The Independent Education Union has failed to establish that its rules extend coverage to mobility instructors at Guide Dogs NSW/ACT, despite the ASU reportedly conceding the teachers' union had a better chance of negotiating an agreement for the group.
The FWC's landmark ruling that a former Foodora rider was an employee is unlikely to have implications for other major gig economy platforms like Uber and Deliveroo, according to leading IR law academic Andrew Stewart.
The construction sector continues to prop up average increases in private sector agreements with gains of almost 6% annually, but overall growth remains shy of 3% a year, according to Department of Jobs data released today.
A parking ranger has failed to establish that he was unfairly sacked after an Uber driver complained about his treatment of a passenger, with the ranger's colleagues lining up to allege he had a history of antagonistic behaviour.
The ACTU has released a new paper which argues that most casual workers get nowhere near the 25% loading due to them, instead receiving a "modest wage premium" of 4% to 5% more than permanent employees.
In a landmark decision that will send tremors through the gig economy, the FWC has found that a former Foodora rider was an employee capable of being sacked, rather than an independent contractor as held by the delivery platform.
A Queensland parliamentary inquiry into "wage theft" has recommended it be made a criminal offence, that a date be set to terminate all remaining Work Choices-era "zombie" agreements, and that the Fair Entitlements Guarantee scheme be extended to temporary overseas visa workers.
Enterprise bargaining has "died a natural death" and left workers increasingly reliant on awards that have become a "bare minima" of industry standards, according to the ACTU's chief counsel, Tony Slevin.
Ahead of an FWC unfair dismissal decision that is today expected to tackle whether a Foodora rider was an employee, the TWU says it expects delivery workers at a creditors' meeting to accept a $3 million "comfort" offer that falls more than $5 million short of the company's overall debts.