Browsing: Jurisdiction | Page 37 (7,626 items)

Viewing all articles in "Jurisdiction" which contains 14 sub-topics, select one from the list below to further narrow your browsing.



Call for guidance on equality targets for big employers

A Senate inquiry is calling for guidance on what will qualify as a "reasonable excuse" for failing to comply with a Bill requiring employers with 500 or more workers to set new publicly-tracked gender equality targets that could determine eligibility for government contracts, while the Greens want to lower the threshold to 100 or more employees.


Scientist's "infrequent error" sacking justified: FWC

In a decision weighing how close to "perfection" an employee's standards need to be, the FWC has upheld the sacking of an experienced scientist accused of "manipulating" data for a single BHP soil sample among thousands he helped test.


Retailers seeking to "tear up rules" that bit them: ACTU

Ahead of a 10-day full bench hearing of a bid to significantly shake-up the retail award, the ACTU has hit out at employers backing measures to "buy-out" core conditions for workers on as little as $53,680 a year, ditch "smokos" and introduce split shifts.


Lengthy suppression order granted after claim settled

The Federal Court has slapped a five-year suppression order on a Channel Seven producer's general protections claim, settled on the basis that details would be kept confidential.


Sacked for breach of non-existent policy: FWC

A large childcare operator has been ordered to pay more than $8000 compensation to a sacked worker falsely accused of telling a parent about her tenuous visa status in supposed breach of a company policy found by the FWC to impose no constraint on such interactions.


UWU organiser gets second chance to contest sacking

A former organiser who claims the UWU sacked her for exacerbating post-amalgamation "tensions" by pushing for a staff agreement has won a three-month extension to file her second unfair dismissal application, after a full bench found her first one barred as she lodged it while pursuing an adverse action case.


Employer too quick to pull trigger over drug result: FWC

The FWC has awarded $20,000 to an on-hire mineworker sacked after testing positive for anti-depressants, finding that more consideration should have been given to his "genuine misunderstanding" of the host's new drug policy.


Worker pays price for labour supplier's "remarkable" acquiescence

The removal of a long-serving on-hire worker on her host's instruction after she mislabelled two boxes amounted to an unfair dismissal but the FWC has "reluctantly" declined to order compensation despite the labour supplier's failure to "go into bat" for her.


Consultation set to start on transport, gig claims

FWC President Adam Hatcher has directed the Road Transport Advisory Group to start consulting on Menulog's claim for a gig economy delivery award, TWU bids for minimum standards and contract chain orders, and a veteran truck driver's application to vary the long distance road transport award.


Page 37 of 763 | Total articles: 7,626