Introductory Info
Date introduced: 11 September 2019
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Social Services
Commencement: 1 January 2020
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Paid Parental Leave Amendment (Work
Test) Bill 2019 (the Bill) is to amend the Paid Parental Leave
Act 2010 (the PPL Act) to:
- allow
the work test period (used to determine eligibility for Paid Parental Leave
Pay) for a pregnant woman in an unsafe job to be moved from the 13-month period
prior to the birth of her child to the 13-month period before the woman had to
cease work due to the hazards connected with her employment and
- extend
the permissible break in the work test from eight weeks to 12 weeks between two
working days.
The measures were announced in the Women’s Economic
Security Statement 2018 and included in the 2018–19 Mid-Year Economic and
Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO).[1]
The measures are expected to cost $6.74 million over the forward estimates and
will commence on 1 January 2020.[2]
The more significant change to Paid Parental Leave Pay announced in the Women’s
Economic Security Statement 2018, which would allow the 18 week Paid Parental
Leave Pay period to be taken in separate blocks of leave, is not included in
the Bill.[3]
Both measures were previously included in a package of
parental leave changes announced in the 2015–16 MYEFO and proposed in the Fairer
Paid Parental Leave Bill 2016 and the Social
Services Legislation Amendment (Omnibus Savings and Child Care Reform) Bill
2017.[4]
The Coalition Government announced that it would not proceed with these
measures in the 2017–18 Budget and both these Bills were discharged from the
notice paper.[5]
Background
Parental
Leave Pay
The PPL Act provides eligible working parents with
up to 18 weeks of payment at the National Minimum Wage (currently $740.60 per
week before tax) when they take leave from work to care for a newborn or
recently adopted child.[6]
The payment, Parental Leave Pay (PLP), was introduced on 1 January 2011.[7]
PLP is paid in addition to, and irrespective of, any employer-provided paid
parental leave which the person may receive.
A separate payment, Dad and Partner Pay (DAPP), can be
paid to fathers, partners and other adoptive parents for up to two weeks while
they are on unpaid leave to care for a newborn or recently adopted child.[8]
In 2017–18, a total of 159,372 parents started receiving
PLP.[9]
The Department of Social Services estimates that 48.5 per cent of mothers with
new babies received PLP in 2017–18, a decrease from the 53.3 per cent of
mothers who received PLP in 2015–16. There were 81,882 fathers and partners who
received DAPP in 2017–18.[10]
Eligibility
for Parental Leave Pay
To be eligible for PLP, an individual who is the birth
mother or initial primary carer adoptive parent must:
- be
the primary carer of their newborn or recently adopted child and
- satisfy
the work, income and residency tests
- be
on leave or not working from the time they become the child’s primary carer
until the end of their PLP period (the period they are eligible to receive PLP)
- not
have already received PLP for the child (and their partner/former partner must
not have received PLP for the child)
- not
be subject to a Newly Arrived Resident’s Waiting Period.[11]
In exceptional circumstances, a person other than the
birth mother or initial primary carer adoptive parent may be able to claim PLP
as the primary claimant.[12]
Work test
To satisfy the work test, a claimant must have performed
330 hours of qualifying work over a period spanning at least 295 consecutive days
(around ten months) within the 392 day period (around 13 months) prior to the
expected or actual date of birth or placement of the child for adoption.[13]
A person is considered to have qualifying work for a day
if there was at least one hour of paid work or at least one hour of paid leave
on that day. Previous periods of PLP or DAPP (for a previous child) may also be
counted as qualifying work.[14]
A birth mother may also satisfy the work test if the
Department of Human Services is satisfied that they would have met the work
test requirements but for the fact their child was born prematurely and/or they
had a pregnancy-related illness or complication that prevented them from
performing paid work.[15]
Days where a person has not performed qualifying work that
do not fall within a ‘permissible break’ cannot be considered when calculating
a claimant’s 295 consecutive day qualifying period. A permissible break is one
between two work days (or at the beginning of the assessed period) where the
break is not more than 56 days (eight weeks).[16]
Income test
An individual can satisfy the income test if their
adjusted taxable income for the reference income year is not above $150,000.[17]
The reference income year is the financial year which ended before either the
day the person makes a claim or day the child is born/day of placement,
whichever is earlier.[18]
Residency
test
To meet the residency test, a PLP claimant must be living
in Australia and be an Australian citizen, the holder of a permanent visa or a
Special Category Visa (SCV), or the holder of a temporary visa determined by
the Minister of Social Services as a qualifying visa class for Special Benefit.[19]
New permanent residents must wait two years before they
are eligible for PLP—only time spent in Australia as a resident counts towards
this waiting period.[20]
Australian citizens, refugees, SCV holders and some other individuals may be
exempt from this waiting period.[21]
Committee
consideration
Senate Standing
Committee for the Selection of Bills
On 19 September 2019, the Senate Selection of Bills
Committee deferred consideration of the Bill to its next meeting.[22]
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Scrutiny of Bills Committee had no comments to
make in relation to the Bill.[23]
Senate
Community Affairs Legislation Committee
The Senate Community Affairs Legislation Committee held
inquiries into both previous Bills that the measures were contained in. The
proposed measures were relatively minor compared to the main amendments
proposed in those Bills and were not discussed in the inquiry reports.[24]
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
The Australian Labor Party supports the Bill. Shadow
Minister for Families and Social Services Linda Burney stated in her second
reading speech on the Bill:
These changes will enable an extra 180 mothers to receive
paid parental leave each year, according to the government. However, these
changes have been very slow in coming and too many Australian women and their
families have missed out on the benefits of paid parental leave as a result.
In 2013, the Australian Jockeys Association publicly
identified the problem and called on the Abbott government to fix its
legislation. The community has been campaigning for these changes for many
years. Labor supports the changes in the bill.[25]
Independent MP Zali Steggall stated that she supported the
Bill.[26]
Position of
major interest groups
At the time of writing, no major interest groups appeared
to have commented on the Bill.
Financial
implications
According to the Explanatory Memorandum, the measures in
the Bill will cost $6.74 million over three years from 2019–20.[27]
Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights
As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011 (Cth), the Government has assessed the
Bill’s compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or declared
in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act. The
Government considers that the Bill is compatible.[28]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights had no
comment on the Bill on the basis it was in the category of Bills that did not
engage, or only marginally engaged, human rights; promoted human rights; and/or
permissibly limited human rights.[29]
Key issues
and provisions
The Bill proposes two changes to the PLP work test:
- allow
for an earlier work period to be assessed in situations where a pregnant woman
has to cease work due to the hazardous nature of her employment
- extend
the permissible break between work days, used to determine days that count
towards a claimants 295 consecutive day qualifying period, from eight weeks to 12
weeks.
Ceasing
hazardous work
The Bill proposes to allow for an exception from the current
work test assessment period for pregnant women who have to cease work due to
the hazards connected with their employment and the risks those hazards pose to
their pregnancies. The current work test assesses days and hours of work in 13
months prior to birth (or adoption). The Bill would allow for women who need to
cease hazardous work due to the risk posed to their pregnancy to have the 13
month period prior to them ceasing work to be assessed, rather than the 13
months prior to birth. The exception will only apply in situations where the PLP
claimant is the birth mother.
Rationale
In his second reading speech for the Bill, Minister for
Trade, Tourism and Investment Simon Birmingham explained the rationale for the
measure:
Currently, a pregnant woman may not meet the work test
because she needs to cease work due to the hazardous nature of her job, despite
the fact that she may have a long history and attachment to the workforce.
While most women are covered under the Fair Work Act 2009,
which allows pregnant employees to move to a safe job or receive 'no safe job'
leave, there are a small number of circumstances where women miss out. For
example, construction workers, miners and jockeys often work on contracts and
do not have employers who can provide them with alternative safe work.
To address these circumstances, women in these situations
will have their work test period calculated from the date they ceased work due
to the hazardous nature of their occupation, rather than from the date of the
birth of their child.[30]
Pregnant employees covered by the National Employment
Standards in the Fair
Work Act 2009 are entitled to move to a safe job if it is not safe for
them to do their normal job because of their pregnancy.[31]
If no safe job is available, the employee is entitled to take ‘no safe job’
leave.[32]
Where an employee is entitled to unpaid parental leave, this no safe job leave
is paid.[33]
As the Minister indicated, not all pregnant employees are
entitled to these arrangements or able to access a safe job or paid ‘no safe
job’ leave. Unpaid leave is not considered ‘qualifying work’ for the PLP work
test.[34]
Female horse racing jockeys were referred to in a number
of second reading speeches as one of the occupations of concern and the Australian
Jockeys Association has been lobbying for change on this issue since at least
2013.[35]
Bendigo MP Lisa Chesters stated that netballers and those in manual jobs had
also raised the issue.[36]
An estimated 20 additional mothers will be able to access
PLP each year as a result of the measure.[37]
Key
provisions
Item 1 inserts a definition of claimant’s
work cessation day at section 6 of the PPL Act. The
definition refers to paragraph 33(2A)(c), inserted by item 2.
Section 33 of the PPL Act defines the work
test period for the purpose of the PLP work test. Item 2 repeals
subsections 33(1) and (2) and inserts proposed subsections 33(1), (2) and
(2A). Under the amendments, the work test period for a
primary claimant is the 392 days immediately before:
- the
day the child is born unless
- if
subsection 33(2A) applies (where the person ceases work due to hazards that
pose a risk to the pregnancy) and the person would not satisfy the work test
under the other criteria, then the claimant’s work cessation day or
- if
the child is born after the expected date of birth and the person would not
satisfy the work test under the other criteria, then the expected date of birth
of the child.
Proposed subsection 33(2A) sets out the criteria for those
pregnant women who cease work due to hazards that pose a risk to the pregnancy.
To meet these criteria, the person must be the primary claimant:
- who
is pregnant with a child or is the birth mother of the child
- who
is performing or performed ‘paid work of a particular kind’ before the birth of
the child and
- who
will cease or ceased performing that work on a particular day (the claimant’s
work cessation day) because of hazards connected with that kind of work
that pose or posed a risk to the pregnancy and
- who
meets any conditions prescribed under the Paid Parental Leave
Rules 2010 (a legislative instrument made by the Minister for Social
Services).
Details of the particular kinds of work which are to be
covered by subsection 33(2A) are not contained in the legislation. It is likely
that these and other conditions, which may relate to the kinds of hazard or
proof that the hazards posed a risk to the pregnancy, will be outlined in the
Paid Parental Leave Rules.
Extending
the permissible break
The Bill will extend the period between working days that
can be considered a permissible break in calculating a claimant’s 295 day
qualifying period. The permissible break will be increased from eight to 12
weeks.
As discussed in the Background section, to meet the
current work test a claimant must have performed 330 hours of qualifying work
over a period spanning at least 295 consecutive days (around ten months) within
the 392 day period (around 13 months) prior to the expected or actual date of
birth or placement of the child for adoption. Days where a person has not
performed qualifying work that do not fall within a ‘permissible break’ cannot
be counted towards a claimant’s 295 consecutive day qualifying period. A
permissible break is one between two work days (or at the beginning of the
assessed period) where the break is not more than 56 days (eight weeks).[38]
The measure will allow those with long breaks in their
period of work, particularly casual or sessional workers, to still qualify for
PLP.
Rationale
In his second reading speech for the Bill, Minister for
Trade, Tourism and Investment Simon Birmingham stated:
In some professions, such as teaching, there may routinely be
a longer break between two work days, which prevents mothers from accessing Parental
Leave Pay, despite having a legitimate attachment to the workforce.
For example, it is not uncommon for casual teachers to finish
work a week or two early towards the end of a school year. However, if these
teachers do not recommence work until a few weeks into the next school term,
they could easily exceed the current eight week rule, even if they had worked
continuously throughout the rest of the year.
...
The Government believes that
these working mothers should be entitled to paid leave to allow them time to
recover from the birth, bond with their baby and receive the health and
developmental benefits that the Paid Parental Leave scheme can help facilitate.[39]
The Government estimates that around 180 additional
mothers will be entitled to PLP each year as a result of this measure.[40]
The Minister’s second reading speech only gives the example of teachers
benefitting from the measure but mothers in other occupations may also benefit.
Key
provisions
The criteria for determining when there is a permissible
break are set out at section 36 of the PPL Act. Items 3 and 4
amend references to the maximum number of consecutive days in a permissible
break at subsection 36(2) and paragraph (36)(3)(c) to substitute
the number 56 with 84. This will mean that the maximum number of consecutive
days allowed for a period between two working days (or at the beginning of a
qualifying period) to be considered a permissible break will be 84 consecutive
days (12 weeks) rather than 56 consecutive days (eight weeks).
Concluding comments
The proposed amendments are relatively minor but will
provide access to PLP for a small number of people who would otherwise be
excluded due to the hazardous or interrupted nature of their work.