement.[30]
2.32
Executive Level staff generally have greater capacity to ensure their
views are heard and are more likely to be heard. APS level staff are much more
likely to be concerned about changes to rights about representation and
consultation. Executive Level employees constituted 37 per cent of those covered
by agreements that have been voted up.
2.33
This suggests that departments such as DHS and DIBP with large numbers
of lower-paid employees at APS3 and APS4 classifications have rejected the cuts
to family-friendly conditions, the cuts to overtime and the derisory wage rises
on offer.
Agencies where no agreement has
been reached
2.34
Despite agreements being reached at the agencies listed in Appendix 3,
more than two thirds of APS employees (over 100 000 workers) work at
agencies where the bargaining dispute is unresolved. The overwhelming majority
of these workers (88 000) are employed by four large agencies: the
Department of Human Services, the Department of Immigration and Border
Protection, the Department of Defence and the Australian Tax Office. These
employees have now been without an enterprise agreement for more than 1000 days
since their previous agreements expired.[31]
2.35
According to the CPSU, over 100 000 employees will have voted 'no'
to proposed agreements in 2016 alone.[32]
2.36
Below is a summary of proposed agreements that have been rejected up to
four times at the following departments.
Table 2.1—Rejected proposed APS agreements
Department of Immigration and Border Protection[33]
|
Date
|
Result (per cent 'no')
|
First vote
|
September 2015
|
91
|
Second vote
|
March 2016
|
81
|
Third vote
|
November 2016
|
82
|
Australian Tax Office[34]
|
Date
|
Result (per cent 'no')
|
First vote
|
December 2015
|
85
|
Second vote
|
May 2016
|
72
|
Department of Human Services[35]
|
Date
|
Result (per cent 'no')
|
First vote
|
September 2015
|
83
|
Second vote
|
February 2016
|
80
|
Third vote
|
November 2016
|
74
|
Department of Defence[36]
|
Date
|
Result (per cent 'no')
|
First vote
|
March 2016
|
60
|
Second vote
|
May 2016
|
55
|
Department of Agriculture and Water Resources[37]
|
Date
|
Result (per cent 'no')
|
First vote
|
October 2015
|
67
|
Second vote
|
December 2015
|
52
|
Third vote
|
March 2016
|
51
|
Fourth vote
|
November 2016
|
54
|
2.37
The size of the 'no' votes at the Department of Immigration and Border
Protection (ranging from 81–91 per cent) is indicative of the enormous
discontent in that department.
2.38
Indeed, it is clear that if 91 per cent of staff rejected a proposed
enterprise agreement, then not even the Executive Level managers who are
required to advocate the agreement to other employees could themselves have
voted for it.
2.39
Following the third 'no' vote at the Department of Human Services, it
was reported that staff had been advised by the head of Human Resources that
there would be 'no change in approach' by the department's management
bargaining team.[38]
2.40
Employees at the Administrative Appeals Tribunal and the National Museum
of Australia also recently voted in November 2016 to reject proposed agreements
with both ballots returning a 'no' vote of 55 per cent.[39]
2.41
As at 21 November 2016, there had been a total of 73 votes by public
sector workers to reject proposed enterprise agreements developed under the
2014 and 2015 bargaining policies.[40]
2.42
After a third 'no' vote at the Department of Immigration and Border
Protection, that dispute went to the Fair Work Commission for compulsory
arbitration.[41]
2.43
However, even at the Fair Work Commission, the Department of Immigration
and Border Protection failed to engage in good faith:
In that particular case, the Commonwealth's current approach
is to frustrate and obstruct to the point where Commissioner Nick Wilson in
Fair Work last week considered that the Department of Immigration and Border
Protection had not complied with his directions and therefore cancelled
conciliation, considering that there was no point in attempting to further
conciliate this matter. I think part of it is that the element of the
bargaining policy is actually making it quite difficult for agencies to deal
with this, even in Fair Work.[42]
2.44
The CPSU subsequently asked that a full bench of the Fair Work
Commission be constituted to hear the matter.[43]
2.45
Ms Flood indicated that employees at other agencies 'would love to get
access to arbitration' but it is not an avenue currently available to them.[44]
Protected industrial action
2.46
As at 27 October 2016, 27 agencies had experienced protected industrial
action during the bargaining round [45]
(see Appendix 4).
2.47
The following example of protected industrial action taken by employees
of the Department of Immigration and Border Protection illustrates the
restraint with which employees have approached the bargaining process.
2.48
As the submission from CPSU members of the Department of Immigration and
Border Protection makes clear, employees did not apply to take protected
industrial action until April 2015, more than nine months after their previous
enterprise agreements had reached their nominal expiry dates.[46]
2.49
The approval for taking various forms of protected industrial action was
approved by an average of 95 per cent of CPSU members.[47]
2.50
The CPSU DIBP bargaining team noted that the approach to taking
protected industrial action by members has been an absolute last resort and has
at all times been conducted in a safe and reasonable manner:
CPSU members working in DIBP are expert and professional, and
feel a deep sense of responsibility in their roles. ABF members who work on the
front line are acutely aware of the requirements of their roles and have approached
the taking of PIA in a considered and safe manner. Having applied to take PIA
in April 2015, and become able to do so in June 2015, CPSU members did not commence
taking serious and sustained PIA until September 2015. From these dates alone
it can be seen that CPSU members did not frivolously or unreasonably take PIA.
This sustained September 2015 action was taken following the worst Enterprise
Agreement offer in the Department's history being made to staff.[48]
Committee view
2.51
The evidence from this bargaining round shows quite clearly that the
current bargaining policy and the hard-line approach adopted by the APS
Commissioner and the government through the Minister Assisting the Prime
Minister for the Public Service differ markedly from the bargaining policies
adopted under previous governments.
2.52
The results of numerous votes on enterprise agreements speak for
themselves. For workers in the Department of Human Services, many on very
modest wages, to vote 'no' to an agreement three times in just over a year
confirms that the government's bargaining framework is an absolute shambles.
2.53
The size of the 'no' vote at the Department of Immigration and Border
Protection indicates the enormous discontent in that department. Indeed, it is
clear to the committee that if 91 per cent of staff rejected a proposed
enterprise agreement, then not even the Executive Level managers who are
required to advocate the agreement to other employees could themselves have
voted for it. No clearer illustration is needed of the toxic nature of the
government's approach to enterprise bargaining.
2.54
Given there have now been a total of 73 'no' votes by public sector
workers rejecting proposed enterprise agreements developed under the
government's bargaining policies, it is incumbent on the government to admit
failure and work speedily to resolve this festering sore.
2.55
The committee urges the government to sit down in good faith with the
CPSU and make genuine attempts to heal the wounds of division that its
bargaining policy has caused.
2.56
Finally, noting that under the bargaining policy agencies may make employment
relations consultative structures which involve employee representatives, the
committee recommends that agencies must clarify for all their employees their
rights with respect to representation and consultation.
Recommendation 1
2.57
The committee recommends that the Minister Assisting the Prime Minister
for the Public Service take steps to ensure that the APSC issues all agencies
with instructions that: the agency must ensure all APS employees may be
represented on workplace matters by a person of their choice, including a union
representative; and that agencies consult employees on matters that affect them
prior to decisions being made.
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