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Commission orders contractors to pay striking workers

In an important decision on strike pay, the NSW IRC has ordered contractors on a Sydney hospital refurbishment site to pay wages to workers who walked off the job in 2001 over concerns about lead contamination - despite their industrial action breaching the project award's dispute resolution provisions.


Work/life balance UK style - a snapshot

It might be a barbecue stopper in Australia, but in the UK the work/life balance has been the source of a lot of action as well as talk, with a UK academic describing the pace of change there as "dizzying" since the Blair Government came to power.


Post-dispute changes at Patrick unsafe, says court

Patrick Stevedores faces substantial penalties and legal costs, after the NSW IRC (in Court Session) today found it guilty of five breaches of the NSW OHS Act over the work practices it introduced on its giant straddle cranes immediately after the 1998 waterfront dispute.

ACT legislation stirs the house on the hill

Amendments to workplace legislation in the ACT are making waves at federal level, with Workplace Relations Minister Kevin Andrews introducing legislation to shield federal agencies from the Territory's new industrial manslaughter laws and the Federal Opposition ruling out support for the introduction of portable long service leave.

Employee trust funds given last minute reprieve on FBT

The Federal Government has granted a last minute extension to construction industry employers who stood to be caught from today by the new requirement to pay fringe benefits tax on contributions to employee entitlement funds.


News in brief, March 31, 2004

Emerson re-introduces good faith bargaining bill and to speak at National Press Club; Noye takes over as FSU's assistant secretary; MUA members to stop work on April 6; Discrimination laws too soft on recruitment and selection, says paper; Bills digest canvasses sunset clause for legislation allowing male-only scholarships; Fedex ordered to pay US$3.2m for sexually discriminating and retaliating against female driver; and finalists announced for work and family awards.

Latham promises 14-week publicly-funded maternity payment

A Latham Labor Government would introduce a means-tested 14-week "baby care payment" that would pay the equivalent of the federal minimum wage, after a five-year phase-in, to "the vast majority" of mothers regardless of whether they are in paid work.