In a ruling sure to send shudders through the labour supply industry, the Queensland IRC has found a labour hire company liable for freedom of association breaches procured by a host employer.
The LHMU and employers will begin talks before the AIRC next week to finalise substantial pay rises for child care workers in Victoria and the ACT, following last week’s full bench ruling on work value and pay relativities in the industry.
In a vital post-Electrolux ruling, the Federal Court has found the AMWU and two officials coerced a coal mining company when it took unprotected industrial action in October in pursuit of matters that didn't pertain to the employment relationship.
An employer who hired a topless waitress for a work Christmas party was not guilty of sexual harassment or discrimination against its female secretary who was working nearby, the NSW Administrative Decisions Tribunal has found.
Queensland businesses employing fewer than 15 employees will continue to be exempted from severance pay obligations, after a State IRC full bench rejected unions' bid to introduce a level playing field.
A cafe has been ordered to pay $2,500 in damages for discriminating against a 46-year-old chef who responded to a job advertisement that sought an employee to join a "young team".
Qantas has struck an in-principle three-year deal with the ASU that pays a 3% annual wage increase to some 10,500 employees, while NUW members have voted down their proposed new deal with the airline.
Both employer bodies and unions will argue that salary packaging pertains to the employment relationship when an AIRC full bench in Adelaide next Monday and Tuesday hears a crucial test case on what can be included in enterprise agreements.
A female underground mine technician has won a two-year battle to establish that she was unfairly dismissed when her employer made her position redundant while she was on maternity leave. It then failed to provide her an alternative position with comparable status and equivalent pay.
An employer was less than considerate towards a working mother when it unilaterally changed her working hours, but it didn't unfairly dismiss her for failing to start on time, the AIRC has ruled.