A court has found a low-paid casual hairdresser's two-year restraint on poaching clients "void and unenforceable" because it is "significantly longer" than necessary to protect her former employer's legitimate business interests, taking into account the absence of compensation for the non-compete clause and the nature of client relationships.
The Minns Labor Government is introducing legislation to ensure senior local government executives are covered by an award or other IRC-approved industrial instrument, in response to anti-corruption commission findings that standard contract provisions might pose a corruption risk.
The TWU says it will "deploy significant and focussed resources" on a campaign to recruit more gig workers, as the FWC prepares to exercise its new powers to set minimum standards in that sector and in road transport.
The FWC has rejected an employer's claim that a company secretary's "time limited" contract merely expired, finding it gave her no choice but to give up her permanent role by making an offer "infected with misrepresentation, misleading conduct and duress".
Coles says it will provide undertakings in a bid to secure approval of its proposed new four-year national supermarkets agreement that covers about 100,000 supermarket employees, after a FWC full bench queried the rules for re-introduced split shift arrangements.
Businesses should consider running randomised trials to inform evidence-based policymaking in the workplace and improve productivity, Assistant employment minister Andrew Leigh has told a HR leadership conference in Sydney.
The SDA is urging the FWC to rule that labour hire clauses in a proposed Aldi agreement are invalid because they circumvent the same-job, same-pay provisions recently introduced into the Fair Work Act.
The FWC has given a power supplier's worker an extra month to file his unfair dismissal application after accepting that he previously lodged one in the NSW IRC and wrongly pivoted to an unfair termination claim "due to confusion, rather than strategy".
Nurses warn of impending bed closures; $32K awarded for Scottish accent sacking; Builder cops $25K penalty for blocking union entry; Listed company faces $50M claim for bullying, victimisation; and Correction.
A migration agent accused of having active cases in the Administrative Appeals Tribunal after he started working for it as an associate must pay $12,000 towards its legal costs after pursuing an unsuccessful adverse action claim challenging his sacking.