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Teachers to walk out in first national day of action

More than 50,000 teachers in NSW are expected to walk off the job tomorrow over a bargaining dispute, along with thousands more in Western Australia and Victoria, in the first ever national public education strike.

News in brief, September 15, 2003

Qantas and TWU resolve labour hire dispute; Commissioner failed to give fair hearing, says bench; NSW Police Commissioner fails to strike out vicarious liability claim; Contractor deeming case proceeds in Queensland; Judge ruminates on confidential information; and Correction to CPSU election article.

First union deal at AFFA voted up by 91%

More than 3,000 workers at the Department of Agriculture Fisheries and Forestry overwhelmingly voted up their first union agreement last week.

Outback miners win preference, keep existing conditions

In an important win for the AWU, the NSW IRC has ruled that the new owner of the Elura mine in Cobar will have to grant the existing workforce preference of employment when it takes over from tomorrow.

News in brief, September 12, 2003

Abbott to release Cole draft on Thursday; Labor to support pregnancy and work legislation; Bill to strengthen s127 passes Lower House; Scholarship to commemorate AWU victim of terrorist attack; and Correction to yesterday's casual exclusion article.

Campaign 2003 in Victoria: the verdict so far

The AMWU has "broken the proverbial back" of Campaign 2003 in Victoria in terms of locking key players into deals and getting consistent outcomes flowing through, according to Victorian secretary, Dave Oliver.

Autoliv and AMWU reach deal in Campaign 2003

After months of negotiations, major auto components manufacturer Autoliv Australia and the AMWU have struck an in-principle agreement that introduces a raft of work/life initiatives rare in manufacturing and commits to reducing casuals on site, but gives only partial ground on other key aspects of the union's Campaign 2003 claim.

Casual exclusion bill to pass Senate

Workplace Relations Minister Tony Abbott has won support for the passage of his bill that provides a 12-month unfair dismissal exclusion for ongoing casuals, after doing a deal with the Democrats.

Woman harassed for taking carer's leave wins discrimination case

An intelligence analyst with the Australian Crimes Commission (ACC) has been awarded $54,000 in compensation after the Federal Magistrate Court found she was intimidated, treated unfavourably, and ultimately dismissed because she took time off to care for her sick son.

News in brief, September 10, 2003

Super portability regulation to be opposed by Labor and Democrats; GWC and TCFU settle court action; CPSU poll nominations open; Submissions close Friday for workplace legislation inquiries; Employer fails to overturn damages won by lying worker; Liberals dominate parliamentary seats with highest-paid populations; and ACCI warns against age bias bill.