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Best wishes for the festive season

This will be the last Workplace Express news update for 2005, until we resume publishing in mid-January 2006.

News in brief, December 21, 2005

AIRC caves in on national wage case; NSW launches High Court challenge to Work Choices legislation; LHMU alarmed at "targeting" of hospitality award; Stewart raises concerns about reports of June renumbering of Workplace Relations Act; and 13% to 14% over three years for detention centre workers.

Refusal to allow part-time return to work was discriminatory: Tribunal

An employer who refused a new mother's request to return to work part-time unlawfully discriminated against her on the basis of her caring responsibilities, while it also transgressed when it banned her from speaking Arabic at work, an anti-discrimination tribunal has found.

DEWR, academics agree on the fall-back amendment

The new higher safety net for workers whose deals are terminated under the 90-day rule will not be undermined by bare-bones agreements, DEWR and two academics maintain.


NTEU believes IR funding rules have been met

The NTEU has finalised collective agreements that it believes meet the Federal Government's new IR requirements with all universities whose 2006 additional funding was under threat - except Ballarat.

New IR legislation - Where to get it

Now the Work Choices legislation has become law, how do practitioners get hold of the rewritten Workplace Relations Act?

Award taskforce to begin industry-based talks in February

The Award Review Taskforce will early next year begin consultations with two key award-reliant industries - hospitality and retail - while it has already begun comparing wage classifications within specific industries to assist in deciding how to streamline them, according to its chair, Matthew O'Callaghan.



Tight deadline for response to award review issues paper

Workplace Relations Minister Kevin Andrews is seeking feedback by January 31 on two discussion papers released today which outline options for the award review process, including cutting back the 4,100 state and federal awards to fewer than 20.