Introductory Info
Date introduced: 4 July 2019
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Industrial Relations
Commencement: Various commencement dates as set out in clause 2 of the Bill and referred to in the body of this Bills Digest.
History of
the Bill
The Fair
Work Laws Amendment (Proper Use of Worker Benefits) Bill 2017 (the Previous
Bill) was introduced into the House of Representatives on 19 October 2017.[1]
The Bill was passed by that chamber and introduced to the Senate on 13 November
2017, but did not progress. The Previous Bill lapsed at the end of the last
Parliament on 1 July 2019.
The Fair Work Laws Amendment (Proper Use of Worker Benefits) Bill 2019 (the Bill) was introduced into the House of Representatives on
4 July 2019 in ‘substantially similar terms’ to the Previous Bill[2]—although
there are some differences. A Bills Digest was prepared in respect of the Previous
Bill.[3]
Whilst much of the material in this Bills Digest has been sourced from that
earlier one, where there are differences between the Bill and the Previous
Bill, these are noted and explored.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Fair Work Laws Amendment (Proper Use of
Worker Benefits) Bill 2019 (the Bill) is to amend the Fair Work
(Registered Organisations) Act 2009 (the FWRO Act), the Fair Work Act 2009
(the FW Act) and other legislation by:
- imposing
new governance and transparency requirements on registered organisations by
requiring registered organisations to have written financial expenditure
policies that have been approved by the committee of management
- requiring
registered organisations to report certain loans, grants and donations
- requiring
registered organisations to disclose the financial benefits obtained by them
and persons linked to them in connection with:
- employee
insurance products
- employee
welfare fund arrangements and
- training
fund arrangements
- introducing
a range of new penalties to ensure compliance by registered organisations with
financial management, disclosure and reporting requirements
- imposing
new governance and transparency requirements on entities related to registered
organisations such as worker entitlement funds (WEFs) and other similar funds
- creating
a registration process for worker entitlement funds and applying governance,
financial reporting and financial disclosure requirements to them
- prohibiting
terms of a modern award or an enterprise agreement requiring or permitting contributions
for the benefit of an employee to be made to any fund other than a
superannuation fund, a registered WEF or a registered charity
- requiring
any term of a modern award or enterprise agreement that names a WEF or
insurance product to allow an employee to choose another fund or insurance
product
- prohibiting
any term of a modern award, enterprise agreement or contract of employment
permitting or requiring employee contributions to an election fund for an
industrial association and
- prohibiting
any action with the intent to coerce an employer to pay amounts to a particular
WEF, superannuation fund, training fund, welfare fund or employee insurance
scheme.
Structure of
the Bill
This Bill is divided into six Schedules:
- Schedule
1 contains amendments to the FWRO Act relating to financial management
and accountability of registered organisations
- Schedule
2 deals with the regulation of WEFs
- Schedule
3 deals with election payments
- Schedule
4 deals with coerced payments to employee benefit funds
- Schedule
5 deals with disclosable arrangements, such as employee insurance schemes and
- Schedule
6 deals with minor and technical amendments.
Background
Organisations registered under the FWRO Act have
certain rights under the FW Act and other legislation, including in
relation to bargaining for enterprise agreements. Registered organisations that
represent the interests of employees include trade unions and professional
associations, whilst registered organisations that represent the interests of
employers or an industry are referred to as employer organisations.
Registered organisations (organisations) occupy a unique
position within Australia's workplace relations system. Whilst they represent
the interests of their members, organisations also seek to advance their own
interests.
For example, organisations may set up (usually via a
‘joint venture’ with other industry parties, such as employers) various forms
of worker entitlement funds (WEFs). These are then used to fund various
employee entitlements such as redundancy pay (thus representing the interests
of their members).[4]
Generally—as with other managed investment funds—income that is identified as
excess to the forecast requirements of the WEF may be distributed to the
parties who set up the WEF from time to time (thus representing the interests
of the organisation itself).
The Royal Commission into Trade Union Governance and
Corruption (RCTUGC) examined the operation of worker entitlement funds and
related entities.
The Bill responds to the recommendations made by the RCTUGC
in relation to the regulation and oversight of WEFs and related issues such as
disclosure of certain benefits arising from specified arrangements between
registered organisations and employers and the types of terms that can be
included in modern awards, enterprise agreements and employment contracts in
relation to WEFs. The Bill also introduces governance, record keeping and
transparency requirements on organisations.
The Government notes that it has ‘taken the opportunity to
adopt several amendments suggested in the previous detailed committee process
which more closely align these reforms with their corporate equivalents’[5]
and has, ‘in response to concerns from’ WEFs, ‘amended the Bill to delay the
commencement of the provisions that affect them, to give them sufficient time
to adjust to the new scheme’.[6]
Committee consideration
The Previous Bill was considered by two Senate Committees,
as noted below.
Previous Senate Education and Employment Legislation
Committee Inquiry
The Previous Bill was referred to the Senate
Education and Employment Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by
10 November 2017. Details of the inquiry are on the inquiry
homepage.
The majority of the Committee recommended that the Bill be
passed subject to one recommendation.[7]
The Australian Labor Party (Labor) and the Australian Greens
(the Greens) both issued Dissenting Reports, recommending that the Senate
reject the Bill.[8]
Amongst other things, Labor considered:
... the provisions of the Bill that prevent worker entitlement
funds from being able to distribute excess capital and/or income to the
Sponsors is punitive and political rather than fair and logical and that a
large part of the intent of the legislation is premised not for good governance
nor to protect members’ benefits but to stop funds flowing to our Sponsors’.[9]
The Greens described the Bill as ‘yet another example of
the government’s determination to erode workers’ rights and undermine unions in
an effort to reduce the effectiveness of their collective power’.[10]
Both Labor and the Greens were concerned with the
perceived lack of consultation on the Bill.[11]
Senate Standing Committee for
the Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
(Scrutiny Committee), after considering the Minister’s responses to its initial
scrutiny concerns,[12]
remained concerned with a number of elements of the Previous Bill.[13]
In relation to the current Bill, the Scrutiny Committee
noted it had commented on the Previous Bill and ‘reiterates those comments’.[14]As
such, those concerns are examined below.
Broad delegation of administrative powers
In relation to the infringement notice regime contained in
proposed section 329MB, the Committee considered that it would be
appropriate to amend the Bill to confine persons authorised to issue
infringement notices to officers with specified attributes, qualifications or
qualities.[15]
In that regard, the Bill has been amended as discussed below under the heading
‘Key issues and provisions’.
Procedural fairness
Proposed Subdivision B of Division 5 of proposed Part
3C provides a deregistration process for non-compliant registered WEFs. Proposed
section 329MK states that this Subdivision is taken to be an exhaustive
statement of the requirements of the natural justice hearing rule in relation
to the Commissioner's decision to deregister a registered WEF.
The Committee noted the Minister's advice that proposed
sections 329MG and 329MK are not intended to exclude the natural
justice hearing rule, but stated:
... the Minister's response does not address why proposed
section 329MK, which provides that the Subdivision is taken to be an exhaustive
statement of the requirements of the natural justice hearing rule, is necessary
and appropriate. The committee reiterates that the natural justice hearing rule
enables the courts to consider whether a hearing provided prior to an adverse
decision is fair in the circumstances of the case, including in the statutory
context of the power being exercised.[16]
The Committee further noted that the effect of proposed
section 329MK would be that the only applicable procedural fairness
requirements are those set out in the Subdivision, and therefore concluded that
in ‘the absence of a satisfactory response as to why it is necessary and
appropriate to provide that proposed Subdivision B provides an exhaustive
statement of the natural justice hearing rule’ the Committee reiterated its
scrutiny concerns and ‘leaves to the Senate as a whole the appropriateness of
excluding aspects of the natural justice hearing rule in relation to the
deregistration process’.[17]
The relevant proposed provisions noted above have not changed in the current Bill.
Exclusion of merits review
Proposed section 329MA provides the Commissioner
with the power to direct the operator of a registered WEF to take, or stop
taking, one or more actions. Proposed section 329NI lists a number of
decisions made by the Commissioner that are reviewable by the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal (AAT). Proposed section 329MA is not listed in proposed
section 329NI. This means that decisions are not subject to any form of
merits review.
The Committee noted the Minister's advice that:
- decisions
taken under proposed section 329MA are directed towards ensuring
compliance with the conditions for registration of a WEF and ‘are thus properly
characterised as law enforcement in nature’ and
- non-compliance
with a direction given under proposed section 329MA is subject to a
civil liability action and judicial review of the Commissioner's direction
under proposed section 329MA is available.
The Committee concluded that as it was not clear that
determinations made under proposed section 329MA are of a law
enforcement nature, ‘it remains unclear why it would be inappropriate to allow
merits review of the Commissioner's decision’.[18]
The relevant proposed provisions noted above have not changed in the current Bill.
These concerns are explored in detail below in the ‘Key issues and
provisions’ parts of this Digest.
Current Senate
Education and Employment Legislation Committee Inquiry
The Bill was referred to the Senate Education and
Employment Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 25 October 2019.
Details of the inquiry are at available at the inquiry
homepage. The majority of the Committee recommended that the Bill be
passed.[19]
Labor and the Greens both issued Dissenting Reports,
recommending that the Senate reject the Bill.[20]
Amongst other things, Labor considers:
... the Bill could effectively shut down worker-run funds,
while incentivising employers to set up and run their own funds, without the
community dividends provided by the current joint employer union funds.[21]
The Greens described the Bill as ‘an ideological attack on
unions, [not motivated by] any real concern about the proper regulation of
workers’ benefits’ that goes ‘significantly beyond the recommendations of the
Royal Commission into Trade Union Governance and Corruption’.[22]
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
Opposition
The Australian Labor Party opposes the Bill.[23]
The Manger of Opposition Business, Tony Burke, stated ‘in whatever form it
comes out, Labor is going to continue to oppose it’.[24]
Other non-government parties/independents
The Greens oppose the Bill.[25]
In the second reading debate in the House of Representatives, Adam Bandt vote
against the Bill.[26]
Of the other non-government MPs, Dr Helen Haines, Bob Katter, Zali Steggall and
Andrew Wilkie voted against the Bill.[27]
Rebekha Sharkie voted for the Bill.[28]
At the time of writing the position of non-government parties/independents in
the Senate was not clear.
Position of
major interest groups
Almost all trade unions and operators of funds that are
likely to be captured by the reforms proposed in Schedule 2 oppose the Bill.[29]
Objections to specific aspects of the Bill are noted below in the ‘Key issues
and provisions’ sections of this digest.
Employer and industry associations are generally
supportive of the Bill.[30]
However the Master Plumbers' and Mechanical Services Association of Australia,
which represents plumbing contractors throughout Australia (some of which are
employers) opposed the Previous Bill.[31]
Financial
implications
The Explanatory
Memorandum states that ‘the Bill will have a minor financial impact’ on the
Commonwealth.[32]
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.[33]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
In its third report of 2019 the Parliamentary Joint
Committee on Human Rights (PJCHR) noted that the Bill has ‘been reintroduced in
relevantly substantially similar terms to those previously commented on’ and
that it ‘reiterates its views as set out in its previous reports’ regarding the
Bill.[34]
In that regard the PJCHR raised a number of concerns with
the Previous Bill and sought advice from the Minister on a number of issues.[35]
Whilst the relevant issues are explored in detail below under the ‘Key issues
and Provisions’ parts of this Digest, in brief the PJCHR:
- concluded
that the proposed prohibition on any term of a modern award or an enterprise
agreement requiring or permitting contributions for the benefit of an
employee to be made to any fund other than a superannuation fund, a registered
WEF or a registered charity is likely to be incompatible with the right to
collectively bargain[36]
- was
‘unable to conclude’ that requirements that WEFs be registered and meet certain
conditions relating to financial management, board composition, disclosure and
how money is spent is ‘a proportionate limitation on the right to freedom of
association and the right to just and favourable conditions at work[37]
(which includes the right of workers to autonomy of union processes, organising
their administration and activities and formulating their own programs without
interference)[38]
- concluded
that the proposed prohibition on any person organising, taking or threatening
to take any action (other than protected industrial action) with the intent to
coerce a person to pay amounts to a particular WEF, superannuation fund,
training fund, welfare fund or employee insurance scheme ‘did not appear to be
a proportionate limitation on the right to strike as an aspect of the right to
freedom of association’[39]
and, due to the absence of a substantive assessment of the issue, ‘it was not
possible to conclude that the measure is [a] proportionate’ limitation on the
right to freedom of expression and assembly.[40]
Key issues and provisions:
financial management obligations
Schedule 1 of the Bill seeks to introduce a number
of new financial management obligations into the FWRO Act, to reflect
issues identified by the RCTUGC and its associated recommendations (9, 10, 17
and 39).[41]
Schedule 1 will commence on the earlier of a day to be fixed by proclamation, or
six months after Royal Assent.[42]
Changes from previous Bill
Reportable loans, grants and donations – current
provisions
Currently section 237 of the FWRO Act requires
organisations to provide the Commissioner of the Registered Organisations
Commission (ROC) with statements about loans, grants and donations over $1,000
made by the organisation, including details about the amount
involved, the purpose of the loan, grant or donation and the name and address
of the person to whom the loan, grant or donation was provided.
A failure to lodge such statements with the ROC or making
false and misleading statements about such loans, grants and donations attract
civil penalties of up to 100 penalty units.[44]
The statements lodged with the ROC must be available for inspection by members
of the organisation during office hours.[45]
Proposed definition of reportable loans, grants and
donations
Proposed subsections 237(1A) and (1B), at item
5 of Schedule 1 to the Bill, define reportable loans, grants and
donations as:
- a
loan, grant or donation exceeding $1,000
- a
loan, grant or donation of $1,000 or less made by the
organisation to a person during the financial year, if the total value
of loans, grants and donations made by the organisation to the person during
the financial year exceeds $1,000 and
- a
loan, grant or donation of $1,000 or less made to the
organisation by a person during the financial year, if the total value
of loans, grants and donations made to the organisation by the person during
the financial year exceeds $1,000.
Proposed reporting obligations in relation to reportable
loans, grants and donations
Proposed subsection 237(1) provides that organisations
will have to lodge with the Commissioner of the ROC (the Commissioner) annual statements
that include the details of each reportable loan, grant or donation. That is,
loans, grants and donations:
- over
$1,000 made by, or to, an organisation during a financial year
and
- under
$1,000 made by or to the organisation if the total
of those loans, grants and donations being provided to, or received from, an
individual would together exceed $1,000 within a financial year.
In contrast to the present situation, under the Bill details
of relevant loans, grants and donations made to the organisation (and
not just those made by it) must be provided to the Commissioner
on an annual basis.
Details to be reported
The relevant details that must be reported to the
Commissioner are:
- the
name and address of the person to whom a reportable loan was made, and the
arrangements for repayment of the loan[46]
- the
name and address of the person who made a reportable loan to the organisation,
and the arrangements for repayment of the loan[47]
- the
name and address of the person to whom a reportable grant or donation was made[48]
and
- the
name and address of the person who made a reportable grant or donation to the
organisation.[49]
However, in relation to reportable loans, grants and
donations made to persons by the organisation, the name and address do not need
to be reported if the loan, grant or donation was made to ‘relieve a member of
the organisation, or a dependant of such a member, from severe financial
hardship’.[50]
Other obligations
Section 293J of the FWRO Act requires organisations
to prepare officer and related party disclosure statements (ORPDS). An ORPDS
must contain details regarding the top five most highly remunerated officers
and payments made to related parties and declared persons or bodies. Further, section
252 of the FWRO Act requires organisations and branches of organisations
to keep proper financial records, and also details the purposes for which
financial records must be kept.
Proposed paragraph 252(1)(d), at item 11 of
Schedule 1, imposes a specific obligation on reporting units to keep financial
records in a manner that will enable an ORPDS to be prepared in accordance with
section 293J of the FWRO Act for the organisation to which the reporting
unit relates or, if the reporting unit is made up of one or more branches, each
such branch. (‘Reporting unit’ is defined at section 242 of the FWRO Act.
If an organisation is not divided into branches, the ‘reporting unit’ is the
whole of the organisation. If an organisation is divided into branches, each
branch will be a ‘reporting unit’ unless alternative arrangements are
authorised by the Fair Work Commission (FWC)).
Penalties
Currently subsection 252(5) of the FWRO Act
requires organisations to keep the financial records required under subsection
252(1) for at least seven years after the completion of the relevant
transactions. The amendment to proposed subsection 252(5), at item 12
of Schedule 1, provides that a civil penalty of up to 100 penalty units will
apply for failures to comply with the requirement to retain records.
Privacy protection measures
The Bill contains a number of measures designed to protect
the privacy of individuals captured by the disclosure and reporting obligations
pertaining to reportable loans, donations and grants. As noted above the name
and address of an individual or entity does not need to be reported if the
reportable loan, grant or donation was made to ‘relieve a member of the
organisation, or a dependant of such a member, from severe financial hardship’.[51]
Further, proposed subsection 237(4A), at item 6
of Schedule 1, provides that the Commissioner must omit from the reportable
loan, grant and donation statements any residential addresses and also
has the discretion to omit any other personal information to ‘protect the
privacy of such information during an inspection’ of the statements by members
of the organisation.[52]
Commencement of new obligations in relation to reportable
loans, grants and donations
Item 16 of Schedule 1 provides that the new
obligations in relation to reportable loans, grants and donations and keeping
records to enable the preparation of an ORPDS will apply in relation to
financial years commencing on or after the day item 16 commences.
Policies dealing with expenditure
Currently paragraph 141(1)(ca) of the FWRO Act
provides that organisations must have rules that require the organisation and
its branches to ‘develop and implement’ policies relating to the expenditure of
the organisation or branch. Whilst developing and implementing such policies
would appear to encompass their application to all officers and employees, the
amendments proposed by the Government are more directive and detailed. As a
result they are likely to operate to remove any uncertainty about their
application to all officers and employees of the organisation or branch.
Item 2 of Schedule 1 repeals paragraph 141(1)(ca)
of the FWRO Act. In its place, item 15 inserts proposed
Division 5 of Part 2A of Chapter 9 of the FWRO Act which deals with
policies relating to expenditure. Proposed section 293N provides that an
organisation and any branch of it must, at all times, have written policies
that:
- are
approved by the committee of management of the organisation or branch
- are
binding on all officers and employees of the organisation or branch and
- deal
with the expenditure of the organisation or branch.
A failure to comply with the above requirements attracts a
civil penalty of up to 100 penalty units.[53]
Compliance with policies and duties of officers
Proposed section 293P of the FWRO Act, at item
15 of Schedule 1, provides that when determining whether an officer or
employee of an organisation or branch has breached various financial management
duties set out in Division 2 of Part 2 of Chapter 9 of the FWRO Act,
which sets out general duties in relation to the financial management of
organisations, regard may be had to whether the officer or employee complied
with the mandatory and binding policies regarding expenditure discussed above.
Model policies dealing with expenditure
Currently section 142A of the FWRO Act enables the
Minister to make model rules about the expenditure of organisations or
branches. Item 3 of Schedule 1 will repeal section 142A. In its place, proposed
section 293Q provides that the Commissioner (rather than the Minister) may
publish model policies in relation to expenditure, which organisations or
branches can adopt in whole or part and with or without modification.
Commencement of obligations regarding expenditure accountability
policies
Item 17 of Schedule 1 has the effect of ensuring
that organisations and branches will have six months from the date upon which item
17 commences to develop expenditure policies that comply with the new
obligations discussed above. However, as paragraph 141(1)(ca) of the FWRO
Act continues to have effect during that period, organisations and branches
will still be required to ‘develop and implement’ policies relating to the
expenditure of the organisation or branch, as discussed above.
Key issues and provisions: regulation of worker
entitlement funds
Schedule 2 deals with regulation of worker entitlement
funds (WEFs). Broadly speaking a WEF can be defined as a fund established for
the purpose of funding employee entitlements such as redundancy pay, sick leave
and other similar entitlements.[54]
According to the RCTUGC the typical features of a WEF are:
- they
are established as ‘joint ventures’ between industry parties (that is a
union(s), employer(s) or employer organisation(s), although some do not involve
employer organisations)
- operated
by a trustee company, the directors of whom are associated with the industry
parties
- pursuant
to enterprise agreements negotiated with a particular union, employers make
regular payments on behalf of workers into a particular WEF
- the
WEF will commonly provide a financial benefit to the industry parties
- under
the rules of the WEF, employees will be entitled to receive certain benefits
(for example, sick leave or redundancy pay) including in some circumstances,
retirement benefits, age-related benefits and death benefits, provided certain
conditions are satisfied and
- the
rules of the WEF will be set out in a trust deed entered into between the
corporate trustee and the industry parties, but the ‘trust deed can be, and
often is, amended from time to time’.[55]
RCTUGC findings in relation to worker entitlement funds
The RCTUGC examined the current regulation of WEFs under
the Corporations
Act 2001, the Fringe Benefits Tax
Assessment Act 1986 (FBTA Act) and in particular the impact of ASIC Class Order [CO
02/314] (the Class Order), which has been repealed and effectively replaced
by the ASIC
Corporations (Employee redundancy funds relief) Instrument 2015/1150 (the
Relief Instrument). The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC)
noted that the relief provided by the Relief Instrument was the same as that
provided by the Class Order.[56]
However, ASIC also noted that as part of its consultation process the following
issues were raised:
- whether
employee redundancy funds would actually meet the definition of a 'managed
investment scheme' in the Corporations Act
- if
they did, whether they should be subject to the managed investment and
associated provisions in the Corporations Act and
- a
12-month extension to the relief was inadequate and that the relief should be
extended for a longer period.[57]
ASIC decided to extend the interim relief for employee
redundancy funds by 24 months to sunset on 1 October 2018 in
consideration of the submissions received, and announced:
ASIC intends to conduct a full policy review and to conduct
further consultation before the relief provided under the new instrument
sunsets or expires.[58]
The exemption has since been extended to 1 October 2021.[59]
Whilst beyond the scope of this Digest to explore, the
RCTUGC noted that the effect of the Class Order (now replaced by the Relief
Instrument) was to exempt WEFs from a range of governance, reporting and
oversight requirements that would otherwise be imposed on WEFs as, in the view
of the RCTUGC, they are captured by the definition of a managed investment
scheme contained in the Corporations Act.[60]
RCTUGC conclusions about the effect of the current
regulatory regime
The RCTUGC concluded that a ‘startling consequence’ of the
operation of the Class Order (and therefore the Relief Instrument) is that WEFs
‘are not subject to any mandatory disclosure requirements’.[61]
The RCTUGC also noted that as a result of the operation of the Class Order (and
therefore the Relief Instrument):
- there
is no statutory requirement on WEFs to provide annual reports or accounts to
persons with an interest in the fund
- there
is no requirement that the entities operating WEFs treat different types of
members (for example, union or non-union workers) who hold interests of the
same class equally and those who hold interests of different classes ‘fairly’
and
- WEFs
‘invariably distribute the income generated on contributions received to
industry parties (for example, unions and employer organisations) to be used
for purposes they see fit’.[62]
The RCTUGC also noted:
- on
a ‘proper construction’ of the FBTA Act, WEFs are not permitted to
distribute income to persons other than to the employers who make contributions
and the employees on whose behalf those contributions are made, but many WEFs
‘avoid this limitation in practice’ by ‘treating the income generated in a
prior financial year as capital, and they then distribute the capital to
industry parties’
- the
absence of any requirement for one or more independent directors on the board
of directors of companies operating WEFs ‘can lead to significant deadlocks
where, as is commonly the case, unions and employer organisations have equal
representation’
- although
the FBTA Act ‘has the effect of imposing some minimum governance
requirements’ on WEFs those requirements ‘are by no means comprehensive’ and do
not include a requirement that directors and managers involved in the WEF ‘be
of good fame and character’ or deal with the forfeiture of workers’ interests
and
- it
is ‘not usual to impose indirect regulation on an entity’ through taxation
legislation such as the FBTA Act.[63]
The RCTUGC noted that there were three possible reform
options that could deal with the above issues:
-
revocation or amendment of the Class Order (replaced by the Relief Instrument)
- amendment of the relevant conditions in the FBTA Act and
- introducing specific legislation subjecting WEFs to governance,
supervision and reporting requirements ‘overseen by an appropriate regulator’.[64]
What did the RCTUGC recommend?
The RCTUGC, whilst arguing that the retention of the Class
Order after its sunset date ‘was inappropriate’ nonetheless considered that:
... there is force in the arguments advanced that revoking the
Class Order and subjecting worker entitlement funds to the full requirements of
Chapter 5C and 7 of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) would amount to
excessive regulation.[65]
Ultimately, the RCTUGC concluded that the FBTA Act
required amendment and the preferable course of action was to ‘introduce
specific legislative provisions governing worker entitlement funds, either in
the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) or in a standalone Act’.[66]
It therefore recommended:
Recommendation 45
Legislation, either standalone or amending the Corporations
Act 2001 (Cth), be enacted dealing comprehensively with the governance,
financial reporting and financial disclosures required by worker entitlement
funds. The legislation should provide for registration of worker entitlement
funds with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission, and contain a prohibition
on any person carrying on or operating an unregistered worker entitlement fund
above a certain minimum number of persons.
Recommendation 46
In consequence of the enactment of the above legislation,
Class Order [CO 02/314] not be extended. In further consequence, s 58PB of the Fringe
Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986 (Cth) be repealed and the fringe benefits
tax exemption in s 58PA(a) be amended to refer to registered worker entitlement
funds.[67]
In this regard, the regime proposed by the Bill differs
somewhat from the recommendations of the RCTUGC as noted below where
appropriate.
Overview of the regulatory model adopted by the Bill
In summary the Bill proposes:
- the
ROC, rather than ASIC, is the primary regulator of WEFs
- registration
of WEFs will effectively be mandatory and will be contingent on certain ongoing
conditions being complied with
- WEFs
be subject to stringent rules regarding the allowable uses of members’
contributions and capital of the fund and
- the
Minister is granted substantial powers that can determine a range of matters
impacting on the internal governance of operators of WEFs.
Commencement dates relating to worker entitlement funds
Parts 1 to 3 of Schedule 2 (the substantive amendments
creating the proposed regime and its transitional rules) will commence on the
earlier of a day to be fixed by proclamation, or six months after Royal Assent.[68]
Part 4 of Schedule 2 (which deals with pre-commencement applications by funds
for registration as a WEF) commences the day after the Act receives the Royal
Assent.[69]
The commencement of Part 5 of Schedule 2 is linked to the commencement of the Fair Work (Registered Organisations) Amendment (Ensuring Integrity
No. 2) Bill, which is currently before the Senate.[70]
Key definitions
Worker entitlement
Proposed section 329HB of the FWRO Act, at item
13 of Schedule 2 to the Bill, defines a ‘worker entitlement’ as any
payment:
- in
respect of or in lieu of leave (however described)
- that
is an employment termination payment or any other payment in relation to
termination of employment or
- payable
by an employer to an employee under a fair work instrument or contract of
employment.
Worker entitlement fund
A ‘worker entitlement fund’ is defined expansively in proposed
section 329HC as a fund whose purposes are or include paying worker
entitlements (discussed above) to fund members. Fund members are defined in
proposed subsection 329HC(2) as workers:
- in
respect of whom contributions are made or
- in
respect of whom transfers from other funds of amounts that relate to worker
entitlements are made.
A WEF is also defined as including funds whose purposes include
paying worker entitlements to the dependants (in the event of the worker’s
death) or legal representatives of fund members.[71]
The Explanatory Memorandum notes ‘the question of a fund’s purpose is a
question of fact to be determined in light of evidence such as the fund’s
constituting documents’.[72]
Proposed paragraph 329HC(1)(b) enables the worker
entitlement fund rules (WEF Rules) to prescribe additional funds for the
purpose of this definition. The Government argues allowing the WEF Rules (which
are legislative instruments and hence subject to the usual Parliamentary
scrutiny and disallowance processes) to prescribe types of funds not covered by
the proposed definition as WEFs:
... is necessary as the Royal Commission did not deal
comprehensively with all types of funds. It is important and appropriate to
provide scope to add to the definition as the need arises to address any gaps
or attempts to circumvent the intent of the registration provisions.[73]
However, proposed subsection 329HC(3) provides that
certain types of funds such as superannuation funds and registered charities
are excluded from the definition of a WEF. In addition, proposed subsection
329HC(4) excludes single-employer funds from the definition of a WEF
unless an election for the fund under proposed section 329HD is in
effect (discussed below).
The effect of the definition of a WEF is that any fund
(other than those of a type specifically excluded) that provides any or all of
the range of benefits identified by the RCTUGC as usually being provided by
such funds will be captured by the definition.
Single employer funds
As noted above, single-employer funds are excluded from
the definition of a WEF. Proposed section 329HD defines ‘single-employer
fund’ as a fund:
- that
has purposes that include paying worker entitlements to fund members or their
death benefits dependants or legal personal representatives
- that
is controlled by a single employer (this includes trusts where the employer is
or appoints the trustee) and
- to
which all contributions are made in respect of employees of the employer.
Despite being excluded from the definition of a WEF, proposed
subsection 329HD(3) allows the operator of a single-employer fund to elect
for the fund to be a WEF.
Operator of a worker entitlement fund
Proposed subsection 329HE(1) defines the ‘operator’
of a WEF that is a trust to be the trustee, or each trustee, of the fund. The
note to the proposed subsection states that it a condition for registration of
a WEF that the fund has no more than one operator.[74]
A person is not an operator of a WEF merely because they:
- act as an agent or employee of another person or
- take
steps in accordance with a constitution that comply with the conditions
regarding winding up a WEF or remedying a defect that led to the WEF being
deregistered[75]
Registration of worker entitlement funds effectively
mandatory
Proposed section 329JA provides that it is an offence
to operate an unregistered WEF. Proposed section 329JB provides that a civil penalty of up to 100 penalty units applies where
a person contributes to an unregistered WEF.[76]
As result of these two provisions and the expansive definition of a
‘worker entitlement fund’ and related definitions, registration of WEFs is
effectively mandatory. This point is expressly made in the Bill’s Explanatory
Memorandum.[77]
Criminal offence for operating an
unregistered fund
Proposed section 329JA provides the
penalty for operating an unregistered fund is 200 penalty units or imprisonment
for five years or both.[78]
This is identical to the penalty imposed by the Corporations Act for
operating an unregistered managed investment scheme.[79] The elements of the
offence are:
- the person is an operator of a fund
- the fund is a WEF
- the fund is not registered and either:
- the purposes of the fund are or include the payment, by or on behalf
of one or more federal system employers,[80]
of worker entitlements to or in relation to one or more federal system
employees or
- the person is a constitutional corporation.
Civil penalty for contributions to
unregistered WEFs
Proposed section 329JB provides that a civil penalty of up to 100 penalty units applies where
a person contributes to an unregistered WEF.[81]
The Government notes that the penalty ‘is intended to ensure that only
registered worker entitlement funds operate’.[82]
As the penalty applies to ‘a person’ this
means that not only will employees potentially be liable for making
contributions to unregistered WEFs, but that employers will also be liable in
certain circumstances. The Government argues this:
... will also serve the legitimate policy
purpose of ensuring that employers and other fund contributors take sufficient
care to ensure that they are making payments only to registered worker
entitlement funds.[83]
Registration process
Proposed section 329KA deals with application
requirements for the registration of a WEF. Applications for registration to
the Commissioner:
- must
be in writing and in the form specified by the Commissioner, and accompanied by
any information or documents required by the Commissioner[84]
- may
result in the Commissioner, by written notice, requesting further information
or inviting the applicant to make written submission in relation to the
application by a specified deadline[85]
and
- must
be decided no later than 40 days after the application is made, or after the
deadline specified in a written notice requesting further information or
submissions from the applicant.[86]
As soon as practicable after the application is made,
certain details about the application (such as the name of the fund and its operator)
must be published on the Commission’s website.[87]
Proposed subsection 329KA(6) then provides that once an application is
determined, the details of the application are to be removed from the website
(this is because details of the fund must be included on the register
maintained under proposed section 329KD).
Consideration of applications
Proposed section 329KB provides that the
Commissioner must grant an application if satisfied that the fund is, or will
be on registration, a WEF and the initial conditions for registration
applicable to the fund will be satisfied (both in relation to the fund and its
operator).[88]
The conditions for registration are discussed below.
However if the Commissioner is not required to approve the
application, proposed section 329KC provides that the application must
be refused.
Once granted, the Commissioner must notify the applicant
and enter the name of the fund on the register established by proposed
section 329KD. Likewise if the application is refused, the Commissioner
must notify the applicant within 14 days of the refusal and set out, in
writing, the reasons for refusal.[89]
Appeal rights in relation to registration decisions
Proposed section 329NI provides that appeals
against a decision to refuse to register a WEF can be made to the
Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT).
When does registration take effect?
Proposed section 329KE provides that a WEF is
registered once the Commissioner approves an application and the WEF is not
deregistered.
Overview of conditions of registration
Proposed section 329LA sets out the initial and
ongoing conditions for registration of a WEF. Only certain conditions are
applicable to single-employer funds. The conditions are set out in the table
to proposed section 329LA.
Changes from
previous Bill
One operator
Condition one provides that a WEF can only have one
operator—this is both an initial and ongoing condition, and is applicable to single-employer
funds.[90]
The Government notes that this condition is based on the requirement in section
601FA of the Corporations Act, which provides that a managed investment
scheme can only have one operator.[91]
Operator is a constitutional corporation and not an
organisation
Condition two provides that the operator of a WEF must be
a constitutional corporation and not a registered organisation—this is both an
initial and ongoing condition.[92]
Whilst the Government notes that the Superannuation Industry (Supervision)
Act 1993 imposes a similar requirement in relation to superannuation funds,[93]
this condition was criticised by some stakeholders. For example the Australian
Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) argued:
A worker entitlement fund will now only be allowed to be
operated by a constitutional corporation, and will not be allowed to be
operated by a registered organisation. There was no recommendation to
this effect made by the Royal Commission. It is clearly inconsistent with
Australia’s international obligations, given the consequences of operating an
unregistered fund.[94]
This condition does not apply to single-employer funds.
Compliance with conditions
Condition three provides that the Commissioner must be satisfied
that the operator, and other persons likely to be involved in the operation of
the WEF, will conduct its affairs in a way that meets the ongoing conditions
imposed by proposed section 329LA.[95]
The Government notes ‘this condition will allow the
Commissioner to refuse an application for registration on the basis of past
conduct and to prevent phoenix arrangements’.[96]
Equal treatment of members
Condition four provides that the WEF must treat members equally
and, if there are different classes of members, the WEF must treat members of a
class equally with other members of that class. Further, different
classes of members must be treated without discrimination on the basis of
membership of an organisation (for example on the basis of union membership). This
is an ongoing condition and is applicable to single-employer funds.[97]
Whilst the Government argues that this ‘requirement adapts
the requirement in section 601FC(1)(d) of the Corporations Act in
relation to equal treatment’[98]
this is disputed by a number of stakeholders. For example the ACTU argued that
the provisions in the Corporations Act actually:
... require managed investment funds to “treat the members who hold
interests of the same class equally and members who hold interests of different
classes fairly”[99]
(emphasis added)
Other stakeholders criticised other aspects of this
condition. For example, Protect Services Ltd (an operator of funds that would
be eligible for registration as WEFs) previously noted that whilst this
condition aims to ‘ensure that entitlements and services provided to union
members are also provided to non-union members’:
... the drafting of the condition is open to a far broader
interpretation which will have consequences beyond what is intended. For
instance, the condition does not take into consideration the fact there may be
legitimate reasons for different classes of members (i.e., different divisions)
having different rules or access to benefits because the divisions cater for
different demographics or industries. In Protect’s case, we currently have
members in the Electrical division, Metals/Manufacturing division and Maritime
division. The drafted condition may prevent an operator from offering
training and welfare services tailored to the needs of those divisions. It
may also be open to interpretation as to whether an operator may provide a
service, such as training, to Metal workers but not provide similar training to
Electrical workers. We submit that the clause be amended to remove any
ambiguity and to allow, in effect, the tailoring of different services (albeit
irrespective of union membership, which is the intention). Superannuation
law contains similar requirements but refers to members of different classes
being treated ‘fairly’, which is a more appropriate test. There are also
exemptions in superannuation law that allow a trustee to offer different
benefits to different classes of members in certain circumstances (i.e., where
an employer has arranged particular insurances for their employees), but these
exceptions in superannuation law only came about after trustees and employers
pointed out that the initial drafting of the relevant legislation was too
restrictive.[100]
(emphasis added).
Limits of classes of members
If the WEF has different classes of members, condition
five provides that these must not be differentiated by reference to membership
of a registered organisation. This is an ongoing condition that also applies to
single-employer funds.[101]
The Government notes this is based on a recommendation of
the RCTUGC.[102]
This provision was criticised by some stakeholders as being unnecessary and
ideologically based. For example, the ACTU previously argued that this
condition:
... is based on the Royal Commission report and the ideological
objection taken therein to funds applying their surplus income to entities that
benefit union members (no ideological objection is apparently taken to
commercial providers of managed investment schemes applying their management or
performance fees to any particular purpose). A member’s interest in a fund
is in the form of funded employment entitlements and insurance benefits. There
is no discrimination between members of the fund in terms of the nature or
accessibility of their interest in the fund. The “discrimination” seized upon
by the Royal Commission only arises after the extent of fund member interests
in the fund has been fully accounted for and a surplus exists. That surplus
(income) is directed as deemed appropriate. The situation is comparable to
the Commonwealth Bank, a provider of managed investments, making a 1.1 million
donation in 2009 to the Victorian Bushfire relief appeal. Some of that may have
benefited persons who were interest holders in its various managed schemes—much
of it would not have—but the nature and extent of the interest holders’
interests in those schemes was unaltered by this expenditure, nor did they
suffer any discrimination.[103]
(emphasis added)
The ACTU also argued that ‘there is nothing at all
untoward’ about a WEF (after the interests of members are accounted for) applying
its own profits or surplus ‘to purposes that it sees fit’ as is the case with
companies and other managed investment schemes. [104]
Constitutional requirements
Condition six provides that a WEF must have a written
constitution that complies with the requirements set out in proposed
subsection 329LB(1) and the WEF Rules issued by the Minister.[105]
This condition is both an initial and ongoing condition for registration, and
also applies to single-employer funds.[106]
Proposed subsection 329LB(1) provides that a constitution of a WEF must:
- require
that the operator be a constitutional corporation and must not be an
organisation
- specify
that no more than five per cent of the assets of the WEF may be invested in an
entity controlled by a contributor to the WEF or an associate of a contributor
- specify
that the assets of the WEF are not to be used in relation to financial
assistance to a contributor, member or associate of a contributor or member of
the WEF
- require
that contributions to the WEF may only be used for purposes authorised by proposed
section 329LC (discussed under the heading ‘Authorised uses of
contributions’ below)
- require
that income of the fund may only be used for purposes authorised by proposed
section 329LD (discussed under the heading ‘Authorised uses of income’
below)
- not
allow contributions or income of the fund to be used to make a payment to an
employee relating to periods of industrial action (for example, strike pay)
- provide
that unclaimed or forfeited money, or money that is treated as such under the
constitution, must not be paid to an industrial association or related party of
an industrial association[107]
- require
that a separate account be kept for each fund member in a way that enables the
member’s entitlements to be calculated.
Whilst the Government argues that the above requirement
are modelled on the requirements that currently apply to ‘approved worker
entitlement funds’ in subsection 58PB(4) of the FTBA Act, some
stakeholders have criticised the requirements.[108]
For example the ACTU previously argued that condition six would:
- impose
on WEFs more restrictions on the distributions of their surplus income when
compared to managed investment funds and under the current regime and
- impose
a requirement to comply with the WEF Rules issued by the Minister at any time,
which may result in operators being required to ‘give information to
contributors, at any time’ and therefore ‘this power could be used excessively
and oppressively, with no explicit or implicit limit expressed in the Bill on
its exercise’.[109]
The ACTU also argued that the prohibition on unions
operating WEFs is a clear contravention of Article 3 of ILO Convention 87
and the principle of freedom of association and ‘did not form part of the Royal
Commission’s recommendations’.[110]
Protect Services Ltd also criticised condition six on the basis that as it
allows the Minister to ‘impose any requirements into a Fund’s constitution’ the
use of this power ‘may put the trustee in a position where they are
contravening their fiduciary duties’.[111]
Condition seven—an ongoing condition—provides that the WEF
must be administered in accordance with its constitution, which includes the
above requirements. This condition also applies to single-employer funds.[112]
Officers of the operator must be of good fame and
character
Condition eight provides that the Commissioner must have
no reason to believe that any officer of the operator of the WEF who performs
duties in relation to the fund is not of good fame or character.[113]
This condition is initial and ongoing, and is linked to proposed
section 329LE which provides that when considering whether there is reason
to believe that a person is not of good fame or character, the Commissioner
must have regard to the following:
- any
conviction of the person, within the period of ten years ending immediately
before the consideration time, for an offence that involves dishonesty and is
punishable by imprisonment for at least three months
- whether
the person has at any time been:
- because
of a conviction, ineligible to be a candidate for election, or elected or
appointed, to an office in an organisation or
- otherwise
disqualified under the FWRO Act from holding office in an organisation
and
- any
other matters the Commissioner considers relevant.
As noted above, in the Previous Bill this condition also
applied to certain staff of the fund – an aspect of the condition that was criticised
by some stakeholders.[114]
Protect Services Ltd recommended that the condition be amended to ensure that
it only applies to directors and officers, ‘otherwise more onerous conditions
are placed on fund operators than are placed on unions in terms of who may be
employed’.[115]
The removal of non-officer employees from the good fame
and character condition from the Bill appears to indicate that this critique of
the drafting of the Previous Bill was actioned by the Government.
Two types of independent directors
Conditions nine and ten provide that a WEF must have:
- condition
nine: at least one voting director who is independent of, and has no material
relationship with, the operator of the fund other than in the role as director[116]
and
- condition
ten: at least one voting director who is independent of, and has no
material relationship, with any of the following:
- any
contributor to the fund or associates of contributors to the fund
- any
organisation that has a member, or associate of a member, who is a fund
contributor
- any
organisation that has a member, or associate of a member, who is a fund member
or
- any
associate of the operator of the fund.[117]
These conditions are both initial and ongoing. The
Government notes that the first requirement noted above (condition nine) ‘is
intended to prevent deadlocks on the board of a fund operator’.[118]
These requirements have been criticised by a number of
stakeholders. For example, the ACTU previously noted that as a result of these
two conditions and proposed paragraph 329LD(2)(e) the independent
directors ‘must vote in favour of’ and will have a veto right over ‘payments to
a training or welfare service provider’.[119]
Further the ACTU argued:
... all corporations have options available to relieve
deadlocks and the issue of potential conflict of interest cannot be said to be
material in light of the proposed prohibition on unions deriving income from
the fund and the extensive disclosure provisions contained in the Bill.[120]
Protect Services Ltd also previously expressed concern
about how the above two conditions are drafted, noting that ‘it is not clear
from the language in the Bill whether the same independent director’ can satisfy
both conditions.[121]
In that regard the Explanatory Memorandum notes:
... the payment must be approved by the voting directors of the
operator including by at least one voting director who is indepedent [sic] per
condition 9 and one voting director who is independent per condition 10 before
it is made, noting that this may be the same person.[122]
(emphasis added)
This means a single independent director can fulfil both
roles in relation to conditions nine and ten.
Fund to be managed at arm’s length
Condition 11 provides that a WEF and its investments must
be managed at arm’s length from:
- the
contributors to the fund and their associates and
- the
fund members.[123]
This is both an initial and ongoing condition. The
Government notes that it is modelled on paragraph 58PB(4)(a) of the FBTA Act
(which the Bill will repeal).[124]
The drafting of condition 11 has been criticised by some stakeholders. For
example, Protect Services Ltd noted that as currently drafted the condition
‘presents some ambiguity’ resulting in significant practical issues.[125]
As noted by the RCTUGC, WEFs are frequently established as ‘joint ventures’
between industry parties and are operated by a trustee company, the directors
of whom are associated with the industry parties (and may be appointed by them).[126]
Protect Services Ltd noted that this means that because
directors of a WEF are drawn from industry parties ‘to represent worker and
employer interests respectively’ this means that:
- directors
nominated by an employer or employer association may be an owner or executive
in a business that is a contributor to the fund
- directors
nominated by a union ‘may have commenced their careers as a worker and will
likely be a fund member’.[127]
As such, as drafted, condition 11 would prevent such
persons from being directors of the operator of a WEF. Therefore Protect
Services Ltd recommended that it instead should be ‘sufficient to rely on
directors’ obligations under the Corporations Act to avoid conflicts of
interest’.[128]
Further, it was also noted that paragraph 58PB(4)(a) of the FBTA Act—which
the Government says condition 11 is modelled on—only refers to ‘“contributors
to the fund”, not fund members’.[129]
Arrangements to ensure contributions and income retains
their character
Condition 12—which is an ongoing condition—provides that
there must be arrangements in place to ensure that the provisions requiring
that contributions and income retain their character are given effect.[130]
The Government notes that this ‘is to prevent the operator converting
contributions into capital’.[131]
This condition is linked to proposed subsections
329LC(2) and 329LD(3), which provide that:
- an
amount that is paid into a fund as a contribution continues at all later times,
while held by the fund, to have the character of a contribution and
- an
amount that is earned, derived or received as income by a fund while the fund
is registered continues at all later times, while held by the fund, to have the
character of income.
Compliance with worker entitlement fund rules
Condition 13—an ongoing condition—provides that the WEF
must comply with requirements in relation to capital adequacy, governance and
liquidity that are prescribed by the WEF Rules.[132]
This condition has been criticised by a number of
stakeholders. Protect Services Ltd previously noted:
... condition 13, requires that funds comply with prescribed
worker entitlement fund rules in relation to “capital adequacy, governance and
liquidity”. Under s329NJ, the Minister is provided broad and extensive power to
prescribe such Rules. We strongly believe that such fundamental parameters
should be clearly set out in the relevant legislation, rather than being
prescribed by the Minister. We also urge that such rules become available as
soon as possible in order for the Board to consider any investment portfolio
implications.[133]
Protect Services further argued that as the WEF Rules can
deal with a broad ‘range of areas which each have the potential to materially
impact operations’ (such as capital adequacy, governance and liquidity) and
that ‘there are no parameters to regulate the timeframes’ in which any changes
to the WEF Rules made by the Minister come into effect, there would be ongoing
‘uncertainty as to operation of Registered Worker Entitlement Funds’.[134]
The ACTU also criticised the requirement to comply with WEF
Rules on the basis that this ‘power could be used excessively and oppressively,
with no explicit or implicit limit expressed in the Bill on its exercise’.[135]
Provision of annual audited reports
Condition 14—an ongoing condition—provides that an operator
must give the Commissioner audited annual reports for a fund in accordance with
proposed section 329LF.[136]
The audited annual reports must be prepared for the financial year in
accordance with any applicable Australian Accounting Standards and be provided
to the Commissioner within four months after the end of the financial year[137]
(the Previous Bill provided for a shorter period of three months). The annual
report must also include:
- a
statement of the profit or loss of the fund, net of tax and net of benefits
paid to fund members, for the financial year
- a
statement of the financial position of the fund as at the end of the financial
year, including all assets and liabilities (including liabilities for accrued
benefits)
- a
statement of the benefits, including the type of benefits, paid for the
financial year to fund members
- details
of certain payments in relation to insurance cover related to payments of
worker entitlements (including details of any commissions or benefits received
or obtained by the operator of the fund or a related party of the operator in
relation to the insurance cover for the financial year)
- a
statement of any management or administration fees paid for the financial year
and the recipients
- the
number and total value of any benefits forfeited during the financial year
- details
of certain training or welfare payments including a new requirement (compared
to the Previous Bill) to include a statement of the voting directors who voted
to make each such individual payment (discussed below)
- any
other matters prescribed by the WEF Rules and
- the
auditor’s report.[138]
The annual report must be audited by a registered auditor
or a registered company auditor and the auditor’s report of the audit must be
attached to (and form part of) the annual report. The audit itself, along with
the audit report, must comply with any applicable Australian Auditing Standards.[139]
The auditor’s report must also set out:
- whether
the annual report complies with the requirements discussed above
- whether
the auditor was given all information, explanation and assistance necessary for
the conduct of the audit (and if not, the reasons why)
- whether
the auditor is of the opinion that the operator has kept financial records
sufficient to enable an annual report for the fund to be prepared and audited
in accordance with the requirements in proposed Part 3C of the FWRO
Act (and if not, the reasons why) and
- any
other matters prescribed by the WEF Rules.[140]
The ACTU, after noting that companies that currently
operate WEFs may be required to lodge such reports with ASIC, if their size
and/or ASIC requires them to do so, criticised the above requirements on the
basis that:
The main purpose of this regulation appears to be to expose
funds to a civil penalty of over $100,000 if they do not provide the same
document to two different regulators on the same date. The existing enforcement
mechanism for failing to comply with existing regular financial reporting
requirements to ASIC is an offence of strict liability, so it is unclear why
additional regulation in this area is necessary.[141]
Likewise, Protect Services Ltd also previously criticised
allowing the Minister to specify matters that must be included in the annual
report and auditor’s report:
There are no restrictions on the period of notice to obtain
the information and report on it. The condition is far-reaching and has the
potential for matters to be included in annual reports of funds, such as terms
of contracts, directors’ and officers’ details, which are not imposed on other
corporations. Additional reporting and/or auditing requirements, of an as-yet
unknown extent, have potential to add significant cost. These catch-all
provisions provide a serious degree of uncertainty in operating a business when
key operating parameters are at the whim of a Minister – conditions that are
not imposed on other corporations.[142]
New
requirement proposed by the Bill
The Bill proposes that annual reports made in compliance
with condition 14 must include a statement containing certain details of
training or welfare payments. The Bill adds a new requirement not contained in
the Previous Bill, namely that the relevant statement include the voting
directors who voted to make each such individual payment. The Explanatory
Memorandum contains no explanation for the rationale behind this new
requirement.
Informing the Commission about certain changes
Condition 15—an ongoing condition—provides that the
operator of a WEF must notify the Commissioner in writing of any changes of
details included in the register of WEFs, within three months of the change
occurring.[143]
This includes the name of the WEF, the name of its operator and other details
the Commissioner considers appropriate.[144]
Provision of information to the Commission, contributors
and members
Condition 16—an ongoing condition—provides that the
operator of a WEF must give to the contributors of the WEF the information
prescribed by the Minister in the WEF Rules at the prescribed time, or at the
intervals required by the Rules.[145]
This condition has attracted some criticism. For example, Protect Services Ltd previously
argued:
... condition 16 ... Allows the Minister to require that
contributors are provided with “information” prescribed by the worker
entitlement fund rules and at the time and intervals prescribed by the rules. This
has far-reaching consequences for the operations of a business. Funds
operate with sophisticated and custom-built information technology systems.
Changes to information and reporting must be taken with due care, with
consideration given to proper amendments to software. Such changes may require
many months of work (and cost) to modify systems in response to a Minister’s
imposition. While we do not object to providing contributors with information,
more certainty needs to be provided to operators to ensure reasonable
timeframes to comply, as well as appropriate contemporary methods of low-cost
electronic communication such as email or text message. Funds also enter into a
broad range of confidential commercial arrangements and handle sensitive
business and financial information as many other corporate entities do. The broad
scope of the Minister’s powers makes it unclear whether Registered Worker
Entitlement Funds could continue to enter into such arrangements.[146]
(emphasis added).
The ACTU also previously argued that the power of the Minister
(via the WEF Rules) to require ‘on an ad-hoc basis’ operators to give information
to contributors, at any time ‘could be used excessively and oppressively, with
no explicit or implicit limit expressed in the Bill on its exercise’.[147]
Condition 17—an ongoing condition—effectively requires the
operator to provide workers with an annual statement.[148]
Protect Services Ltd criticised this requirement arguing:
... we regard the concept of annual statements as outdated,
when information is available to members “24/7” through online access as well
as a Smartphone App. While we respect the fact that not all members have such
access it is important that communications with members are cost effective and
efficient.[149]
However, Protect Services Ltd previously noted with
approval that the Explanatory Memorandum provides that the requirement that an
operator ‘gives’ a certain thing (in this case, the annual statements) ‘may be
met by emailing the relevant person, including emailing a link to the
prescribed information’.[150]
Condition 18—an ongoing condition—provides that the
operator must give the Commissioner, contributors and fund members information
about any change to the constitution of the WEF and any change to the operation
of the WEF affecting payments to members as soon as practicable.[151]
Disclosure of certain information and documents
Condition 19—an ongoing condition— provides that an
operator of a WEF must give a person certain information either before they
become a member of the WEF, or as soon as practicable after they become a
member. The information that must be provided in a statement includes:
- the
amount of any fees and administrative expenses charged by the operator in
relation to the fund and
- information
about the eligibility of fund members to makes claims for payment from the WEF
and how to make such a claim.[152]
Condition 20—an ongoing condition—provides that an
operator of a WEF must:
- on
request, give a copy of the constitution of the fund to any contributor to the
fund
- give
a copy of the constitution of the WEF to each person who may become a
fund member and
- ensure
that each member has a copy of the constitution or has access to it on the WEF’s
website.[153]
The ACTU criticised conditions 19 and 20 on the basis that
a requirement to ‘give’ the above information ‘is clearly different in law to a
requirement to take reasonable steps to provide, or to ensure that the thing is
available’ and therefore:
... in industries where workers are highly mobile, it is
inevitable that the requirement to “give” could not be satisfied in all
circumstances. It is a highly oppressive requirement that results in civil
penalties and possible deregistration.[154]
Protect Services Ltd also previously criticised condition
20 on the basis of its practicality. Protect Services Ltd noted that
subcondition 20(b), which requires a copy of the constitution to be provided to
each person who ‘the operator knows may become a fund member’, causes
two issues:
- it
requires that the operator establishes a knowledge of who may become a
member and
- operators
‘can only establish who may become a member if an employer chooses to
disclose their list of employees and their contact details to [the operator]
prior to becoming a contributor’.[155]
Protect Services Ltd noted that in relation to the second
point above ‘this is impractical and unlikely to occur or may impose an
obligation on us to obtain details for people [who] are not yet party to an
industrial agreement to become a member’ and therefore recommended that either
subcondition 20(b) be removed from the Bill or the word ‘or’ be substituted for
the word ‘and’ at the end of subcondition 20(b), which would allow
‘notification to be provided or for the information to be available on a
website’.[156]
Condition 21—an ongoing condition—provides that if the
income of the WEF is used to make certain training or welfare payments, the
operator of the fund must notify each member of the fund as soon as is
practicable after the payment is approved. Such a notification must include:
- who
the payment will be made to
- details
of the particular training and welfare services provided and
- the
voting directors for voted to make the payment.
Alternatively, the operator of the WEF can ensure that
each member has access to this information on the WEF’s website.[157]
New
requirement proposed by the Bill
The Bill adds a new requirement not contained in the
Previous Bill, namely that the relevant notifications of training or welfare
payments covered by proposed subsection 329LD(2) must include the voting
directors who voted to make each such individual payment. The Explanatory
Memorandum contains no explanation for the rationale behind this new
requirement.
Training requirements
Condition 22—an ongoing condition—provides that an
operator of a WEF must comply with training requirements set out in proposed
section 329LG.[158]
Those requirements are that the officers and staff members of an operator of a
WEF whose duties include those related to the financial management of the WEF must
undertake approved training (discussed below) within six months of the later of:
- assuming
duties that relate to the financial management of a fund or
- condition
22 starting to apply in relation to the fund.[159]
Under the Previous Bill, the training requirements had to
be met within six months of the person assuming duties that related to the
financial management of the fund. Whilst not stated in the Explanatory
Memorandum, this change appears to reflect the Government’s assertion that the
Bill was amended ‘to delay the commencement of the provisions’ that affect WEFs
‘to give them sufficient time to adjust to the new scheme’.[160]
The Commissioner may approve training provided by an
organisation, peak council or other body or person that the Commissioner is
satisfied has the appropriate skills and expertise to provide the training.[161]
Proposed subsection 329LG(4) provides that an operator may apply to the
Commissioner on behalf of an officer or staff member for an exemption from the
training requirements. The Commissioner has the discretion to grant such
exemptions subject to any conditions if satisfied that the person has ‘a proper
understanding’ of their duties ‘relating to the financial management’ of the
WEF because of their:
- experience
as a company director or as an officer of a registered organisation or
- other
professional qualifications and experience.[162]
Authorised uses of contributions
Proposed section 329LC effectively limits the
purposes for which a constitution complying with condition six of registration
(and therefore proposed section 329LB) can allow contributions to a WEF to
be used. The Government notes that these authorised uses are adapted from the
requirements in paragraph 58PB(4)(c) of the FBTA Act.[163]
The authorised uses of contributions are:
- to
pay a kind of worker entitlement to WEF members for whom contributions have
been made for that kind of entitlement (payments may also be made to death
benefits dependants or legal personal representatives of those WEF members)
- to
make investments to generate income from the assets of the WEF
- to
reimburse contributors to the fund who have paid entitlements directly to WEF
members in circumstances where the contributor was under an obligation or
permitted to pay those entitlements
- to
return contributions to contributors to the WEF
- to
pay, at market value, for certain types of insurance cover
- to
transfer contributions to another WEF
- to
pay the reasonable administrative expenses of the WEF including administrative
costs to the trustee and board fees to directors of the operator
- to
pay amounts to an external administrator of a contributor in certain circumstances
- to
pay interest on or repay money lent to the WEF.[164]
Authorised uses of income
Proposed section 329LD effectively limits the
purposes for which a constitution complying with condition six of registration
(and therefore proposed section 329LB) can allow income of a WEF to be
used. The authorised uses of the income of a WEF are:
- the
purposes covered in proposed section 329LC in relation to authorised
uses of contributions (discussed above)
- payments
other than worker entitlements to fund members, their death benefits dependants
or legal personal representatives
- payments
to a contributor to the fund whose contributions are in respect of employees or
former employees of the contributor and
- payments
for certain training and welfare purposes.[165]
Income of a WEF may only be used to make payments for
training and welfare purposes when they satisfy the criteria in proposed
subsection 329LD(2):
- the
payment is made for the sole purpose of providing training or welfare services
to either or both of:
- participants
or former participants in any industry in which fund members participate and
- the
spouses or dependents of such participants or former participants and
- if
the training or welfare services are not provided by the operator of the WEF:
- the
services must be provided at market value and on commercial terms and
- negotiated
at arm’s length from any director with a material personal interest in the
provider of the services and
- the
services are provided in such a way that does not discriminate ‘unfairly’
between fund members and
- before
payment is made, the payment is approved by the voting directors of the
operator including by:
- at
least one voting director who is independent as per condition nine and
- a
voting director who is independent per condition ten.[166]
In 2017 the Senate Education and
Employment Legislation Committee expressed concern that proposed
section 329LD may operate to prevent gifts or donations to charities connected
to the provision of workers benefits (for example, charities established to prevent
suicide and improve mental health in particular industries).[167]
The Committee recommended:
... the government review the wording of proposed section 329LD
in light of the concerns raised that it would not allow for a gift or donation
to be made to charities operating in this sector.[168]
The wording of proposed section 329LD remains
unchanged from the Previous Bill. In its 2019 Report on the Bill, the Senate Education and Employment Legislation Committee revisited the
issue and noted:
The committee notes the concerns raised by submitters in
regard to proposed section 329LD. In particular, it acknowledges the concerns
about the prohibition on gifts and donations in the context of the valuable
work carried out by MATES in Construction in the building and construction
industry. However, noting the assurances of the department, the committee is of
the view that the wording in proposed section 329LD will still allow for MATES
in Construction to continue their work, provided they take steps to convert
their operations into a 'fee-for-service' model which would qualify as services
provided at market value on commercial terms.[169]
The Committee therefore did not reiterate its
recommendation that proposed section 329LD be amended, and instead
recommended that the Bill be passed.[170]
Restrictions on distributions of income or capital
A number of stakeholders were critical of the restrictions
on the types of distributions of income or capital that the Bill proposes to
impose on WEFs. For example, Protect Services Ltd previously argued:
Section 329LD does not allow for a distribution of income
nor prior years income under s329LD(3) to sponsors of the fund.
Distributions of income are permitted to fund members (workers) under
s329LD(1)(b) and to contributors (employers) under s329LD(1)(c). This change in
the framework for distribution of income may have the effect of both workers and
employers claiming an entitlement to the income of investment of capital. If
the fund operators (which are generally trustees of trusts) were required to
take into consideration a claim of these beneficiaries on the income of the
fund when setting the fund’s investment strategy, this could have the
unintended consequence of shifting the core purpose of Registered Worker
Entitlement Funds away from capital preservation in order to generate income to
meet beneficiary expectations... it is important to note that trustees of
retail superannuation funds can distribute income to their sponsors instead of
returning that excess money to fund members and likewise companies can
distribute excess to their shareholders via dividends. We submit that the
only reason that such distributions are being prevented in the case of our fund
is because some of those sponsors are unions.[171]
(emphasis added)
The ACTU made a similar point, arguing that if passed in
its current form, WEFs would become ‘the only managed investment schemes in
Australia’ that would be:
- prohibited
from distributing any income that they generate to their operator or sponsor
and
- restricted
in how their operator may dispose of income earned from operating the fund.[172]
Human rights criticism of registration requirements for
worker entitlement funds
The PJCHR previously expressed concern about the proposed
WEF registration regime discussed above. The PJCHR noted that under condition
two in proposed section 329LA a WEF will only be able to be operated by
a corporation and cannot be operated by a registered organisation (that is, a
trade union or employer organisation). In addition, it noted that under proposed
sections 329JA to 329JB it will be an offence to operate an unregistered
WEF and a civil penalty provision for employers to contribute to such a fund.[173]
The PJCHR noted that the interpretation of the right to
freedom of association and the right to just and favourable conditions of work
is informed by the ILO treaties, and that ILO Convention 87 specifically
protects the right of workers to autonomy of union processes, organising their
administration and activities and formulating their own programs without
interference. The PJCHR stated:
Providing that registered organisations cannot administer
'worker entitlement funds' and limiting the purposes for which such money may
be used would appear to engage and limit these rights. However, the statement
of compatibility does not acknowledge this limitation so does not provide an
assessment of whether the limitation is permissible as a matter of international
human rights law.[174]
After considering the Minister’s responses, the PJCHR
concluded:
... it was unclear from the information provided that ... the
measure is the least rights restrictive approach. It was unclear from the
response whether there are any other reasonably available less rights
restrictive alternatives to prohibiting registered organisations from operating
such funds in general. Accordingly, it was uncertain whether the measure
constitutes a proportionate limitation on the right to freedom of association.
Based on the information provided and the above analysis, the committee was
unable to conclude that the measure is a proportionate limitation on the right to
freedom of association and the right to just and favourable conditions at work.[175]
Other provisions related to authorised uses of
contributions and income
Under the new annual reporting requirements WEFs must
report on training and welfare payments. Specifically they will be required to
include in the annual report details of:
- the
total amount of payments paid for training or welfare services
- the
amount of each individual training or welfare services payment made
- who
the payments were made to
- the
purpose of each individual payment and
- the
voting directors for voted to make the payment.[176]
WEFs must also report on payments made in relation to
certain types of insurance that can be made from member contributions.[177]
As noted above, under condition 21 WEFs must notify each
member, as soon as is practicable after the payment is approved, about training
and welfare service related payments. That notification must detail who the
payment was made to, what training or welfare services will be provided and the
voting directors for voted to make the payment. Alternatively, the operator of
the WEF can ensure that each member has access to such information on the
website of the fund.[178]
The penalty for non-compliance with conditions six and
seven (and hence proposed sections 329LC and 329LD) is 100
penalty units and/or deregistration.[179]
Likewise the penalty for non-compliance with condition 14 (and hence proposed
section 329LF) is 100 penalty units and/or deregistration.[180]
The Commissioner may also issue a direction to a fund to
comply with an ongoing condition.[181]
Failure to comply with such a direction attracts a maximum penalty of 60
penalty units.[182]
Finally, the Commissioner may also seek an injunction from
the Federal Court under existing section 308 of the FWRO Act in relation
to a breach of a civil penalty provision.
New
requirements and other changes proposed by the Bill
The Bill adds a new requirement not contained in the
Previous Bill relating to the information that must be contained in annual
reports in relation to training or welfare payments covered by proposed
subsection 329LD(2). Proposed subparagraph 329LF(3)(g)(v) provides that
annual reports must also include the voting directors who voted to make each
such individual training or welfare payment. The Explanatory Memorandum
contains no explanation for the rationale behind this new requirement.
In addition, proposed paragraph 329LF(2)(b) now
provides that annual reports for a WEF must be provided to the Commissioner
within four months after the end of the financial year, rather than the three
month period provided for in the Previous Bill. No explanation for this change
is contained in the Explanatory Memorandum. However, the Government notes that ‘in
response to concerns from’ WEFs it ‘amended the Bill to delay the commencement
of the provisions that affect them, to give them sufficient time to adjust to
the new scheme’ and the amendment is consistent with that stated position.[183]
Worker entitlement fund rules
Proposed section 329NJ provides that the Minister
may, by legislative instrument, make WEF Rules that prescribe matters:
- required
or permitted to be prescribed by the WEF Rules or
- necessary
or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to the
amendments to the FWRO Act contained in proposed Part 3C.
As the breadth of the WEF Rules and their interaction with
the reforms proposed by the Bill has attracted substantial criticism from
stakeholders, it is examined below in detail. However, it should be noted that
the WEF Rules are legislative instruments and therefore subject to
Parliamentary scrutiny and disallowance.[184]
What can be prescribed by the WEF Rules?
Apart from the broad drafting contained in proposed
subsection 329NJ(1), a range of other provisions allow the WEF Rules to
deal with a wide array of different matters. Some of these are discussed below.
Types of funds regulated
The WEF Rules can be used to prescribe that certain types
of funds are worker entitlement funds, and therefore must be registered (as
operating an unregistered WEF is an offence).[185]
This was criticised by some stakeholders on the basis that it allows the
Minister ‘to increase the scope of coverage of the legislation’ and therefore
this introduces ‘a source of significant business risk’ rooted in increased
uncertainty.[186]
The ACTU also previously argued:
The Minister is, on the face of it, empowered to prescribe
funds in this way even if they do not provide a benefit to the members that
would meet the definition of worker entitlements. The most troubling aspect of
this executive power, aside from the lack of certainty, is that union operated
funds that comply with the law may be prescribed, with the result that the
Union instantly will be liable for a criminal offence under proposed section
329JA of the [FW]RO Act. It is to be noted that the scope created in these
provisions also extends significantly on the scope which formed the context of
the discussion in the Royal Commission’s final report.[187]
Constitutional requirements
The WEF Rules can be used to impose requirements in
relation to the constitution of a WEF.[188]
As such, the WEF Rules can be used to regulate a broad array of matters related
to membership, elections, numbers and types of directors, voting requirements
and so forth.[189]
United Voice argued:
The extent of regulation and interference in internal
affairs, down to the level of requiring a union to submit its internal policies
to the regulator, is unparalleled. It certainly is not a feature of corporate
regulation, despite persistent misconduct, which harms workers, consumers and
the economy, and includes wage theft, fraud, insider trading and money
laundering.[190]
A number of other stakeholders previously expressed
similar concerns about the ability of the WEF Rules to regulate the contents of
the constitutions of WEFs, arguing it was an inappropriate degree of
interference and regulation.[191]
Capital adequacy and liquidity requirements
The WEF Rules can be used to prescribe both capital
adequacy and liquidity requirements that WEFs must comply with.[192]
Some stakeholders expressed concerns about this power,
noting that both capital adequacy and liquidity are not defined, nor is there
any indication regarding minimum or maximum timeframes in which WEFs would be
‘required to achieve this position’.[193]
Protect Services Ltd argued:
We strongly believe that such fundamental parameters should
be clearly set out in the relevant legislation, rather than being prescribed by
the Minister. We also urge that such rules become available as soon as possible
in order for the Board to consider any investment portfolio implications.[194]
Governance
The WEF Rules can be used to prescribe ‘governance’
requirements that WEFs must comply with.[195]
Some stakeholders expressed concern about this power. For example, Protect
Services Ltd argued that as ‘governance’ requirements are not defined in the
Bill it would ‘in effect allow the Minister to provide broad conditions so long
as there is a tenuous link to “governance”’ and thus expose WEFs to operational
uncertainty and risk.[196]
Specific impact on annual and audit reports
Proposed paragraph 329LF(3)(h) requires WEFs to include
in their annual report ‘any other matters’ prescribed by the WEF Rules.
Likewise proposed paragraph 329LF(5)(d) requires auditors to include in
their audit report ‘any other matters’ prescribed by the WEF Rules.
Further, in relation to the contents of the auditor’s
report, proposed subsections 329NJ(2) and (3) effectively allow
the WEF Rules to specify how WEFs are to be audited, including by applying,
adopting or incorporating (with or without modification) relevant accounting or
auditing and assurance standards in force at a particular time. Protect
Services Ltd previously criticised the above requirements:
S329LF(3)(h) and s329LF(5)(d)– allow the Minister to specify
any ‘other matter’ to be included in an Annual Report and Auditor’s report.
There are no restrictions on the period of notice to obtain the information and
report on it. The condition is far-reaching and has the potential for matters
to be included in annual reports of funds, such as terms of contracts,
directors’ and officers’ details, which are not imposed on other corporations.
Additional reporting and/or auditing requirements, of an as-yet unknown extent,
have potential to add significant cost.
These
catch-all provisions provide a serious degree of uncertainty in operating a
business when key operating parameters are at the whim of a Minister –
conditions that are not imposed on other corporations.[197]
The ACTU was also critical of this aspect of the potential
application of the WEF Rules arguing:
The worker entitlement rules will enable the minister to
directly... impose requirements on the content of the annual reports and audit
reports of the funds. This rule-making power can be used to introduce change
just for the sake of it, to constantly keep these funds on the hop, tying them
up in red tape.[198]
Limits on the rule-making power of the Minister
Whilst the breadth of the matters allowed to be dealt with
by the WEF Rules is substantial, there are limits on the rule-making power of
the Minister. First, proposed subsection 329NJ(4) provides that the WEF
Rules cannot:
- create
an offence or civil penalty
- provide
powers of arrest, detention, entry, search or seizure
- impose
a tax
- set
an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund or
- directly
amend the text of the FWRO Act.
Second, proposed subsection 329NJ(5) provides that
where the WEF Rules are inconsistent with the Regulations made under the FWRO
Act, the Rules have no effect to the extent of any such inconsistency, but
are taken to be consistent to the extent they are capable of operating
concurrently with the Regulations.
Consequences of non-compliance with conditions other than
de-registration
Broadly speaking, the Bill proposes a range of
consequences for operators who fail to comply with the conditions for
registration. These are:
- infringement
notices
- civil
penalties and
- de-registration.
Whilst the Bill also creates a criminal offence in
relation to operating an unregistered WEF (discussed above) the civil
enforcement regime is focused on non-compliance with conditions of registration
as a WEF by operators, along with de-registration in certain cases (discussed
below separately).
Civil penalties
The Bill creates a range of civil penalties for failing to
comply with conditions of registration. Single-employer funds are subject to a
smaller range of penalties. As noted above, single employer funds that elect to
be registered (and hence regulated) are subject to fewer conditions than WEFs that
manage contributions from multiple employers. The Department of Employment previously
noted:
... lighter-touch regulation for single-employer funds is
appropriate. These funds are set up to protect the entitlements only for an
employer’s own employees, while other multi-employer funds hold millions of
dollars’ worth of entitlements and accept contributions from thousands of
employers for thousands of workers. Overregulation of single-employer funds may
deter employers from establishing these funds entirely which might make
workers’ entitlements more vulnerable to non-payment, particularly in the case
of a business winding up.[199]
This ‘light touch’ regulation is reflected in the fact
that many of the civil penalties for breaching conditions of registration do
not apply to single-employer funds. The table below provides an outline of the
main civil penalty provisions in relation to breaching conditions of
registration and their application.
Table 1: proposed civil penalties for non-compliance
with registration conditions
Condition(s)
|
Provision
|
Penalty
|
Notes
|
Four (equal and non-discriminatory treatment)
|
Proposed section 329MC
|
100 penalty units
|
Does not apply to single-employer funds.
|
Five (classes of membership)
|
Proposed section 329MD
|
100 penalty units
|
Does not apply to single-employer funds.
|
Six and parts of Seven (constitutional aspects)
|
Proposed section 329ME
|
100 penalty units
|
Does not apply to single-employer funds.
|
Conditions 14 to 21
|
Proposed section 329MF
|
100 penalty units
|
Does not apply to single-employer funds.
|
Source: Fair Work Laws Amendment (Proper Use of Worker
Benefits) Bill 2019.
In addition to the above penalties, proposed section
329MA enables the Commissioner to give an operator of a registered WEF fund
that is not a single-employer fund a written notice directing the operator to
take, or stop taking, one or more actions specified in the notice, provided
that the Commissioner is satisfied that giving the notice is in the best
interests of the fund’s contributors or members.
Such a notice given by the Commissioner is for the purposes
of ensuring that:
- an
ongoing condition in relation to a WEF is being complied with or
- a
report, notice, information or a statement given in accordance with conditions
14 to 19 is not false or misleading in a material particular.
A failure to comply with a direction is a civil liability
contravention with a maximum penalty of 60 penalty units.[200]
The Government notes that such directions and associated civil penalties will
operate ‘as an alternative to deregistration’.[201]
Infringement notice regime
Proposed section 329MB provides that each of the
civil penalty provisions in proposed sections 329ME (constitution) and 329MF
(giving information) that apply to operators of registered WEFs that are not
single-employer funds are subject to the infringement notice framework
established under Part 5 of the Regulatory Powers
(Standard Provisions) Act 2014.[202]
An infringement notice is:
... a notice of a pecuniary penalty imposed on a person by
statute setting out particulars of an alleged contravention of a law ...
Infringement notices are administrative methods for dealing with certain
breaches of the law and are typically used for low-level offences and where a
high volume of uncontested contraventions is likely.[203]
Proposed section 329MB will allow a small group of
persons with particular expertise in the regulation of registered organisations
and their associated entities to be authorised as infringement officers by the
Commissioner. In contrast to the Previous Bill however, such persons must be a Senior
Executive Service (SES) employee or acting SES employee. The effect of proposed
section 329MB is that such employees will be permitted to exercise powers
and functions in relation to infringement notices (such as issuing infringement
notices) as part of the overall enforcement regime created by the Bill.[204]
De-registration of worker entitlement funds
Proposed section 329MG sets out the process for
deregistration of a WEF for non-compliance with an ongoing condition of
registration. Importantly, within this process there are certain circumstances
in which the Commissioner has no discretion and deregistration is mandated.
Show cause notice
The first step in the deregistration process is the
Commissioner giving a WEF operator a show-cause notice. However, before issuing
a show-cause notice the Commissioner must consider:
- the
seriousness of the non-compliance
- any
previous non-compliance with ongoing conditions in relation to the WEF
- whether
deregistration would be in the best interests of the fund members
- whether
action other than deregistration (such as the imposition of civil penalties)
would be more appropriate in the circumstances and
- any
other matters.[205]
If the Commissioner determines it is appropriate to issue
a show cause notice, the notice must:
- set
out the grounds for the proposed deregistration
- include
the proposed date of effect (which must be at least 56 days after the day the
notice was given) and
- invite
submissions on the proposed deregistration within a specified time-frame (at
least 28 days after the notice was given).[206]
The notice must also be published on the Commission’s
website.[207]
Mandatory de-registration following the issue of a show-cause
notice
If a show-cause notice related to non-compliance with
conditions one or two[208]
then, after considering any submissions of the operator, if the Commissioner
continues to be satisfied that the condition has not or is not being complied
with the Commissioner must, by written notice, deregister the WEF.[209]
The deregistration takes effect from the day of the proposed deregistration
provided in the written notice. Once deregistered, the Commissioner must remove
the details of the WEF from the register as soon as practicable.[210]
Discretionary de-registration following the issue of a
show-cause notice
If a show-cause notice related to non-compliance with
ongoing conditions other than conditions one and two then, after considering
any submissions of the operator, if the Commissioner continues to be satisfied
that the condition has not or is not being complied with the Commissioner may,
by written notice, deregister the WEF.[211]
The deregistration takes effect from the day of the
proposed deregistration provided in the written notice. Once deregistered, the
Commissioner must remove the details of the WEF from the register as soon as
practicable.[212]
If the Commissioner determines not to deregister the WEF,
the Commissioner must within 14 days of making that decision notify the
operator of the decision and the reasons for the decision and publish a copy of
the notice on the Commission’s website.[213]
Natural justice requirements
Proposed section 329MK provides that the show-cause
process exhaustively deals with the natural justice (procedural fairness)
requirements in relation to the deregistration process. As noted earlier in
this digest, the Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills raised
some concerns about this provision.
Deregistration on other grounds
A WEF maybe also be deregistered on request by the
operator, or when a WEF has been fully wound up or otherwise ceases to exist.[214]
In addition, where the operator of a single-employer fund that elected to
register as a WEF revokes that election, the WEF is also deregistered.[215]
Post-deregistration obligations
The Bill retains the post-deregistration obligations
contained in the Previous Bill, as well as including a new obligation. These
requirements do not apply to single-employer funds.[216]
Consistent with the Previous Bill, proposed subsection
329NC(3) provides that a former operator of a deregistered WEF must, no
more than 90 days after deregistration takes effect provide:
- a
final annual report
- final
information for contributors and
- final
information for fund members.
Each requirement is a civil penalty provision with a
maximum penalty of 100 penalty units. The requirements do not apply if the
registration of the fund is reinstated before the end of the 90-day period
following the deregistration day and do not apply to single-employer funds.
Proposed subsection 329NC(2) imposes a new
requirement that a former operator of a deregistered WEF must, no more than seven
days after the deregistration takes effect, give a written notice to the contributors
of the WEF informing them of the deregistration. The Explanatory Memorandum
notes that this is to ‘ensure that contributors do not inadvertently contribute
to a deregistered fund’.[217]
Reinstatement of registration
Other than through the appeals process (discussed below) proposed
section 329ND allows the Commissioner to re-register a WEF if satisfied:
- it
should not have been deregistered or
- that
the conditions that led to deregistration are now being complied with.
The Commissioner must include the details of the
reinstated worker entitlement fund on the register of funds as soon as
practicable.
Appeal rights in relation to deregistration decisions
Proposed section 329NI provides that appeals
against a decision to deregister a WEF can be made to the AAT.
Information gathering and sharing powers
Proposed section 329NF provides information
gathering powers to the Commissioner. In summary, if the Commissioner believes
on reasonable grounds that a person has information or a document:
- relevant
to determining whether an ongoing condition applicable to a registered WEF has
been or is being complied with or
- whether proposed section 329NC (in relation to final reports after
deregistration) has been complied with
the Commissioner may require, by issuing a written notice,
a person to give the Commissioner specified information or documents or a
specified kind of information or documents.[218]
The written notice must specify a time, at least 14 days after the notice was
given, for compliance with the requirement to provide information or documents
to the Commissioner.[219]
A civil penalty of 30 penalty units applies if a person
who is given a notice does not comply with it, except where the person has a
reasonable excuse, including that to answer a question or produce a document
may tend to incriminate the person or expose the person to a penalty.[220]
As such, the proposed information gathering powers do not abrogate the
privilege against self-incrimination, nor do they abrogate the right to legal
professional privilege.[221]
Information sharing powers
Currently paragraph 329G(2)(b) of the FWRO Act
allows the Commissioner to disclose information if they reasonably believe that
its disclosure is likely to assist in the administration or enforcement of a
law of the Commonwealth, a state or territory. In spite of the existence of
this broad power, proposed section 329NH requires the Commissioner to
provide to the Commissioner of Taxation:
- a
copy of constitutions of registered WEFs and funds for which an application for
registration has been made and
- information
about changes to the constitutions of registered WEFs.
Publishing of annual reports of WEFs
Proposed section 329NG provides that the
Commissioner must publish the annual reports of registered WEFs on its website.
Transitional rules for WEFs
The Bill contains detailed transitional rules regarding WEFs.
These are described on pages 32 to 36 of the Explanatory
Memorandum. The transition period for certain funds has been extended from six
months under the Previous Bill to 12 months in the Bill.[222]
Key issues and provisions: prohibiting terms requiring payment
to WEFs
Modern
awards and payments to WEFs
The RCTUGC recommended that the FW Act be amended:
.... to make unlawful any term of an enterprise agreement
requiring or permitting contributions for the benefit of an employee to be made
to any fund (other than a superannuation fund) providing for, or for the
payment of, employee entitlements, training or welfare unless the fund is:
(a) a registered worker entitlement fund (see Recommendation
45); or
(b) a registered charity.[223]
The amendments proposed by the Bill differ substantially
from this recommendation. For example, proposed section 151A of the FW
Act, at item 3 of Schedule 2 to the Bill, prohibits any term of a
modern award requiring or permitting contributions to be made to a WEF unless
it is registered and each employee can choose the registered WEF to which the
payments are to be made.
Whilst the RCTUGC made no recommendations in relation to
imposing such a prohibition in relation to modern awards the Government argues:
The Bill will amend the FW Act to prohibit any term of a
modern award (section 151A) or an enterprise agreement (paragraphs 194(i)-(k))
requiring or permitting contributions to be made to any fund other than a
superannuation fund, a registered worker entitlement fund or a registered
charity or deductible gift recipient (recommendation 49)... The legitimate
objective of these amendments is to address the potential for misappropriation
of funds and to avoid conflicts of interest and possible coercion... The
provisions... are necessary to support the governance and disclosure requirements...
that will operate to protect the interests of members. The provisions are
required to respond to the findings of two Royal Commissions on the imperative
to properly regulate worker entitlement funds and the significant amounts of
money the funds control that should be used solely for the benefit of workers.
Preventing enterprise agreements from including terms
requiring or allowing payments to unregistered funds provides the necessary
incentives for funds to become registered. In return, the registration
requirements in the Bill will provide workers with a guarantee that any
contribution made to a worker entitlement fund on their behalf will be subject
to appropriate scrutiny and oversight. The restrictions are a proportionate
response to the need to regulate worker entitlement funds and protect the
rights of workers.[224]
This restriction has been criticised by some stakeholders.
For example, it is argued that introducing the ability for employees to choose
a fund for contributions and insurance payments to be made into on their behalf
‘would be onerous and add extra responsibility on the employer, not the Fund,
to source more than one fund’ and, because of the small number of funds
operating in some states, would ‘increase the administration and general cost
of the employer doing business’.[225]
Further it is also argued that comparisons with choice of
superannuation funds rules are inappropriate for a range of reasons including
that ‘Registered Worker Entitlement Funds are not investment vehicles and are
not intended to generate investment income for members, but to preserve their
entitlement to capital’.[226]
The CFMMEU also argued that the prohibition against modern awards (and
enterprise agreements) requiring or permitting contributions to be made to a
specific registered WEF unless such a term enables employees to choose their
own WEF would undermine the effectiveness of WEFs generally:
It should also be recognised that the pooling of workers
capital gives all members of the funds a combined purchasing power that they
would not otherwise enjoy. If individual workers disperse contributions to a
wide range of funds, or if, as the Worker Benefits Bill proposes, a plethora of
single employer funds are created which are completely outside the scheme of
regulation, then this will quickly undermine the commerciality of benefits that
the funds can provide. This will result in a reduced level of benefit or an
increase in the unit cost of providing the benefit/s, or both.[227]
The ACTU argued that prohibiting employment instruments
such as modern awards from mandating contributions to certain WEFs is a ‘clear
contravention of Article 4 of ILO Convention 98 and the principle of
voluntary agreement making’.[228]
Enterprise agreements, employment contracts and payments
to WEFs
The Bill would amend the FW Act to prohibit any
term of an enterprise agreement (proposed paragraphs 194(i)‑(k),at
item 4 of Schedule 2) or an employment contract (proposed section 333B,
at item 8 of Schedule 2) from requiring or permitting contributions to
be made to any fund that makes payments or provides training in relation to welfare
services or assistance other than a:
- superannuation
fund
- registered
WEF
- registered
charity or
- deductible
gift recipient.
The prohibition on such terms in enterprise agreements is
broadly consistent with the recommendation of the RCTUGC. Likewise, whilst the
RCTUGC did not recommend such prohibitions apply to employment contracts, given
that they usually—in conjunction with a modern award or enterprise
agreement—form the basis or totality of the employment arrangement, the
inclusion of such a prohibition in terms of employment contracts is arguably
consistent with the underlying purpose of the RCTUGC’s recommendation. That
said, the inclusion of deductible gift recipients in the type of funds that
payments can be made to under the terms of an enterprise agreement or
employment contract goes further than what was recommended by the RCTUGC, but
in doing so adds a degree of flexibility beyond what was recommended.
Currently subsection 186(4) of the FW
Act provides that before approving an enterprise agreement, the FWC must be
satisfied that an agreement does not include any unlawful terms (defined in
section 194). As the amendments expand the list of unlawful terms as noted
above, the amendments would prevent an enterprise agreement containing these
terms from being approved by the FWC, and therefore being legally enforceable.
The extension of this prohibition to terms in employment contracts will prevent
them from being used to circumvent the prohibition against their inclusion in
enterprise agreements and modern awards.
Changes from Previous Bill
Application of prohibitions of certain
terms
Item 26 of
Schedule 2 of the Bill inserts proposed Part 7 into Schedule 1 to the FW
Act. Proposed clause 32 of Schedule 1 to the FW Act provides
that the prohibitions on terms of modern awards, enterprise agreements and
employment contracts in Part 1 of Schedule 2 to the Bill will apply only to
modern awards made or varied after commencement and to enterprise agreements
and employment contracts that are made after the commencement of the
amendments, but do not apply in relation to a transitioning approved fund or
transitioning non-approved fund, as defined by proposed clause 31 of Schedule 1 to the FW Act. The
Explanatory Memorandum notes ‘this means a transitioning approved fund or a
transitioning non-approved fund can be named in a modern award or enterprise
agreement’.[229]
Human rights concerns
The PJCHR raised concerns about the
compatibility of the proposed prohibition on any term of a modern award or an
enterprise agreement requiring or permitting contributions for the
benefit of an employee to be made to any fund other than a superannuation fund,
a registered WEF or a registered charity with the right to freedom of
association and the right to just and favourable conditions at work (which
includes the right to collectively bargain without unreasonable and
disproportionate interference from the state).[230] The PJCHR noted that the
above rights are informed by ILO treaties, and hence:
The principle of 'autonomy of bargaining' in
the negotiation of collective agreements is an 'essential element' of Article 4
of ILO Convention No. 98 which envisages that parties will be free to reach their
own settlement of a collective agreement without interference.[231]
The PJCHR stated that prohibiting the
inclusion of particular terms in an enterprise agreement interferes with the
outcomes of the bargaining process and therefore ‘engages and limits the right
to just and favourable
conditions of work and the right to collectively bargain as an aspect of the
right to freedom of association’.[232]
The PJCHR noted that international supervisory mechanisms have previously
raised specific concerns in relation to current restrictions imposed on
bargaining outcomes under Australian domestic law.[233]
The PJCHR noted that the prohibition may
be permissible, provided certain criteria are satisfied, including that the
measure must address a legitimate objective, be rationally connected to that
objective and be a proportionate way to achieve that objective.[234] In that regard the PJCHR
noted:
... the statement of compatibility provides
limited information as to whether the limitation is proportionate. In order to
be a proportionate limitation on human rights a measure must be the least
rights restrictive way of achieving its stated objective.[235]
The PJCHR concluded that the measure
engages and limits the right to freedom of association, the right to
collectively bargain, and the right to just and favourable conditions of work and raised questions as to its compatibility with
those rights. The PJCHR sought from the Minister advice regarding:
- whether the limitation is a reasonable and proportionate measure to
achieve that objective (including findings by relevant international supervisory
mechanisms about whether the limitation is permissible) and
- whether consultation has occurred with the relevant workers' and employers'
organisations in relation to
the measure.[236]
After considering the Minister’s responses, the PJCHR
noted:
... while the minister's response referred to ILO comments
about when it may be legitimate to limit particular rights, it did not address
the specific concerns raised by international monitoring bodies in relation to
Australia's restrictions on bargaining outcomes through prohibiting particular
matters in enterprise agreements... In light of the concerns raised by these
international monitoring bodies as to the existing restrictions on bargaining
outcomes in Australia, it is likely that any amendments which further restrict
such matters would also raise concerns.[237]
Ultimately the PJCHR concluded that the provisions in the
Bill prohibiting terms of modern awards, enterprise agreements and employment
contracts from requiring or permitting payments to specific WEFs ‘is a further
restriction on bargaining outcomes’ and therefore concluded the prohibitions
are ‘likely to be incompatible with the right to collectively bargain’.[238]
Key issues and provisions: prohibition of election
payments
Schedule 3 deals with election payments in relation to
industrial associations. It will commence immediately after Parts 1 to 3 of
Schedule 2 commence.[239]
The RCTUGC recommended that the FW Act be amended
to:
... prohibit any term of a modern award, enterprise agreement
or contract of employment permitting an employer to deduct, or requiring an
employee to pay, from an employee’s salary an amount to be paid towards an
election fund.[240]
The amendments in Schedule 3 of the Bill give effect to
and are consistent with this recommendation. Item 1 will amend section
12 of the FW Act to insert a definition of ‘regulated
election purpose’. A ‘regulated election purpose’ is defined as a payment:
.... made for a purpose that includes the
purpose of funding, supporting or promoting the election of a candidate or
group of candidates for an election or elections to an office in an industrial
association (including the election of a person or group of persons in a future
election or elections).[241]
Item 2 amends section 194 of the FW Act to
include in the definition of an ‘unlawful term’ of an enterprise agreement a
term that requires or permits a payment to be made for a regulated election
purpose. The effect of this is to prevent the FWC from approving
agreements with such terms, and prevent those agreements from being legally
enforceable. Proposed section 333C, at item 5 of Schedule
3, imposes the same prohibition on the inclusion of such a term in employment
contracts. None of the amendments in Schedule 3 appear to deal with the
inclusion of such terms in modern awards.
Item 6 provides that the above prohibitions will
apply to enterprise agreements and employment contracts made after the
commencement of the amendments in Schedule 3. That is the prohibition will not
apply retrospectively.
Human rights concerns
The PJCHR raised concerns about the compatibility of the
proposed prohibition of any term of an enterprise agreement or contract of
employment permitting or requiring employee contributions to an election fund
with the right to just and favourable conditions of work and the right to
collectively bargain as an aspect of the right to freedom of association, as it
represents an interference with the outcomes of collective bargaining
processes.[242]
The PJCHR noted that the Explanatory Memorandum ‘only
asserts that the measure 'is reasonable, necessary and proportionate’ and
‘provides no reasoning or evidence’ as to whether the proposed prohibition ‘is
rationally connected (that is, effective to achieve) and proportionate to the
stated objectives’.[243]
The PJCHR stated that this ‘raises questions as to whether the measure is
compatible with the right to freedom of association and the right to just and
favourable conditions at work’[244]
and sought from the Minister advice regarding:
- whether
there is reasoning or evidence that establishes that the stated objective
addresses a pressing or substantial concern or whether the proposed changes are
otherwise aimed at achieving a legitimate objective
- how
the measure is effective to achieve (that is, rationally connected to) its
stated objective and
- whether
the limitation is a reasonable and proportionate measure to achieve the stated
objective (including whether the measure is the least rights restrictive way of
achieving its stated objective).[245]
After considering the Minister’s responses, the PJCHR
noted that ensuring that non-incumbent candidates for elected union positions
are not disadvantaged and that employees can choose whether to contribute to a
particular fund in the particular circumstances ‘would appear to constitute
legitimate objectives for the purposes of international human rights law’.[246]
Further, the PJCHR noted ‘the measures would also appear to be rationally
connected to these objectives’.[247]
In relation to whether the measure is reasonable and
proportionate, the PJCHR noted that employees will still be able to make
genuine contributions, voluntarily and independently of an industrial instrument
and that therefore ‘on balance, this would appear to be a proportionate
limitation on bargaining outcomes’.[248]
The PJCHR therefore concluded that the prohibition on
enterprise agreements or employment contracts containing terms requiring or
permitting a payment to specific election funds ‘appears to be compatible with
the right to freedom of association and the right to just and favourable conditions
of work’.[249]
Key issues and provisions: coerced payments to employee
benefit funds
Schedule 4 deals with coerced payments to employee benefit
funds. Items 1 and 3 will commence on the earlier of a day to be
fixed by proclamation or six months after Royal Assent.[250]
Item 2 will commence at the later of immediately after item 1
commences and the time Parts 1 to 3 of Schedule 2 commence.[251]
What the law
does already
Arguably, existing section 343 of the FW Act
already prohibits the coercion of payments to employee benefit funds (that is,
funds that would be considered WEFs under the regulatory framework proposed by
the Bill) where such coercion is in relation to a proposed enterprise agreement.
What the
Bill will do
Despite the existence of section 343 of the FW Act the
RCTUGC recommended:
A new civil remedy provision be added to the Fair Work Act
2009 (Cth) prohibiting a person from organising or taking (or threatening
to organise or take) any action, other than protected industrial action,
with intent to coerce an employer to pay amounts to a particular
employee benefit fund, superannuation fund or employee insurance scheme.[252]
(emphasis added)
The amendments in Schedule 4 purport to give effect to
this recommendation.[253]
Proposed section 355A prohibits a person from organising or taking, or
threatening to organise or take, any action (other than protected industrial
action) against another person with intent to coerce that other person
(or a third person) to make payments to certain employee benefit funds
including:
- superannuation
funds
- training
funds
- welfare
funds
- life
or disability insurance cover funds
- WEFs
and
- certain
types pf managed investment schemes that are promoted by an organisation or
related party.[254]
In this regard, as the prohibition is expressed as
applying to any coercion against another person, rather than an employer, and
also applies to types of funds arguably not captured by the RCTUGC’s
recommendation, the proposed amendment would have a broader application than
recommended by the RCTUGC.
Proposed subsection 355A(2) provides that the
prohibition does not apply to protected industrial action. The penalty for such
coercion is a civil penalty of up to 60 penalty units.[255]
Human rights concerns
The PJCHR expressed concerns about the measure in both
relation to the right to strike and freedom of expression and assembly. The
PJCHR noted that the right to strike is protected as an aspect of both the
right to freedom of association and the right to form and join trade unions
under Article 22 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
(ICCPR) and Article 8 of the International Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR).[256]
However the right to strike is not absolute and may be limited in certain
circumstances.[257]
The PJCHR also noted that the right to freedom of assembly and the right to
freedom of expression are protected by Articles 19 and 21 of the ICCPR,
but those rights may be limited for certain prescribed purposes (for example,
where it is necessary to respect the rights of others, to protect national
security, public safety, public order, public health or morals) provided those
limitations are prescribed by law, reasonable, necessary and proportionate to
achieving the prescribed purpose.[258]
The PJCHR noted that the prohibition proposed by Schedule
4 of the Bill and proposed section 355A in particular engages and limits
the right to strike:
This is because it may impose an additional penalty or
disincentive to taking unprotected industrial action with the intent of
influencing the conduct of an employer. The existing restrictions on taking
industrial action under Australian domestic law have been consistently
criticised by international supervisory mechanisms as going beyond what is
permissible.[259]
The PJCHR noted that whilst the Explanatory Memorandum ‘acknowledges
that the measure engages work-related rights’ it ‘does not expressly
acknowledge that the right to strike is an aspect of the right to freedom of association’.[260]
The PJCHR further noted that the prohibition ‘on forms of protest action
appears to be potentially quite broad’[261]
and therefore ‘may extend to prohibiting forms of expression or assembly’ and
therefore ‘it may engage and limit the right to freedom of expression and
assembly’.[262]
The PJCHR further noted:
- beyond
providing a description of the measure, the Explanatory Memorandum does not
clearly identify the legitimate objective of the measure[263]
- the
Explanatory Memorandum appears to argue that the measure in fact supports
freedom of association and human rights, but provides no explanation of the
reasoning for this view[264]
and
therefore the statement of compatibility contained in the
Explanatory Memorandum:
... does not meet the standards outlined in the committee's Guidance
Note 1, which require that where a limitation on a right is proposed the
statement of compatibility provide a reasoned and evidence-based assessment of
how the measure pursues a legitimate objective, is rationally connected to that
objective, and is proportionate.[265]
The PJCHR concluded that there were ‘questions as to
whether the measure is compatible with the right to strike as an aspect of the
right to freedom of association’[266]
and therefore sought from the Minister further advice regarding:
- whether
the measure is aimed at achieving a legitimate objective for the purposes of
international human rights law
- how
the measure is effective to achieve (that is, rationally connected to) that
objective
- the
scope of any restriction on the right to freedom of expression and assembly and
- whether
the limitation is a reasonable and proportionate measure to achieve the stated
objective (including any relevant safeguards and whether the measure is the
least rights restrictive way of achieving its stated objective).[267]
After considering the Minister’s response, the PJCHR concluded
that the measure ‘did not appear to be a proportionate limitation on the right
to strike as an aspect of the right to freedom of association’[268]
and further:
As the information provided to the committee did not include
a substantive assessment as to whether any limitation on the right to freedom
of expression and assembly is permissible, it was not possible to conclude that
the measure is proportionate.[269]
Key issues and provisions: disclosable arrangements
Schedule 5 inserts a new Part 3D into Chapter 11 of the FWRO
Act dealing with ‘disclosable arrangements’. Items 1 to 3 and
item 5 of the Schedule will commence on the later of a day to be
fixed by proclamation or six months after Royal Assent.[270]
Item 4 will commence at the later of the time Parts 1 to 3 of Schedule 2
commence and immediately after the commencement of items 1 to 3.[271]
The RCTUGC examined the types of arrangements that will be
captured by the amendments in Schedule 5 of the Bill. In framing its
recommendation, the RCTUGC argued:
The more suitable course is to introduce, whether by
legislation or regulation, provisions specifically dealing with disclosure to
employers of the nature and quantum of the pecuniary benefits received
(including amounts that can reasonably be expected to be received) by unions from
the operation of employee insurance schemes. The quantum should include
both the total amount received, but also the proportion of the payment made by
the employer that will be received by the union. The benefits disclosed should
include:
(a) direct cash payments to the union;
(b) direct
cash payments to an entity related to the union or at the direction of the
union, or to any entity where the money, or part of it, is eventually paid to
the union;
(c) other
financial benefits provided to the union, such as the payment of insurance
premiums on the union’s behalf;
(d) other
financial benefits provided to an entity related to the union, or to any entity
where the value of the financial benefit, or part of it, is transferred to the
union; and
(e) financial benefits provided solely to union members
(for example, ambulance or health benefits).
The disclosure should be short, simple and would capture any
form of commission or fees.[272]
(emphasis added)
The above gives context to the RCTUGC’s recommendation 47
that amendments be made to the Corporations Act requiring disclosure of
‘the direct and indirect pecuniary benefits obtained by them in connection with
employee insurance products’ and that the provisions should require:
- a
branch of a registered organisation, and an officer of a branch of a registered
organisation
- that
arranges or promotes a particular insurance product providing cover for
employees of an employer, or refers an employer to a person who arranges or
provides such a product (whether in enterprise bargaining or otherwise)
- to
disclose in writing to the employer in no more than two pages the nature and
quantum of all direct and indirect pecuniary benefits that the branch or any
related entity receives or expects to receive, or
- which
are available only to the branch’s members, from the issuer of the product, or
any arranger or promoter, or any related entity.[273]
Importantly however the RCTUGC noted that it ‘is important
to emphasise that the disclosure envisaged by recommendation 47 is separate
from any disclosure that occurs as part of enterprise bargaining’.[274]
Proposal differs from the recommendation of the RCTUGC
The disclosable arrangement regime proposed by Schedule 5
of the Bill differs from the broad model proposed by the RCTUGC in a number of
substantive ways.
First, the regime will be housed in the FWRO Act
rather than the Corporations Act as recommended. Second the regime will
apply not only to pecuniary benefits derived from employee insurance schemes
but also certain managed investment schemes, training funds, welfare funds and
any other types of arrangements prescribed by the ‘disposable arrangements
rules’ (DARs). This means the regime proposed by the Bill has substantially
broader application than that envisaged and recommended by the RCTUGC. Third,
the regime proposed by the RCTUGC envisaged disclosure by registered
organisations to employers. In contrast, the Bill proposes to mandate that employers
‘pass on to employees disclosures made by an organisation to the employer’ as
well.[275]
Who is covered by the disclosable arrangements regime?
The disclosable arrangements regime will apply to both
registered organisations (and their branches) and federal system employers, as
well as persons linked to them (a ‘related party’).[276]
What is a disclosable arrangement?
Proposed section 329PD of the FWRO Act, at item
3 of Schedule 5, defines a disclosable arrangement as including any
arrangement (whether or not in writing and whether formal or informal):
- between
an organisation, or a related party, and a federal system employer for:
- insurance
promoted or arranged by the organisation or a related party to be offered or
provided to the employer’s employees or
- the
organisation or a related party to refer the employer to an insurer or
insurance intermediary for the purposes of employees of the employer being
offered or provided insurance[277]
- for
a federal system employer to become a member of, or make payments in relation
to, a managed investment scheme (within the meaning of the Corporations Act)
if:
- the
arrangement is promoted or arranged by an organisation or a related party and
- the
arrangement is for the purposes of (or for purposes that include) managing
financial risk and
- employees
of the employer benefit or may benefit from the arrangement if specified events
occur in relation to the employees[278]
- between
an organisation, or a related party, and a federal system employer for the
employer to:
- become
a member of or make payments to a training fund, welfare fund or WEF that is
for the benefit of the employer’s employees if
- the
fund is arranged or promoted by the organisation or a related party [279]
or
- between
an organisation, or a related party, and a federal system employer if the
arrangement is prescribed by the DARs.[280]
Proposed section 329PC provides that the DARs may
prescribe that certain financial benefits are not disclosable arrangements for
the purposes of proposed Part 3D of Chapter 11 of the FWRO Act.
Disclosable arrangements rules
Proposed section 329PE provides that the Minister
may, by legislative instrument, make disclosable arrangements rules (DARs) that
prescribe matters:
- required
or permitted to be prescribed by the DARs or
- necessary
or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to the
amendments to the FWRO Act contained in proposed Part 3D of
Chapter 11.
Noting that the DARs are legislative instruments and
therefore are subject to Parliamentary scrutiny and disallowance,[281]
nonetheless the breadth of the DARs and their interaction with the reforms
proposed by the Bill attracted criticism from some stakeholders. For example,
the ACTU previously argued:
... the arrangements that must be disclosed are too broad. They
are not limited to arrangements that are contractual in nature or legally
binding. Further, the Minister may, at any time, unilaterally prescribe what
constitutes a disclosable arrangement. Beyond the Minister’s power to
prescribe, the arrangements that are covered are arrangements for the provision
of or referral for insurance, arrangements for certain management investment
schemes, training funds and welfare funds. It is to be noted that Royal Commission
limited its recommendation to pecuniary benefits associated with employee
insurance products.[282]
Limits on the rule-making power of the Minister
Whilst the breadth of the matters allowed to be dealt with
by the DARs is substantial, there are limits on the rule-making power of the
Minister. First, proposed subsection 329PE(2) provides that the DARs
cannot:
- create
an offence or civil penalty
- provide
powers of arrest, detention, entry, search or seizure
- impose
a tax
- set
an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund or
- directly
amend the text of the FWRO Act.
Second, proposed subsection 329PE(3) provides that
where the DARs are inconsistent with Regulations made under the FWRO Act,
the DARs have no effect to the extent of any such inconsistency, but are taken
to be consistent to the extent they are capable of operating concurrently with
the Regulations.
What must be disclosed?
In general, organisations must disclose a financial
benefit it, or a related party of it:
- can
reasonably be expected to receive or obtain (directly or indirectly)
- in
connection with a disclosable arrangement it proposes to enter
into or with an existing disclosable arrangement it proposes to change.[283]
Proposed section 329PD defines the types of disclosable
arrangement which the above obligations apply.
Certain
insurance products
Proposed subsection 329PD(2) provides that a disclosable
arrangement includes an arrangement between an organisation or a
related party of an organisation and an employer for:
- insurance
promoted or arranged by the organisation or a related party of an organisation
to be offered or provided to employees of the employer or
- referring
the employer to an insurance intermediary for the purposes of employees of the
employer being offered or provided insurance.
Managed investment products, training and welfare fund and
WEFs
The definition of disclosable arrangements
also includes arrangements between an organisation or a related party of an
organisation and an employer for an employer to become a member of, or make
payments in relation to:
- managed
investment schemes
- training
funds or welfare funds where the arrangement is promoted or arranged by the
organisation and
- WEFs.[284]
Consideration
for services provided by officers of organisations
Where an organisation or a related party of an
organisation is a party to a disclosable arrangement mentioned in proposed subsection
329PD(3) or (4) and the organisation, or an officer of the organisation, will
or can reasonably be expected to receive consideration from the managed
investment scheme or type of fund to which the arrangement relates for services
provided by an officer of the organisation, the consideration is taken (under proposed
subsection 329QA(4)) to be a financial benefit for the purposes of proposed
Part 3 of Chapter 11 of the FWRO Act.[285]
This means that the organisation must provide the employer a disclosure
document in relation to the agreement, in accordance with proposed
subsection 329QA(3).
Criticisms of deeming consideration provided to officers
to be a financial benefit
The ACTU criticised the effect of proposed subsection
329QA(4) on the basis that its effect is:
... where union officials are already paid for their time in
managing established training and welfare funds, that payment is deemed to be
“a financial benefit that the organisation will, or can be reasonably be
expected to, receive in connection with” the arrangement, and therefore be
disclosable. This will create the impression that the union, or one if its
officials, is receiving a kickback as a result of “doing a deal” with the
employer, whereas the reality is that the income flow is entirely independent
of any arrangement ultimately entered into with the employer in question.[286]
Who must disclosure be made to?
An organisation must disclose to employers any financial
benefits it or persons linked to it might receive or obtain in connection with
a disclosable arrangement it proposes to enter into, or an existing disclosable
arrangement it proposes to change, with an employer.[287]
In turn, the employer must notify its employees of the organisation’s
disclosure.[288]
Changes from
previous Bill
How must the disclosure be made?
Disclosures made by organisations and employers must be
made by a disclosure document that is provided by the
organisation to the employer who must then give a copy of it to its employees.[291]
The disclosure document must describe the connection
between the arrangement and the financial benefits that will or can reasonably
be expected to be received or obtained in connection with it by the
organisation or a related party to the organisation (the expected
recipients) and:
- describe
the nature and (as far as reasonably practicable) amount of those financial
benefits in relation to each expected recipient
- name
each expected recipient
- be
in accordance with any other requirements prescribed by the DARs and
- be
given in a manner (if any) prescribed by the DARs.[292]
When must the disclosure be made?
In relation to proposed disclosable arrangements,
organisations must disclose the arrangement before the arrangement is entered
into.[293]
In relation to disclosable arrangements in force prior to the commencement of
the proposed amendments, the organisation must disclose relevant changes to the
arrangement before the proposed change takes effect.[294]
The ACTU was critical of the timing requirements related to
disclosure, arguing:
.... the requirement to disclose is pre-emptive, ongoing and
enforceable by way of civil penalty. In addition, disclosures are required to
be provided to the ROC, which in turn must publish the disclosures on its
website... The oppressiveness of these provisions becomes obvious once it is
understood that the obligation to disclose something and consequentially have
it published on the ROC website arises at the point when the arrangement is proposed
and before it is entered into. This means compulsory disclosures to
the employer, its employees and the world at large of arrangements that may
never be entered into simply because the employer rejects them... The net effect
is therefore to create red-tape disincentives to employers negotiating with
unions that have established offerings outside their union to benefit their
members.[295]
Alternative disclosure
Section 179 of the FW Act provides that
organisations that are bargaining representatives for a proposed enterprise
agreement must take all reasonable steps to provide a document to the employers
that will be covered by the proposed enterprise agreement disclosing certain
financial benefits that the organisation (or certain related persons) will, or
expects to, receive under the terms of the agreement. Under section 179, the
document must disclose any financial benefit, other than a
financial benefit that is:
- payable
to an employee covered by the agreement (for example, wages)
- payment
of a membership fee for an organisation, or
- prescribed
by the Regulations.
To prevent an organisation from having to disclose the
same financial benefits under the FWRO Act and the FW Act proposed
section 329QD provides that an organisation complies with its disclosure
obligations in relation to a financial benefit that an organisation or related
party of an organisation will or can reasonably be expected to receive or
obtain in connection with a disclosable arrangement where:
- the
organisation gives the employer a document under section 179 of the FW Act
that meets the requirements of proposed section 329QA or 329QB in
relation to the arrangement (other than any requirements in relation to manner
and form) and
- the
organisation gives the document to the employer by the time required under proposed
section 329QA or 329QB.
Whilst this will prevent duplication of disclosure
obligations where an organisation has disclosed under section 179 of the FW
Act, it must still comply with its obligations to keep such disclosures up
to date and to give copies of the disclosure to the Commissioner as if the
disclosure had been made under proposed section 329QA.[296]
Changes from
the Previous Bill
Other
obligations
In addition to the disclosure obligations, organisations
must:
- keep
their disclosures up to date[298]
- correct
any inaccuracies or misleading material included in the disclosure document as
soon as practicable after becoming aware of the inaccuracy or misleading
material[299]
- notify
the Commissioner about disclosable arrangements by providing the Commissioner
with copies of the disclosure documents no later than 28 days after the later
of:
- the
day the arrangement to which the document relates is entered into and
- the
day the document is given to the employer or employees[300]
- notify
the Commissioner about any previously notified arrangements coming to an end.[301]
Penalties for non-disclosure and other matters
Table 2 sets out the penalties for non-disclosure and other
related matters.
Table 2: proposed civil penalties for non-compliance with
disclosure and related obligations
Obligation
|
Provision(s)
|
Penalty
|
Failure to provide a disclosure document by the required
time
|
Proposed subsections 329QA(1) and (2).
|
60 penalty units
|
Employer failing to notify employees of organisation’s
disclosure
|
Proposed section 329RA
|
60 penalty units
|
Knowingly or recklessly making false or misleading
statements in a disclosure document
|
Proposed section 329QC
|
60 penalty units
|
Failing to keep disclosures up to date
|
Proposed subsection 329QB(1)
|
60 penalty units
|
Failing to correct any inaccuracies or misleading material
included in the disclosure document as soon as practicable
|
Proposed paragraph 329QB(1)(b)(ii) and (2)(b)
|
60 penalty units
|
Failing to notify Commissioner about disclosable
arrangements by providing the Commissioner with copies of the disclosure
documents by the required time
|
Proposed subsection 329SA(2)
|
60 penalty units
|
Failing to notify the Commissioner about a notified
arrangement coming to an end
|
Proposed subsection 329SA(3)
|
60 penalty units
|
Source: Fair Work Laws Amendment (Proper Use of Worker
Benefits) Bill 2019.
Publication by the Commissioner of disclosure documents
Proposed subsection 329SC(1) requires the
Commissioner to publish on the Commission’s website copies of disclosure documents
provided under the new regime, as soon as practicable. Proposed subsection 329SC(2)
provides that the Commissioner must omit any residential addresses and has
the discretion to omit other personal information (such as names).
The Explanatory Memorandum states that ‘[i]t is expected
that only information that is required to provide the necessary level of
transparency of disclosable arrangements will be published’.[302]
Application of amendments
Item 5 deals with the application of the amendments
in Schedule 5. Subitem 5(1) provides that the regime created by proposed
Part 3D of Chapter 11 will apply in relation to disclosable arrangements
entered into on or after the commencement of proposed Part 3D.
Subitem 5(2) provides that the disclosure
obligations in proposed Part 3D also apply to arrangements entered into before
the commencement of proposed Part 3D as if:
- the
arrangement had been entered into on the day item 5 commences
- the
references in proposed section 329QA to a ‘financial benefit that will
or can reasonably be expected to be received or obtained in connection with the
arrangement’ were references to financial benefits that ‘will or can reasonably
be expected to be received or obtained on or after that day’ and
- the
time by which a document must be given under proposed section 329QA in
relation to the arrangement was six months after the commencement of Item 5.
This means that in effect, the amendments will apply
retrospectively to arrangements entered into before the application of proposed
Part 3D, provided the financial benefits arising from the arrangement ‘will
or can reasonably be expected to be received or obtained’ on or after the
commencement of proposed Part 3D.
Subitem 5(3) provides that for arrangements
captured by the retrospective operation of the amendments provided in subitem
5(2), an organisation is taken to comply with its obligation to provide
copies of the disclosure documents to the Commissioner[303]
if they do so no later than 28 days after giving the document to the employer
under proposed section 329QA.
Other provisions
Items 18 to 25 of Part 1 of Schedule 2 make
amendments to taxation legislation reflecting the intention to shift regulation
of WEFs from the FBTA Act to the FWRO Act.
Concluding comments
As highlighted throughout this Digest, the Bill contains a
number of changes from the Previous Bill. Even with those changes, the Bill
contains a number of measures which are highly contentious and/or go beyond, or
at least substantially build upon, the recommendations of the RCTUGC.
The prohibition on distributing income to the sponsors of
WEFs after the forecast claims on the fund by employees have been accounted for
is particularly controversial and would set WEFs apart from other collective
investment or insurance funds.
In addition, the discretion granted to the Minister by the
WEF Rules and DARs is substantial and may allow a degree of intervention into
the management of WEFs that is highly granular when compared to other
comparable collective investment vehicles.
More broadly, other measures such as the disclosable
arrangements regime, apart from being contentious, may impose a regulatory
burden on registered organisations that other entities do not have to comply
with.