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Technology the driver in occupational change

Big spending by households has led to jobs for the humble sales assistant growing faster than any other category, but despite this, technology is the biggest driver of change, according to new research.

UK discrimination case to test dress code

In a novel test case, a UK public servant is claiming in an employment tribunal that a dress code requiring him to wear a collar and tie discriminates against him on the basis of his sex.

ACM denied worker a fair go: AIRC

A high-profile private prison company failed to give an employee a fair go when it sacked him over criminal offences he openly disclosed when he was hired, the AIRC has ruled.

$25,000 over five years under child payment plan

A new family welfare plan canvassed as a possible alternative to a national paid maternity leave scheme proposes to deliver almost $25,000 cash and $4,000-a-year in subsidies for early childhood care in the first five years of a child's life.

News in brief, February 24, 2003

Shorten outlines baseline for AWU deals in opening speech to union national conference; AIRC quashes Energy Developments Limited's s170LK agreement; and Qantas says flights normal despite FAAA action.

Unions more popular but not so powerful: survey

Australian employees' attitudes towards unions has continued to improve, an annual report commissioned by the NSW Labor Council has revealed, although the majority still believe employers have more power.

Launch of critique as Cole hands over report

Unions have today launched a book critiquing the Cole Royal Commission, to coincide with Royal Commissioner Terence Cole handing his final report to the Governor-General this afternoon.

News in brief, February 21, 2003

Federal Court upholds penalty ruling against Brisbane Council; Barrier Industrial Council celebrates 80th anniversary; and Clarifications on restraint ruling and British American Tobacco articles.


Bench slashes CFMEU contempt penalty

A Federal Court full bench has reduced a penalty against the coal mining union for defying orders to return to work from $200,000 to $50,000.