More news - page 2227 of 2246

NSW Commissioner dies

NSW Industrial Relations Commissioner Paul Kelly died yesterday, from what is believed to have been a heart attack

ANZ discriminated against women: FSU

The FSU has lodged a complaint with HREOC against the ANZ bank, claiming that a restructuring program designed to reduce part-time employees' hours indirectly discriminated against women.

Campaign 2000 contempt case underway

The AIG's unprecedented contempt action against the AMWU, AWU, CEPU and three union officials continues in the Federal Court today.

ATO workers consider GST bans

Australian Tax Office workers are expected to vote this morning in favour of work bans on GST implementation as part of their ongoing bid to secure a better pay offer from the department.

It's only discrimination if a job's on offer: court

In an important ruling for employers, Queensland's highest court has ruled that an employer who told a jobseeker he was too old hadn't discriminated against him, because the jobseeker had approached the employer "on spec" and there had been no job on offer.

Victorian Budget boosts IR savvy

The Victorian Government has allocated funds from the State Budget to a strategic IR advice unit that the Government hopes will keep it on the front foot with disputes such as the recent construction battle, and help it counter sniping from the Federal Government.

Movement in Qld IR Minister's office

Jacqueline King, one of Queensland IR Minister Paul Braddy's IR policy advisors, is temporarily moving to Victoria to assist the State's IR taskforce.

Contractor test case to proceed

A crucial test of the new Queensland IR Act's contractor deeming provisions will now proceed, after the State's Supreme Court dismissed an employer bid to throw out the case.

Teachers defy calls to stop strike

The NSW Teachers Federation might be facing fines of up to $10,000 after it decided to proceed with tomorrow's 24-hour strike.

Corporate regulator helps unions reach shareholders

Unions seeking to use shareholder power to influence the policies of public companies will be heartened by a direction from Australia's corporate regulator, the ASIC, to five major shareholders of Rio Tinto to disclose the organisations which hold shares in the mining company.