Review recommends new entry rights in Victoria; Women's unit axed in NSW Mini-Budget; Tasmanian public servants accept 14.75% increase; Catholic university maternity provision boosts debate on paid maternity leave, says report; and Watchirs appointed ACT Discrimination Commissioner.
In a ruling of national importance to the aged care industry, the Federal Court has today fined an aged care facility $3,200 for breaching freedom of association laws and made it clear nursing homes and hostels can't lawfully insist that unqualified care workers administer medications to clients.
The NSWNA has slammed a report on Australia's residential aged care workforce as unreliable, while the HSUA has given it qualified praise for recognising the chronic staff shortages in the sector.
In a blow to the NSW Labor Council's Secure Employment Test Case, State IR Minister John Della Bosca will oppose the NSW IRC amending all State awards to limit the use of casuals, labour hire employees and contractors.
The AWU, CEPU and AMWU are seeking an urgent Federal Court hearing for an injunction against the lockout of 300 construction workers on Esso's Bass Strait oil and gas rigs.
The ACTU says the Howard Government's plan to legislate away the new rights to severance pay for employees of small businesses is a wrong-headed, kneejerk reaction. (Please note: This is a re-send of an article uploaded last night.)
The ACTU says the Howard Government's plan to legislate away the new rights to severance pay for employees of small businesses is a wrong-headed, kneejerk reaction.
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.
Three out of four fathers with access to family-friendly provisions in the workplace are opting against taking advantage of career breaks, parental leave, or part-time work, a new report has found.
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.