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ILO to scrutinise Australia's IR laws

The ILO will next week investigate whether Australia's current workplace laws comply with international obligations to allow employees to join unions and bargain collectively.

Labor premiers prepare to face Howard on IR as High Court challenge looms

As the ALP premiers begin arriving in Canberra ahead of tomorrow's COAG meeting, the former NSW IR Minister and Attorney-General, Jeff Shaw QC, says there is a "respectably arguable case" against the Federal Government's planned takeover of the states' IR systems.

Queensland to shield workers from Howard's IR regime

With John Howard set to demand at Friday's COAG meeting that the states cede their IR powers to Canberra, Queensland has thrown a spanner in the works, saying it will legislate to provide minimum conditions for the State's workers, while NSW will look at following the same path.

HR moving back in-house, as pay for directors reaches $200K

More large employers are engaging in-house HR specialists as the labour market tightens, while the typical salary for a HR director in Sydney has now reached the $200,000 mark, according to a new remuneration survey by recruitment company Hays.


News in brief, May 31, 2005

Andrews' pay goes up 4.1%, but argues low paid should get 2.4%; University and TAFE employees begin protests against second wave tomorrow; Appaloosa employees lose their jobs, but have till Thursday to sign AWAs with labour hire company; NSW IRC refuses backpay to cover strike during bargaining; Pro forma retrenchment letter suggested employer was "going through the motions"; Full bench clarifies calculation of car benefit for unfair dismissal claims; Hudson recommends five measures to help employers improve work-life balance in the workplace; and AIRC rejects employer dismissal appeal lodged nine months late.

Footy tipping cheat gets his job back

An Australian Bureau of Statistics executive sacked for manipulating the organisation's footy tipping competition has got his job back, following an AIRC ruling.


News in brief, May 30, 2005

NSW IRC to arbitrate dispute over outsourcing and AWAs; Catholic agency claims PM's favoured research on income inequality is wrong; and Former NSW IRC member to head panel to define what "worker" means.

Second wave AWAs to render awards irrelevant: Lawyer

The new AWA provisions in the Howard Government's second wave of IR change will render awards all but irrelevant, by allowing employers to offer individual contracts that remove all existing conditions except for the five new legislated minima, according to Sydney barrister Ingmar Taylor.