Chapter 2
Employment portfolio
2.1
This chapter summarises certain key areas of interest raised during the
committee's consideration of budget estimates for the 2017-18 financial year
for the Employment portfolio.
2.2
On 29 and 30 May 2017, the committee heard evidence from Senator
the Hon. Michaelia Cash, Minister for Employment, along with officers
from the Department of Employment (the Department) and agencies responsible for
administering employment and workplace policy, including:
-
Fair Work Commission (FWC);
-
Registered Organisations Commission (ROC);
-
Office of the Fair Work Ombudsman (FWO);
-
Workplace Gender Equality Agency (WGEA);
-
Australian Building and Construction Commission (ABCC);
-
Asbestos Safety and Eradication Agency (ASEA);
-
Comcare, the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Commission
and Seafarers Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Commission; and
-
Safe Work Australia.
Department of Employment
Cross-Portfolio
2.3
The Department opened proceedings by advising the committee that there
had been a minor change in its organisational structure. Ms Leon,
Secretary, advised that two legal branches had been merged.[1]
2.4
Committee members inquired about the Department's use of labour hire
agreements.[2]
Ms Leon informed the committee that the Department engages 226 contract
workers on labour hire agreements, the majority of which specialise in
information technology. The Department's total expenditure on labour hire
agreements was $17.9 million in the 2016-17 financial year to April 2017.[3]
2.5
Ms Leon provided an overview of the Department's procedures undertaken
in relation to labour hire agreements:
When we engage a labour hire firm to provide staff to us, we
then enter into a contract with them for the provision of staff. The
responsibility of the labour hire firm is to fulfil the terms of the contract
to the department by providing staff with the skills that they say they are
going to provide to us. We do not have an employment relationship with those
members of staff. Their relationship is with the labour hire firm. The staff
are managed by the labour hire firm, and the labour hire firm has legal
responsibilities to pay them and to pay them according to law and according to
the terms of the contract they have with the person... In relation to the
contractors, of course we have the normal work health and safety obligations
that we have towards any person in the workplace... But, in relation to their pay
and the payment of tax on superannuation and so on, it is the labour hire firm
that has that legal responsibility.[4]
2.6
Committee members enquired further regarding whether the Department was
aware of any labour hire agreement involving Plutus Payroll. The Department
advised that investigations were ongoing to assess the impact on departmental
contractors. Mr Clout, Acting Deputy Secretary, Executive, informed the
committee that the Department's investigations had so far received 26 responses
from contractors, eight of which had 'some degree of connection with Plutus',
and all of which had been paid by the company.[5]
2.7
The committee made enquiries regarding alleged taxation fraud by Plutus
in relation to the Department's labour hire agreements. Mr Clout noted
that the matter was subject to an ongoing Australian Taxation Office and Australian
Federal Police investigation. However, he stated that while it was likely that
there would be taxation implications, they would be unlikely to be identified
until the end of the current financial year and that it was unlikely that
contractors under Plutus agreements would be aware of any taxation fraud if it
were to exist.[6]
2.8
The committee investigated matters relating the 'shared services
program'. Ms Leon clarified that, despite media reports claiming that the
program would be shut down, the shared services program had received additional
funding under the recent budget to expand the six hubs providing shared
transactional corporate services across the Australian Public Service.[7]
2.9
Ms Leon explained that the shared services centre was formed as a result
of machinery-of-government changes which split the former Department of
Education, Employment and Workplace Relationships into two separate
departments. Ms Leon stated that the two departments agreed to share
corporate services in order to provide a budget saving of between
$5 million and $10 million by avoiding duplicating IT and other
corporate systems. Ms Leon further noted that this model has been adopted
by other agencies and departments in order to 'achieve corporate efficiencies'.[8]
Outcome One
2.10
The new jobseeker compliance measures announced in the Federal Budget
were discussed at length. Committee members enquired into the new 'demerit and
three-strike phase' system. Ms Leon noted that the purpose of the new
compliance system is 'not only to target the persistently non-compliant but
also to ease up the current financial penalties that apply to [the] majority of
people who are on income support but who do the right thing'.[9]
2.11
Ms Leon and Mr Martin Hehir, Deputy Secretary, explained the operation
of the new compliance measures:
Ms Leon: The new system will be that...where a person
fails to attend an appointment or another activity that they are required to
do—and if they do not have an reasonable excuse for doing so, they will not
incur a financial penalty; instead, they will get one demerit point.
Mr Hehir: In addition to the demerit, their payment
is suspended until they attend.
Ms Leon: But a suspension—unlike a penalty...means
that, when the person attends, then the period for which their income support
was suspended will then be paid back to them. If the person incurs three
demerit points—that is three instances where they have failed to attend—then
their jobactive provider will conduct an interview with them where they assess
whether there is some problem with their requirements that means they are not
able to meet them. For example, their job plan may not be appropriate for them
given the circumstances of their life at the moment and so the provider is
required to assess whether there needs to be some change to their job plan and
the requirements they have to fulfil.[10]
2.12
Officials advised that if the job plan determined by the jobactive
provider was deemed to be appropriate, the person would incur a fourth demerit
point. This would trigger a further assessment by the Department of Human
Services to check whether the plan was appropriate or whether there were other
circumstances preventing compliance. If no such impediment was identified, then
the person would be moved into the 'intensive compliance phase' where financial
penalties for failure to comply would accrue.[11]
2.13
Mr Hehir further noted that this system would be subject to a 'rolling
six‑month basis', in which demerit points would extinguish after a six-month
period.[12]
2.14
The Department was asked whether stakeholders had been consulted during
the development of the 'demerit' system. Ms Leon told the committee:
The demerits system was developed as a budget measure, so the
specific measure was not the subject of consultation, because it was developed
during the budget-in-confidence process. But the way the compliance system
operates has been the subject of consultation and input from the stakeholders
we usually talk to, including ACOSS...and community organisations that deal with
our compliance system have regularly made the point to us that it is very
complex and difficult for people to navigate and that people think that the
system of imposing financial penalties, even for one missed appointment, is
unduly harsh. So it was listening to that kind of feedback that informed our
development of the model... They have given us the feedback that the previous
eight-week payment penalty was not very effective in getting action from the
persistently noncompliant. So we have taken account of the feedback that we got
through our regular consultations in developing the new compliance system.[13]
2.15
Ms Leon advised that the new compliance measures would result in a saving
of $204 million over five years.[14]
This measure forms part of a $632 million saving by the Department, which
also incorporates $148 million saved in refocussing the Work for the Dole
program.[15]
2.16
Committee members asked whether the Department had calculated how many
income support recipients would access measures contained in the budget for
drug treatment and what the drug treatment would comprise of. Mr Hehir informed
the committee that the Department has calculated that around 2500 to 3000
jobseekers are expected to use the Employment Fund for drug and alcohol
treatment.[16]
2.17
The committee enquired into the operation of the Employment Fund. Ms
Leon provided an overview regarding how the Employment Fund will support
individual jobseekers:
The way that the employment fund works is that, for each
jobseeker who goes on to a jobactive provider's case load, an amount is
credited to the employment fund that notionally goes with the number of
jobseekers. Then the jobactive provider has access to that aggregated pool of
funds in order to make an assessment for each individual as to: is there some
particular thing that they need that would help them get a job? For some it
might be the cost of transport to get to the job. For some it might be a
uniform or steel capped boots or something that they need by way of equipment.
For some of them it might be training. There is a broad range of expenditure
that the provider can approve out of the fund. We have pretty extensive
guidelines about what can be approved and what cannot.[17]
2.18
Committee members enquired into comments made by Ms Leon regarding
jobactive providers' underutilisation of the Employment Fund. Ms Leon informed
the committee that the Department had observed lower than average expenditure
in jobactive provider contracts for the first year of engagement. She noted
that consultation with providers had assisted the Department in identifying
where expenditure was useful and where 'unintended barriers' exist.[18]
2.19
The Department provided the committee with an overview of new measures
designed to assist mature-age jobseekers. Ms Benedikte Jensen, Group Manager,
Labour Market Strategy, informed the committee that the Pathway to Work pilot would
work with employers to provide programs such as pre-employment training and
work experience. Ms Jensen noted that these programs will focus on mature-age
jobseekers and have up to ten pilots running at once.[19]
2.20
The committee enquired into departmental measures to assist jobseekers
with mental health issues. Ms Leon said that the Department was working on a
policy to assist with mental health. However, she also noted that this was a
complex issue which required further development.[20]
2.21
There was examination of the ParentsNext program, particularly in
relation to the sites selected for intensive support. Ms Leon stated that these
sites were selected due to having a high proportion of Indigenous parenting
payment recipients.[21]
2.22
The review of the National Work Experience Program expansion was
discussed. Ms Robyn Shannon, Branch Manager, Economic Strategy, advised that
the review was being finalised and will be made public.[22]
2.23
Questions were asked about the removal of coordinators from the Work for
the Dole program. The Department advised that this proposal was based on
feedback from providers and hosts who suggested that coordinators added
unnecessary complexity to the process.[23]
2.24
The committee discussed a Work for the Dole incident involving asbestos,
which was noted in the Additional Estimates 2016-17 report.[24]
Officials were asked what action had been taken in light of the removal of
signs indicating that a site had been contaminated. Ms Leon stated that the
asbestos found onsite was not the asbestos listed on the register, which had
been previously removed. Mr Hehir also noted that an audit had been conducted
of the building and, having found no evidence of asbestos on the property, the
signage was removed.[25]
2.25
The committee returned to another topic discussed at Additional
Estimates 2016-17 relating to the death of a Work for the Dole participant.[26]
Ms Leon advised that the Minister for Employment had received
correspondence from the Queensland Minister for Employment and Industrial
Relations on 19 May 2017 to the effect that the investigation, while
ongoing due to its serious and complex nature, was being finalised. Further,
the Department had written to Workplace Health and Safety Queensland (WHSQ)
requesting advice regarding whether the documents sought under the Senate order
could harm the public interest or prejudice the investigation or any subsequent
legal proceeding.[27]
WHSQ subsequently informed the Department that a review of the documents was
taking place and would be finalised by late June.[28]
Outcome Two
2.26
The committee sought an update from the Department in relation to
proceedings against Queensland Nickel and its implications for the Fair
Entitlement Guarantee. The Department advised that $66.78 million had been
paid out under the program to 764 affected workers.[29]
2.27
The committee enquired whether any modelling had been performed by the
Department in regards to the penalty rates decision by the Fair Work
Commission. Dr Alison Morehead, Group Manager, Workplace Relations Policy,
stated that it had conducted a number of studies to determine a number of
people who would be affected by the decision, and explained how the studies
were designed.[30]
Dr Morehead noted that precise estimates regarding the total dollar loss to
workers were difficult to obtain due to the nature of casual Sunday employment.[31]
Additionally, Dr Morehead advised that the number of affected workers was likely
to be between 300 000 and 450 000 rather than other estimates of 700
000 or up to one million.[32]
2.28
Questions were asked in relation to the recent changes made to the
temporary 457 visa programme's Short-term Skilled Occupation List,
particularly in relation to the arts sector. The Department advised that the
decision to remove a number of occupations from the list was a result of
analysis of labour market factors and how many visa holders were in the sector.[33]
The Department further advised that one third of 650 occupations on the list
had been removed.[34]
2.29
The death of a participant under the Seasonal Worker Program was
discussed. The Department stated that the worker held a visa that enabled him
to participate in the program, and that no cause of death has yet been issued. Ms Alison
Durbin, Branch Manager, Workplace Relations Policy, advised that the Department
was awaiting information from the coroner before taking further action.[35]
Fair Work Commission
2.30
The committee inquired into the reduction in funding for the Fair Work
Commission (the FWC) between 2016-17 and 2017-18. The FWC advised the committee
that this was in part due to the transfer of functions from the FWC to the ROC,
in addition to funding being attributed to the ROC for the purposes of the
Royal Commission into Trade Union Governance and Corruption.[36]
2.31
Committee members sought information regarding enterprise agreements
with a number of retail outlets and in particular whether the FWC investigated
employers who declared that agreements passed the Better Off Overall Test.
Mr Murray Furlong, Director, Tribunal Services, advised that assessors
check every agreement to ensure compliance with pre-lodgement provisions.[37]
2.32
The Department was asked about the Pay Equity Unit's (PEU) current
organisational structure. Mr Furlong advised that the PEU is no longer a
discrete unit, and has been subsumed as part of a broader unit.[38]
Ms Bernadette O'Neill, General Manager, informed the committee that the
decision to merge the PEU into the larger group was due to a lack of activity
in the PEU and the assessment that its resources could be better utilised
elsewhere.[39]
Registered Organisations Commission
2.33
Mr Mark Bielecki, the new Registered Organisations Commissioner, was
welcomed by the committee to his first appearance at estimates hearings. He
opened proceedings with a statement regarding his recent appointment to the Registered
Organisations Commission (ROC).[40]
2.34
Committee members sought information regarding policies and procedures
in place to govern the operational relationship between the ROC and the FWO,
which Mr Bielecki said he would provide on notice.[41]
2.35
Senators further enquired about the ROC's funding falling from $6.5
million in 2017-18 to $3.6 million in the forward estimates. Mr Bielecki stated
that the additional funding in 2017-18 relates to the Royal Commission into
Trade Union Governance and Corruption, and that it was expected that less
funding would be required in the forward estimates for that purpose.[42]
Fair Work Ombudsman
2.36
Committee members sought information regarding the focus on education
and advice by the Fair Work Ombudsman (the FWO). The FWO advised that it had a
number of initiatives being pursued, including the release of the Record My
Hours app, enhancing the FWO's online presence, and research in connection with
the Migrant Workers' Taskforce.[43]
2.37
The committee enquired into allegations of underpayment of employees by
Dominos, which were raised during Additional Estimates 2016-17 hearings.[44]
Mr Michael Campbell, Deputy Fair Work Ombudsman, Operations, informed the
committee that the FWO currently has 26 active investigations into Dominos
outlets and had attached 'significant quality resources' to the investigation.[45]
2.38
The investigation of an alleged breach of the Fair Work Act by crew
members of the Tandara Spirit was discussed. Senators asked why a
prosecution regarding that case was discontinued. Ms Natalie James, Fair Work
Ombudsman, informed the committee that due to a High Court case the common law
had changed, prompting the discontinuation.[46]
2.39
Enquiries were also made into allegations of underpayment by foreign
seafarers. Mr Campbell confirmed that the FWO had investigated these instances
and is currently prosecuting a case in which sixty-one workers were underpaid.[47]
2.40
Audits looking into apprentices and trainees' pay were also discussed.
The FWO advised that there were reports of underpayment of apprentices.[48]
The Minister of Employment further noted that the Fair Work Amendment
(Protecting Vulnerable Workers) Bill 2017 was designed to address such
concerns, including measures such as increasing penalties to breaches of the
Act and strengthening investigatory powers.[49]
Workplace Gender Equality Agency
2.41
The discussion with the Workplace Gender Equality Agency (the WGEA)
opened with a question regarding when the gender pay gap would close based on
current trends. Ms Libby Lyons, Director, advised that OECD estimates
suggest that pay equality would be achieved 'in excess of 100 years'.[50]
2.42
The committee enquired into the gap in gender participation in the
workforce. Ms Lyons noted that, according to the OECD, the male
participation rate in Australia was at 82.2 per cent and the female
participation rate was at 70.5 per cent in 2014.[51]
Upon further questioning, Ms Lyons acknowledged that current figures were
not available as only ABS statistics were available. It was noted that the lack
of consistency in statistical sources presented problems in accurately tracking
participation rates.[52]
2.43
There was an examination into primary carer's leave. Ms Lyons
informed the committee that the WGEA is aware of employers who provide primary
carer's leave, in addition to other incentives to return to work such as
emergency nanny services and bonuses for returning to work.[53]
Australian Building and Construction Commission
2.44
The Commissioner, Mr Nigel Hadgkiss, made an opening statement in which
he noted the agency's workload, including assessment of over 300 agreements per
month.[54]
2.45
The committee made enquiries regarding whether an external organisation
had been engaged by the Australian Building and Construction Commission
(the ABCC) to assess building code compliance. Mr Hadgkiss advised
that a computing company assists with the ABCC's case management system and has
been requested to assess agreements.[55]
There was further discussion about the possibility of a future tendering
process for these functions.[56]
2.46
There was also discussion about recent court cases in which the ABCC was
involved. Senators enquired into a case involving a trade union fined for
breaching provisions of the Fair Work Act. Mr Hadgkiss informed the
committee that the ABCC had pursued the case at a cost of $50 000.[57]
Mr Hadgkiss additionally provided details on a Federal Court case relating
to a union official having a meeting onsite.[58]
2.47
Enquiries were made in relation to the ABCC's communication with state,
territory and Commonwealth occupational health and safety regulators in
relation to information-sharing arrangements. Mr Hadgkiss noted that he
had sent letters to the heads of the regulators in these jurisdictions, and
that regional managers would be responsible for further interactions with those
agencies.[59]
2.48
Senators questioned the Minister in regards to the outcome of the Royal
Commission into Trade Union Governance and Corruption. Minister Cash advised
that the Federal Government had committed to adopting the recommendations set
out in the Royal Commission's findings, which would be partially addressed
through the bill to protect vulnerable workers and the bill in relation to
corrupting benefits.[60]
Asbestos Safety and Eradication Agency
2.49
Mr Peter Tighe, Chief Executive Officer, provided an overview of the
implementation of the National Strategic Plan for Asbestos Management and
Awareness and its national awareness raising campaign.[61]
2.50
Committee members asked ASEA for an update on the Rotterdam Convention.
Mr Tighe stated that the Australian contingent had attended the Convention in
April and early May, where a major concern discussed during proceedings was
chrysotile asbestos listed on annexure III. The issue was further discussed in
the context of trade agreements with China and the United States.[62]
Comcare, the Safety, Rehabilitation and
Compensation Authority and Seafarers Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation
Authority
2.51
Comcare and the Seafarers Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation
Authority were called by a senator who did not attend the hearing to ask
questions. No other senator attending had questions for the agency.[63]
The committee apologised to the witnesses for their inconvenience and dismissed
the agencies without question.
Safe Work Australia
2.52
Committee members questioned whether a review by Safe Work of the
building and construction industry had been considered. Ms Michelle
Baxter, Chief Executive Officer, told the committee that the Minister had
written to the chair of Safe Work requesting that a review be conducted of work
health and safety laws in the building and construction sector. The request was
considered by Safe Work members and was ultimately not agreed to in the form
requested. Members instead asked the chair to seek the Minister's agreement to
have Safe Work conduct the review from her workplace health and safety
ministerial colleagues in the states and territories.[64]
The Minister further noted that one state had responded stating that they felt
a review was not necessary.[65]
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