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News in brief, September 14, 2005

Review FBT concessions, salary sacrifice arrangements for cars, says bipartisan report; Counter-offers driving up HR salaries, say recruiters; UK employers employ new strategies to beat long hours cultures; Address diabetes and other lifestyle diseases to increase labour force participation, says Treasury paper; and Prisoner not an employee, says AIRC.

CFMEU's Joe McDonald convicted of assault

CFMEU WA branch assistant secretary Joe McDonald has today been convicted for assaulting a BGC OHS manager when he entered a Perth building site after a crane fell into a hole.

SA childcare workers win work value increase

Some 4,000 childcare workers in South Australia have won substantial pay increases, after the State IRC accepted their work value had increased substantially.

Bracks Government loses fight with Taskforce over tender documents

A Federal Court full bench has ordered the Victorian Government to hand over tender documents to a Building Industry Taskforce investigation of an alleged FOA breach, in a ruling that confirms the broad powers of industrial inspectors to demand the production of documents.

Jump-up rates pertain, broad right of entry provisions don't: AIRC

An AIRC full bench has upheld an earlier rejection of nine warehousing agreements on matters pertaining grounds. In doing so, however, the bench allowed labour hire jump-up clauses and an income protection provision, confining its finding mainly to right of entry provisions.

IMF backs second wave IR changes

The International Monetary Fund, in its annual assessment of the Australian economy, has urged the Howard Government to use the "exceptional opportunity" created by its Senate majority to implement its second wave IR changes.

Senator Joyce no pushover on IR

Despite its slim Upper House majority, the Federal Government might yet have to revert to seeking support from the Democrats for its second wave IR changes, after renegade National Party Senator for Queensland, Barnaby Joyce, yesterday raised new concerns about the proposals.


Court likens bank's IR strategy to '70s tax avoidance schemes

The CBA is likely to appeal the Federal Court's invalidation of a key subsidiary's certified agreement, after the court found the bank's strategy to avoid its awards and agreements was akin to the bottom of the harbour tax avoidance schemes of the 1970s.