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This is a Bill, not an Act. For current law, see the Acts databases.
South Australia
Fair Work (Commonwealth Powers)
Bill 2009
A BILL FOR
An Act to refer certain matters relating to workplace relations to the
Parliament of the Commonwealth for the purposes of section 51(xxxvii) of the
Constitution of the Commonwealth.
Contents
1 Short
title
2 Commencement
3 Interpretation
4 Fundamental workplace relations
principles
5 Reference of matters
6 Matters excluded from the
reference
7 Termination of references
8 Effect of termination of amendment
reference or transition reference before initial reference
9 Period for
termination of references
Schedule 1—Text to be included in the provisions of
the Commonwealth Fair Work Act
Division 2B—Application of this Act in States that
refer matters after 1 July 2009
30K Meaning of terms used in
this Division
30L Meaning of referring State
30M Extended meaning
of national system employee
30N Extended meaning of national system
employer
30P Extended meaning of outworker entity
30Q General
protections
30R Division only has effect if supported by reference
The Parliament of South Australia enacts as
follows:
This Act may be cited as the Fair Work (Commonwealth Powers)
Act 2009.
(1) This Act will come into operation on a day to be fixed by
proclamation.
(2) Section 7(5) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1915 does not
apply to this Act or to a provision of this Act.
(1) In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears—
administrative unit means—
(a) a department established as part of the Public Service of the State;
or
(b) an attached office under the Public Sector
Act 2009;
amendment reference means the reference under
section 5(1)(b);
Commonwealth Fair Work Act means the Fair Work
Act 2009 of the Commonwealth (as amended from time to time);
employing authority means a person designated as an employing
authority, and empowered to employ persons on behalf of the Crown, under an
Act;
excluded subject matter means any of the following
matters:
(a) a matter dealt with in the Equal Opportunity
Act 1984;
(b) superannuation;
(c) workers compensation;
(d) occupational health and safety;
(e) matters relating to outworkers (within the ordinary meaning of the
term);
(f) child labour;
(g) training arrangements;
(h) long service leave;
(i) leave for victims of crime;
(j) attendance for service on a jury, or for emergency service
duties;
(k) declaration, prescription or substitution of public
holidays;
(l) the following matters relating to provision of essential services or
to situations of emergency:
(i) directions to perform work (including to perform work at a particular
time or place, or in a particular way);
(ii) directions not to perform work (including not to perform work at a
particular time or place, or in a particular way);
(m) regulation of any of the following:
(i) employee associations;
(ii) employer associations;
(iii) members of employee associations or of employer
associations;
(n) workplace surveillance;
(o) business trading hours;
(p) claims for enforcement of contracts of employment, except so far as a
law of a State provides for the variation or setting aside of rights and
obligations arising under a contract of employment, or another arrangement for
employment, that a court or tribunal finds is unfair;
(q) rights or remedies incidental to a matter referred to in a preceding
paragraph of this definition,
except to the extent that the Fair Work Act 2009 of the
Commonwealth, as originally enacted, deals with the matter (directly or
indirectly), or requires or permits instruments made or given effect under the
Commonwealth Fair Work Act so to deal with the matter;
express amendment of the Commonwealth Fair Work Act means the
direct amendment of the text of that Act (whether by the insertion, omission,
repeal, substitution or relocation of words or matter) but does not include the
enactment by a Commonwealth Act of a provision that has, or will have,
substantive effect otherwise than as part of the text of the Commonwealth Fair
Work Act;
fundamental workplace relations principles—see
section 4;
initial reference means the reference under
section 5(1)(a);
initial referred provisions means the scheduled text, to the
extent to which that text deals with matters that are included in the
legislative powers of the Parliament of the State;
law enforcement officer means—
(a) a member of SA Police under the Police Act 1998;
or
(b) a police cadet, police medical officer or special constable;
or
(c) a person employed as a protective security officer under the
Protective Security Act 2007;
local government sector employee means an employee of a local
government sector employer;
local government sector employer means an employer that
is—
(a) a council constituted under the Local Government Act 1999;
or
(b) a subsidiary or regional subsidiary established under the Local
Government Act 1999; or
(c) any other entity established under the Local Government
Act 1999; or
(d) the Local Government Association of South Australia; or
(e) any other entity established by a body referred to in a preceding
paragraph;
public sector agency means—
(a) a Minister; or
(b) a chief executive of an administrative unit; or
(c) an administrative unit; or
(d) an employing authority; or
(e) any other agency or instrumentality of the Crown; or
(f) a body corporate—
(i) comprised of persons, or with a governing body comprised of persons, a
majority of whom are appointed by the Governor, a Minister or an agency or
instrumentality of the Crown; or
(ii) subject to control or direction by a Minister; or
(g) a person or body declared under an Act to be a public sector agency
for the purposes of the management or governance of the public sector of the
State; or
(h) a subsidiary of a Minister or a person or body referred to in a
preceding paragraph,
but does not include a person or body declared under an Act not to be part
of the Crown or not to be an agency or instrumentality of the Crown;
public sector employee means a chief executive of an
administrative unit or an employee in an administrative unit or other person
employed or appointed by a public sector agency;
reference means—
(a) the initial reference; or
(b) the amendment reference; or
(c) the transition reference;
referred subject matters means any of the
following:
(a) terms and conditions of employment, including any of the
following:
(i) minimum terms and conditions of employment (including employment
standards and minimum wages);
(ii) terms and conditions of employment contained in instruments
(including instruments such as awards, determinations and enterprise-level
agreements);
(iii) bargaining in relation to terms and conditions of
employment;
(iv) the effect of a transfer of business on terms and conditions of
employment;
(b) terms and conditions under which an outworker entity may arrange for
work to be performed for the entity (directly or indirectly), if the work is of
a kind that is often performed by outworkers;
(c) rights and responsibilities of persons, including employees,
employers, independent contractors, outworkers, outworker entities, associations
of employees or associations of employers, being rights and responsibilities
relating to any of the following:
(i) freedom of association and related protections;
(ii) protection from discrimination relating to employment;
(iii) termination of employment;
(iv) industrial action;
(v) protection from payment of fees for services related to
bargaining;
(vi) sham independent contractor arrangements;
(vii) standing down employees without pay;
(viii) rights of entry and rights of access to records;
(d) compliance with, and enforcement of, the Commonwealth Fair Work
Act;
(e) the administration of the Commonwealth Fair Work Act;
(f) the application of the Commonwealth Fair Work Act;
(g) matters incidental or ancillary to the operation of the Commonwealth
Fair Work Act or of instruments made or given effect under the Commonwealth Fair
Work Act,
but does not include any excluded subject matter;
referred transition matters means the matters of the making
of laws with respect to the transition from the regime provided for
by—
(a) the Workplace Relations Act 1996 of the Commonwealth (as it
continues to apply because of the Fair Work (Transitional and Consequential
Amendments) Act 2009 of the Commonwealth); or
(b) a law of this State relating to workplace relations,
to the regime provided for by the Commonwealth Fair Work Act;
scheduled text means the text set out in Schedule
1;
transition reference means the reference under
section 5(1)(c).
(2) Words or phrases in the definition of excluded subject
matter or the definition of referred subject matters that
are defined in the Commonwealth Fair Work Act have the meaning that is set out
in that Act.
(3) For the purposes of the Commonwealth Fair Work Act, the Commissioner
of Police is to be taken to be an employer of law enforcement officers of the
State.
4—Fundamental
workplace relations principles
The following are the fundamental workplace relations principles under this
Act:
(a) that the Commonwealth Fair Work Act should provide for, and continue
to provide for, the following:
(i) a strong, simple and enforceable safety net of minimum employment
standards;
(ii) genuine rights and responsibilities to ensure fairness, choice and
representation at work, including the freedom to choose whether or not to join
and be represented by a union or participate in collective activities;
(iii) collective bargaining at the enterprise level with no provision for
individual statutory agreements;
(iv) fair and effective remedies available through an independent
umpire;
(v) protection from unfair dismissal;
(b) that there should be, and continue to be, in connection with the
operation of the Commonwealth Fair Work Act, the following:
(i) an independent tribunal system;
(ii) an independent authority able to assist employers and employees
within a national workplace relations system.
(1) Subject to the other provisions of this Act, the following matters are
referred to the Parliament of the Commonwealth:
(a) the matters to which the initial referred provisions relate, but only
to the extent of the making of laws with respect to those matters by including
the initial referred provisions in the Commonwealth Fair Work Act, as originally
enacted, and as subsequently amended by amendments enacted at any time before
this Act commences, in the terms, or substantially in the terms, set out in the
scheduled text;
(b) the referred subject matters, but only to the extent of making laws
with respect to any such matter by making express amendments of the Commonwealth
Fair Work Act;
(c) the referred transition matters.
(2) The reference of a matter under subsection (1) has effect
only—
(a) if and to the extent that the matter is not included in the
legislative powers of the Parliament of the Commonwealth (otherwise than by a
reference for the purposes of section 51(xxxvii) of the Constitution of the
Commonwealth); and
(b) if and to the extent that the matter is included in the legislative
powers of the Parliament of the State.
(3) The operation of each paragraph of subsection (1) is not affected
by any other paragraph.
(4) For the avoidance of doubt, it is the intention of the Parliament of
the State that the Commonwealth Fair Work Act may be expressly amended, or have
its operation otherwise affected, at any time after the commencement of this Act
by provisions of Commonwealth Acts whose operation is based on legislative
powers that the Parliament of the Commonwealth has apart from under the
references under subsection (1).
(5) Despite any other provision of this section, a reference under
subsection (1) has effect for a period—
(a) beginning when this section commences; and
(b) ending at the end of the day fixed under section 7 as the day on
which the reference is to terminate,
but no longer.
6—Matters
excluded from the reference
A matter referred by section 5 does not include—
(a) matters relating to Ministers, Members of Parliament, judicial
officers or members of tribunals established by or under a law of the State;
or
(b) matters relating to public sector employees; or
(c) matters relating to persons engaged as a member of a Minister's
personal staff; or
(d) matters relating to persons—
(i) appointed under section 68 of the Constitution Act 1934;
or
(ii) appointed or engaged by the Governor or a Minister under any other
Act, law or authority; or
(e) matters relating to persons holding office as Parliamentary officers
or employed under the Parliament (Joint Services) Act 1985;
or
(f) matters relating to persons holding office or employed under the
Courts Administration Act 1993; or
(g) matters relating to—
(i) members of SA Police under the Police Act 1998;
or
(ii) police cadets, police medical officers or special constables;
or
(iii) persons employed as protective security officers under the
Protective Security Act 2007; or
(h) matters relating to local government sector employees.
(1) The Governor may, at any time, by proclamation published in the
Gazette, fix a day as the day on which—
(a) the references are to terminate; or
(b) the amendment reference is to terminate; or
(c) the transition reference is to terminate.
(2) The Governor may, by proclamation published in the Gazette, revoke a
proclamation published under subsection (1), in which case the revoked
proclamation is taken (for the purposes of section 5) never to have been
published.
(3) A revoking proclamation has effect only if published before the day
fixed under subsection (1).
(4) The revocation of a proclamation published under subsection (1)
does not prevent publication of a further proclamation under that
subsection.
(5) If the amendment reference and the transition reference have been
terminated, the expression the references in subsection (1)
refers only to the initial reference.
8—Effect of
termination of amendment reference or transition reference before initial
reference
(1) If the amendment reference or the transition reference terminates
before the initial reference, the termination of the amendment reference or
transition reference does not affect—
(a) laws that were made under that reference before that termination
(whether or not they have come into operation before that termination);
or
(b) the continued operation in the State of the Commonwealth Fair Work Act
as in operation immediately before that termination or as subsequently amended
or affected by—
(i) laws referred to in paragraph (a) that come into operation after
that termination; or
(ii) provisions referred to in section 5(4).
(2) Accordingly, the amendment reference or transition reference continues
to have effect for the purposes of subsection (1) unless the initial
reference is terminated.
9—Period
for termination of references
(1) Subject to subsection (2), a day fixed by a proclamation under
section 7(1) must be no earlier than the first day after the end of the
period of 6 months beginning on the day on which the proclamation is
published.
(2) If—
(a) a proclamation under section 7(1) only provides for the
termination of the amendment reference; and
(b) the Governor, as part of the proclamation by which the termination is
to be effected, declares that, in the opinion of the Governor, the Commonwealth
Fair Work Act—
(i) is proposed to be amended (by an amendment introduced into the
Parliament of the Commonwealth by a Commonwealth Minister); or
(ii) has been amended,
in a manner that is inconsistent with 1 or more of the fundamental
workplace relations principles,
the day fixed by the proclamation under section 7(1)(b) may be earlier
than the day that applies under subsection (1) but must be no earlier than
the first day after the end of the period of 3 months beginning on the day
on which the proclamation is published.
(3) If the Governor terminates the amendment reference and fixes a day
under subsection (2), the Minister must, as soon as practicable after the
publication of the relevant proclamation, prepare a report on the matter and
cause copies of that report to be laid before both Houses of
Parliament.
Schedule
1—Text to be included in the provisions of the Commonwealth Fair Work
Act
Division 2B—Application of this Act in States that
refer matters after 1 July 2009
30K—Meaning of
terms used in this Division
In this Division:
amendment includes the insertion, omission, repeal,
substitution or relocation of words or matter.
amendment reference of a State means the reference by the
Parliament of the State to the Parliament of the Commonwealth of the matters
covered by subsection 30L(4).
excluded subject matter means any of the following
matters:
(a) a matter dealt with in a law referred to in
subsection 27(1A);
(b) superannuation;
(c) workers compensation;
(d) occupational health and safety;
(e) matters relating to outworkers (within the ordinary meaning of the
term);
(f) child labour;
(g) training arrangements;
(h) long service leave;
(i) leave for victims of crime;
(j) attendance for service on a jury, or for emergency service
duties;
(k) declaration, prescription or substitution of public
holidays;
(l) the following matters relating to provision of essential services or
to situations of emergency:
(i) directions to perform work (including to perform work at a particular
time or place, or in a particular way);
(ii) directions not to perform work (including not to perform work at a
particular time or place, or in a particular way);
(m) regulation of any of the following:
(i) employee associations;
(ii) employer associations;
(iii) members of employee associations or of employer
associations;
(n) workplace surveillance;
(o) business trading hours;
(p) claims for enforcement of contracts of employment, except so far as a
law of a State provides for the variation or setting aside of rights and
obligations arising under a contract of employment, or another arrangement for
employment, that a court or tribunal finds is unfair;
(q) rights or remedies incidental to a matter referred to in a preceding
paragraph of this definition;
except to the extent that this Act as originally enacted deals with the
matter (directly or indirectly), or requires or permits instruments made or
given effect under this Act so to deal with the matter.
express amendment means the direct amendment of this Act, but
does not include the enactment by a Commonwealth Act of a provision that has, or
will have, substantive effect otherwise than as part of the text of this
Act.
fundamental workplace relations principles: see
subsection 30L(9).
initial reference of a State means the reference by the
Parliament of the State to the Parliament of the Commonwealth of the matters
covered by subsection 30L(3).
law enforcement officer means:
(a) a member of a police force or police service; or
(b) a person appointed to a position for the purpose of being trained as a
member of a police force or police service; or
(c) a person who has the powers and duties of a member of a police force
or police service;
and, without limiting paragraphs (a), (b) and (c), includes a police
reservist, a police recruit, a police cadet, a junior constable, a police
medical officer, a special constable, an ancillary constable or a protective
services officer.
local government employee, of a State, means:
(a) an employee of a local government employer of the State; or
(b) any other employee in the State of a kind specified in the
regulations.
local government employer, of a State, means an employer that
is:
(a) a body (whether incorporated or unincorporated) established for a
local government purpose by or under a law of a State; or
(b) a body corporate in which a body to which paragraph (a) applies
has, or 2 or more such bodies together have, a controlling interest;
or
(c) any other local government body in the State of a kind specified in
the regulations.
referral law, of a State, means the law of the State that
refers matters, as mentioned in subsection 30L(1), to the Parliament of the
Commonwealth.
referred provisions means the provisions of this Division to
the extent to which they deal with matters that are included in the legislative
powers of the Parliaments of the States.
referred subject matters means any of the
following:
(a) terms and conditions of employment, including any of the
following:
(i) minimum terms and conditions of employment, (including employment
standards and minimum wages);
(ii) terms and conditions of employment contained in instruments
(including instruments such as awards, determinations and enterprise level
agreements);
(iii) bargaining in relation to terms and conditions of
employment;
(iv) the effect of a transfer of business on terms and conditions of
employment;
(b) terms and conditions under which an outworker entity may arrange for
work to be performed for the entity (directly or indirectly), if the work is of
a kind that is often performed by outworkers;
(c) rights and responsibilities of persons, including employees,
employers, independent contractors, outworkers, outworker entities, associations
of employees or associations of employers, being rights and responsibilities
relating to any of the following:
(i) freedom of association and related protections;
(ii) protection from discrimination relating to employment;
(iii) termination of employment;
(iv) industrial action;
(v) protection from payment of fees for services related to
bargaining;
(vi) sham independent contractor arrangements;
(vii) standing down employees without pay;
(viii) rights of entry and rights of access to records;
(d) compliance with, and enforcement of, this Act;
(e) the administration of this Act;
(f) the application of this Act;
(g) matters incidental or ancillary to the operation of this Act or of
instruments made or given effect under this Act;
but does not include any excluded subject matter.
referring State: see section 30L.
State public sector employee, of a State, means:
(a) an employee of a State public sector employer of the State;
or
(b) any other employee in the State of a kind specified in the
regulations;
and includes a law enforcement officer of the State.
State public sector employer, of a State, means an employer
that is:
(a) the State, the Governor of the State or a Minister of the State;
or
(b) a body (whether incorporated or unincorporated) established for a
public purpose by or under a law of the State, by the Governor of the State or
by a Minister of the State; or
(c) a body corporate in which the State has a controlling interest;
or
(d) any other employer in the State of a kind specified in the
regulations;
and includes a holder of an office of the State whom the State’s
referral law provides is to be taken, for the purposes of this Act, to be an
employer of law enforcement officers of the State.
transition reference of a State means the reference by the
Parliament of the State to the Parliament of the Commonwealth of the matters
covered by subsection 30L(5).
30L—Meaning of
referring State
Reference of matters by State Parliament to Commonwealth
Parliament
(1) A State is a referring State if the Parliament of the
State has, after 1 July 2009, referred the matters covered by subsections (3),
(4) and (5) in relation to the State to the Parliament of the Commonwealth for
the purposes of paragraph 51(xxxvii) of the Constitution:
(a) if and to the extent that the matters are not otherwise included in
the legislative powers of the Parliament of the Commonwealth (otherwise than by
a reference under paragraph 51(xxxvii) of the Constitution); and
(b) if and to the extent that the matters are included in the legislative
powers of the Parliament of the State.
This subsection has effect subject to subsection (6).
(2) A State is a referring State even if:
(a) the State’s referral law provides that the reference to the
Parliament of the Commonwealth of any or all of the matters covered by
subsections (3), (4) and (5) is to terminate in particular circumstances;
or
(b) the State’s referral law provides that particular matters, or
all matters, relating to State public sector employees, or State public sector
employers, of the State are not included in any or all of the matters covered by
subsections (3), (4) and (5); or
(c) the State’s referral law provides that particular matters, or
all matters, relating to local government employees, or local government
employers, of the State are not included in any or all of the matters covered by
subsections (3), (4) and (5).
Reference covering referred provisions
(3) This subsection covers the matters to which the referred provisions
relate to the extent of making laws with respect to those matters by amending
this Act, as originally enacted, and as subsequently amended by amendments
enacted at any time before the State’s referral law commenced, to include
the referred provisions.
Reference covering amendments
(4) This subsection covers the referred subject matters to the extent of
making laws with respect to those matters by making express amendments of this
Act.
Reference covering transitional matters
(5) This subsection covers making laws with respect to the transition from
the regime provided for by:
(a) the Workplace Relations Act 1996 (as it continues to apply
because of the Fair Work (Transitional Provisions and Consequential
Amendments) Act 2009); or
(b) a law of a State relating to workplace relations or industrial
relations;
to the regime provided for by this Act.
Effect of termination of reference
(6) Despite anything to the contrary in a referral law of a State, a State
ceases to be a referring State if any or all of the following
occurs:
(a) the State’s initial reference terminates;
(b) the State’s amendment reference terminates, and neither of
subsections (7) and (8) apply to the termination;
(c) the State’s transition reference terminates.
(7) A State does not cease to be a referring State because
of the termination of its amendment reference if:
(a) the termination is effected by the Governor of that State fixing a day
by proclamation as the day on which the reference terminates; and
(b) the day fixed is no earlier than the first day after the end of the
period of 6 months beginning on the day on which the proclamation is
published; and
(c) that State’s amendment reference, and the amendment reference of
every other referring State (other than a referring State that has terminated
its amendment reference in the circumstances referred to in
subsection (8)), terminate on the same day.
(8) A State does not cease to be a referring State because
of the termination of its amendment reference if:
(a) the termination is effected by the Governor of that State fixing a day
by proclamation as the day on which the reference terminates; and
(b) the day fixed is no earlier than the first day after the end of the
period of 3 months beginning on the day on which the proclamation is
published; and
(c) the Governor of that State, as part of the proclamation by which the
termination is to be effected, declares that, in the opinion of the Governor,
this Act:
(i) is proposed to be amended (by an amendment introduced into the
Parliament by a Minister); or
(ii) has been amended;
in a manner that is inconsistent with one or more of the fundamental
workplace relations principles.
(9) The following are the fundamental workplace relations
principles:
(a) that this Act should provide for, and continue to provide for, the
following:
(i) a strong, simple and enforceable safety net of minimum employment
standards;
(ii) genuine rights and responsibilities to ensure fairness, choice and
representation at work, including the freedom to choose whether or not to join
and be represented by a union or participate in collective activities;
(iii) collective bargaining at the enterprise level with no provision for
individual statutory agreements;
(iv) fair and effective remedies available through an independent
umpire;
(v) protection from unfair dismissal;
(b) that there should be, and continue to be, in connection with the
operation of this Act, the following:
(i) an independent tribunal system;
(ii) an independent authority able to assist employers and employees
within a national workplace relations system.
30M—Extended
meaning of national system
employee
(1) A national system employee includes any individual in a
State that is a referring State because of this Division so far as he or she is
employed, or usually employed, as described in subsection 30N(1), except on a
vocational placement.
(2) This section does not limit the operation of section 13 (which defines
a national system employee).
Note—
Section 30R may limit the extent to which this section extends the meaning
of national system employee.
30N—Extended
meaning of national system
employer
(1) A national system employer includes any person in a
State that is a referring State because of this Division so far as the person
employs, or usually employs, an individual.
(2) This section does not limit the operation of section 14 (which defines
a national system employer).
Note—
Section 30R may limit the extent to which this section extends the meaning
of national system employer.
30P—Extended
meaning of outworker
entity
(1) An outworker entity includes a person, other than in the
person’s capacity as a national system employer, so far as:
(a) the person arranges for work to be performed for the person (either
directly or indirectly); and
(b) the work is of a kind that is often performed by outworkers;
and
(c) one or more of the following applies:
(i) at the time the arrangement is made, one or more parties to the
arrangement is in a State that is a referring State because of this
Division;
(ii) the work is to be performed in a State that is a referring State
because of this Division;
(iii) the person referred to in paragraph (a) carries on an activity
(whether of a commercial, governmental or other nature) in a State that is a
referring State because of this Division, and the work is reasonably likely to
be performed in that State;
(iv) the person referred to in paragraph (a) carries on an activity
(whether of a commercial, governmental or other nature) in a State that is a
referring State because of this Division, and the work is to be performed in
connection with that activity.
(2) This section does not limit the operation of the definition of
outworker entity in section 12.
Note—
Section 30R may limit the extent to which this section extends the meaning
of outworker entity.
(1) Part 3-1 (which deals with general protections) applies to action
taken in a State that is a referring State because of this Division.
(2) This section applies despite section 337 (which limits the application
of Part 3-1), and does not limit the operation of sections 338 and 339
(which set out the application of that Part).
Note—
Section 30R may limit the extent to which this section extends the
application of Part 3-1.
30R—Division only
has effect if supported by reference
A provision of this Division has effect in relation to a State that is a
referring State because of this Division only to the extent that the
State’s referral law refers to the Parliament of the Commonwealth the
matters mentioned in subsection 30L(1) that result in the Parliament of the
Commonwealth having sufficient legislative power for the provision so to have
effect.