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Australian Workers' Union, The v Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd [2024] FWC 2265 (23 August 2024)

Last Updated: 13 September 2024

FAIR WORK COMMISSION
DECISION

Fair Work Act 2009

s.437—Protected action
Australian Workers’ Union, The
v
Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd

(B2024/1051)

COMMISSIONER SIMPSON
BRISBANE, 23 AUGUST 2024

Proposed protected action ballot of employees of Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd – Application dismissed.

“Dear Registry

We act for Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd (Kuiper).

We refer to Application for a Protected Action Ballot Order filed by the Australian Workers Union (AWU) on Sunday, 18 August 2024 (Application).

We are instructed that Kuiper objects to the Application on the following grounds:

  1. The enterprise agreement proposed by the AWU (referred to in Part 2.1, paragraph 7 of Form F34B dated 18 August 2024) covers employees who are covered by the:
(a) Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd - Western Australia and Northern Territory Offshore Construction Project Greenfields Agreement 2020 – 2024, which has a nominal expiry date of 16 August 2024; and

(b) Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd Maintenance Work (Western Australia and Northern Territory) Agreement 2021-2025, which has a nominal expiry date of 2 July 2025.

By reason of s438(1) of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) (FW Act), the Application cannot be made as it is more than 30 days before the nominal expiry date of the Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd Maintenance Work (Western Australia and Northern Territory) Agreement 2021-2025.

  1. A protected action ballot order cannot be made under s443(1)(b) of the FW Act as the Commission cannot be satisfied in the circumstances that the AWU has been and is genuinely trying to reach agreement with Kuiper in relation to the enterprise agreement proposed by the AWU.

Kuiper wishes to be heard by the Commission in respect of the objections outlined above.

In the alternative, in the event that a Protected Action Ballot Order is to be made, Kuiper seeks that under s 443(5) of the FW Act that the Protected Action Ballot Order specify that the period of written notice referred to in s 414(2)(a) be 7 working days on the basis of there being exceptional circumstances justifying this period of written notice.

We note that Kuiper will seek permission to be represented at any hearing. Kuiper’s counsel is located in Melbourne, and we therefore respectfully request that the matter be listed not before Wednesday, 21 August 2024.

Yours sincerely.”

EVIDENCE

“1. The Australian Workers Union (AWU) has been trying to reach agreement with Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd (Respondent) for an agreement to replace the Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd – Western Australia and Northern Territory Offshore Construction Projects Greenfields Agreement 2020 – 2024 (2020 Agreement). The proposed agreement will cover the Respondent’s employees in the classifications contained in the proposed agreement and who are members or are eligible to be members of the AWU.

2. The 2020 Agreement nominally expired on 16 August 2024.

3. On 10 May 2024, the AWU sent correspondence to the Respondent requesting that bargaining commence to replace the 2020 Agreement.

4. On 22 May 2024, the Respondent responded to the AWU and did not agree to bargain.

5. On 29 May 2024, the AWU sent further correspondence to the Respondent requesting that bargaining commence to replace the 2020 Agreement.

6. On 30 May 2024, the Respondent responded to the AWU and did not agree to bargain.

7. On 9 July 2024, the AWU sent further correspondence to the Respondent regarding bargaining to replace the 2020 Agreement. Attached to this correspondence was the AWU log of claims for the proposed agreement, which was in the form of a comprehensive enterprise agreement titled the Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd AWU, ETU and AMWU Offshore WA & NT Offshore Construction Projects Enterprise Agreement 2024 – 2027.

8. In the correspondence dated 9 July 2024, the AWU requested that the Respondent contact the AWU should it require any clarity regarding the AWU log of claims. The AWU reiterated this in an email to the Respondent later on the same day.

9. The Respondent did not seek any clarification on the AWU’s claims.

10. On 9 August 2024, the Respondent sent correspondence to the AWU to inform the AWU of a meeting to discuss ‘the process and timing’ for negotiations for an agreement to replace the 2020 Agreement.

11. This meeting took place on 16 August 2024. I attended this meeting for the AWU, along with another AWU organiser, Tony Hall.

12. At this meeting, the Respondent confirmed that it had received the AWU log of claims. Bargaining meetings were set for 29 August 2024 and 11 September 2024. However, the Respondent did not initiate bargaining nor agree to bargain at this meeting.

13. On 17 August 2024, the AWU sent the Respondent a request to bargain consistent with s.173(2A) of the Fair Work Act, making 17 August 2024 the notification time for the proposed agreement.

14. The AWU and the company have not found agreement on some the key fundamental items, which include:

(a) Rates of Pay;

(b) Allowances;

(c) Income Protection;

(d) Wage Escalations;

(e) Safety and Accommodation Standards;

(f) Rosters;

(g) Local Content; and

(h) Minimum Manning.

15. The next bargaining meeting has been scheduled for 29 August 2024.

16. The AWU is genuinely trying to reach agreement with the Respondent.

17. It is my belief that the AWU is not pursuing any claims regarding non-permitted matters or unlawful terms in negotiations with the Respondent.

18. The Fair Work Commission can be confident that the AWU meets the requirements contained in section 443(1)(b) of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) and is genuinely trying to reach agreement with the Respondent.”

“In accordance with s.437(5) of the Act, the employees to be balloted are those employees of Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd who will be covered by the proposed enterprise agreement and are members of, or are represented by, the bargaining representative who is the Applicant for this protected action ballot order.”

“In accordance with s.437(5) of the Act, the employees to be balloted are those employees of Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd who are members of, or are represented by, The Australian Workers’ Union and whose employment is covered by the Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd – Western Australia and Northern Territory Offshore Construction Projects Greenfields Agreement 2020 – 2024.


Evidence of Mr Kumeroa

(a) Kuiper Australia – Western Australia and Northern Territory Offshore

Construction Projects Agreement 2013-2015;

(b) Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd Onshore and Offshore Greenfields Agreement 2015;

(c) Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd – Western Australia and Northern Territory

Construction Projects Greenfields Agreement 2016; and

(d) The 2020 Agreement.


Evidence of Mr Follett

(a) the Automotive, Food, Metals, Engineering, Printing and Kindred Industries Union of Workers (AMWU);

(b) the Electrical Trades Union, a division of the Communications, Electrical, Electronic, Energy, Information, Postal, Plumbing and Allied Services Union of Australia (ETU); and

(c) the Australian Workers’ Union (AWU).

“Dear Mr Follett,

Re: Bargaining to replace the Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd – Western Australia and Northern Territory Offshore Construction Projects Greenfields Agreement 2020-2024

We contact you on behalf of The Australian Workers’ Union (AWU) and the Maritime Division of the Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (MUA), collectively known as the Offshore Alliance (Alliance).

As you are likely aware, the enterprise agreement known as the Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd Western Australia and Northern Territory Offshore Construction Projects Greenfields Agreement 2020-2024 (2020 Agreement) nominally expired on 16 August 2024. A significant number of employees covered by the 2020 Agreement are members of The Australian Workers’ Union.

The AWU formally requests that bargaining for an enterprise agreement to replace the 2020 Agreement commences as soon as practicable. As an employee organisation, the AWU will be the default bargaining representative for its members in negotiations for an agreement to replace the 2020 Agreement by virtue of s.176(1)(b)(i) of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Act).

Please note that this correspondence is a request in writing to bargain for a proposed agreement for the purposes of s.173(2A) of the Act. As such, 17 August 2024 is the notification time for the proposed agreement to replace the 2020 Agreement. Please acknowledge receipt of this correspondence as soon as practicable.

Yours Sincerely”

“Dear Ms Roach,

Re: Bargaining to replace the Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd – Western Australia and Northern Territory Offshore Construction Projects Greenfields Agreement 2020- 2024

We contact you on behalf of The Australian Workers’ Union (AWU) and the Maritime Division of the Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (MUA), collectively known as the Offshore Alliance (Alliance).

We contact you in relation to the now expired Kuiper Australia Pty Ltd – Western Australia and Northern Territory Offshore Construction Projects Greenfields Agreement 2020-2024 (2020 Agreement) and the AWU’s request to bargain for a replacement agreement dated 17 August 2024.

The AWU clarifies that the union seeks to bargain for an agreement to replace the 2020 Agreement and, as evidenced by the AWU log of claims served on the company on 9 July 2024, the AWU considers scope likely to be the subject of negotiation throughout bargaining.

In any protected action ballot order that the AWU may apply for in relation to the renegotiation of the 2020 Agreement, the AWU will only ever seek to ballot members of the AWU who are covered by the 2020 Agreement. We ask that you acknowledge receipt of this correspondence as soon as practicable.”

(a) no bargaining meetings (other than the preparatory meeting of 16 August 2024) had been held with the AWU, AMWU or ETU;

(b) there had been no discussions about any terms of the proposed enterprise agreement, nor any discussion of any single claim to be made by any of the four relevant bargaining representatives;

(c) Kuiper had not received a log of claims from the AMWU or ETU (which Kuiper understood it would receive in advance of the first bargaining meeting scheduled for 29 August 2024) and had no idea to what extent those logs of claims will differ from that of the AWU.

(d) whilst the AWU had provided a draft of the AWU Proposed Agreement, the coverage of the AWU Proposed Agreement is, for reasons materially different from that of the 2020 Agreement. The Respondent had not yet indicated to the AWU its position in relation to any terms of the AWU Proposed Agreement and no aspects of that Log of Claims have been discussed at all;

(e) The Respondent had not otherwise received any log of claims from the AWU for any other form of proposed agreement to replace the Offshore Construction Agreement;

(f) The Respondent is yet to put to any of the bargaining representatives its own log of claims in relation to an agreement to replace the Offshore Construction Agreement; and

(g) Kuiper has not yet issued a Notice of Employee Representational Rights to its employees.

(a) hook-up or commissioning;

(b) repair, replacement or remedial work on existing facilities or infrastructures; or

(c) production work.


SUBMISSIONS

(a) first, because an application should not have been made under section 437 (for the purposes of section 443(1)(a)), because it is more than 30 days before the nominal expiry date of an enterprise agreement that presently covers a number of employees who would be covered by the proposed enterprise agreement, such that the Application must not have been made (section 438(1) of the Act); and/or

(b) second, because the Commission cannot be satisfied the AWU has been, and is, genuinely trying to reach agreement with the employer of the employees who are to be balloted, in relation to the proposed enterprise agreement, for the purposes of section 443(1)(b) of the Act.

“[8] The Fair Work Act 2009 (FW Act) uses the expression “proposed enterprise agreement”, “proposed single-enterprise agreement” and “proposed agreement” in a number of places. An agreement may be “proposed” by an employer or it may be “proposed” by a bargaining representative of employees or there may be different and competing agreements “proposed” by both. Where a person makes an application under the FW Act in their capacity as a bargaining representative for a “proposed enterprise agreement” or “proposed single enterprise agreement”, the bargaining representative is entitled to rely on the agreement it has proposed or it may choose to make the application in relation to an agreement proposed by another bargaining representative. In this case, it was the LHMU that first “proposed” an agreement and it was the agreement proposed by the LHMU that was the “proposed single enterprise agreement” for purposes of the LHMU’s application for a protected action ballot order under s.437.”

“[15] Mermaid Marine and Skilled Offshore stand for the proposition that all that is required for there to be ‘a proposed enterprise agreement’ within the meaning of ss. 437(1) and 443(1) of the FW Act is an ‘agreement [which] the bargaining representative applying for an order under [s.437] is proposing at the time the application for a protected action ballot order is made’. Further, in MUA v Swire Pacific Ship Management (Australia) Pty Ltd (Swire) the Full Bench characterised a ‘proposed enterprise agreement’ as something that one of the parties wants to negotiate: ‘There need not be a developed draft, and it may simply be an idea or a series of claims...’ While Mermaid Marine, Skilled Offshore, and Swire were all decided before the commencement of s.437(2A), we are not persuaded that the introduction of s.437(2A) affects the reasoning in those cases in respect of this issue.

[16] We should also add that the decision in Mermaid Marine should not be taken as suggesting that an application under s. 437(1) of the FW Act may only be made in relation to an agreement proposed by a PABO applicant. Mermaid Marine was concerned with resolving a contention that because the scope of the agreement proposed by the employer covered employees who were also covered by an operative enterprise agreement whose nominal expiry date had not yet passed and was not due to pass for some significant period, the PABO applicant was prevented, by reason of s.438 (1), from making the application. However the PABO applicant in Mermaid Marine was proposing an agreement which was narrower in scope than the agreement proposed by the employer covering only those employees who were not otherwise covered by the operative enterprise agreement. It is in that context that paragraph [46] in Mermaid Marine is to be understood.

[17] Therefore, it seems to us plainly permissible that a bargaining representative of an employee who will be covered by an agreement proposed by the employer, may apply for a protected action ballot order to determine whether employees wish to engage in particular protected industrial action for that agreement.”

(citations omitted)

“AGL Loy Yang opposes the grant of a PABO on several grounds including that the CFMEU could not, on 5 April 2016, apply for a PABO because there has not been a notification time in relation to the proposed enterprise agreement. We agree and we have decided to dismiss the application. As we have concluded that there is not a valid application for a PABO before the Commission, it is not necessary for us to decide the other matters argued before us and we decline to do so. These are our reasons for dismissing the application.”

“That the CFMEU was proposing an agreement with more than one employer at the time that it applied for a PABO in circumstances where one of the employers had not agreed to or initiated bargaining, seems to us therefore to be fatal to the application. The CFMEU was not, on 5 April 2016, able to apply under s 437(1). That the CFMEU later changed its position in relation to the application or coverage of the proposed agreement does not change the fact that when it applied, it was not permitted by reason of s 437(2A) of the Act to do so. The purported application it made was not a valid one.”

“When read in context, “a proposed enterprise agreement” in s 438(1) seems to us to mean no more than the agreement the bargaining representative applying for an order under s 447 is proposing at the time the application for a protected action ballot order is made. It is that agreement to which the ballot will relate and it is employees represented by the bargaining representative who fall within the scope of that agreement (or a group of such employees) who will vote on questions of particular industrial action. That the Appellant does not agree with the scope of the proposed agreement or would prefer a broader scope or that the bargaining parties have bargained for a broader scope previously is, for the purpose of identifying the proposed enterprise agreement to which s 438(1) might relate, irrelevant in considering whether s 438(1) prohibits an application being made.”

“It seems to us, for present purposes the question of the validity of the application for a PABO made by the CFMEU, may be determined by considering whether, on 5 April 2016, s 437 permitted the CFMEU to apply to the Commission for an order. The answer to this question depends in turn on first identifying the proposed enterprise agreement in relation to which a protected action ballot would be conducted to determine whether employees wish to engage in particular industrial action for the agreement. Secondly, the answer depends on whether there has been a notification time in relation to the proposed enterprise agreement.”

“In this case, identifying the proposed enterprise agreement is not difficult. As at 5 April 2016, the proposed agreement was that which was attached to the witness statement of Mr Hardy as Annexure GH88. The proposed agreement contains an application or coverage provision which seeks that the proposed agreement cover employers (and their employees) other than AGL Loy Yang. That this was the case when the CFMEU applied under s 437 of the Act is uncontroversial. That the CFMEU subsequently, on 12 April 2016, changed its position on the application or coverage of the proposed enterprise agreement it sought so as to limit it to employees of AGL Loy Yang, does not change the fact that when it applied for a PABO on 5 April 2016, it sought and proposed an agreement not only with AGL Loy Yang but also with AGL Energy and unidentified related bodies corporate of AGL Energy.”

“We do not accept the construction of s 437 advanced by the CFMEU. The question of whether a bargaining representative “may apply” is, in our view, to be determined at the time that such an application is made rather than having regard to the possibility that circumstances, which existed at the time the application was made which would prevent the application, might change during the hearing or indeed prior to a decision as to whether a PABO is made. The construction for which the CFMEU contends is contrary to the clear words of s 437(1) read in the context of the section as a whole and the other provisions of Div 8 of Pt 3-3, Ch 3 of the Act and would render for example the operation of s 441(1), which requires the Commission to determine a PABO application within two working days after the application is made, uncertain.”


CONCLUSION

A picture containing logoDescription automatically generated

COMMISSIONER

Appearances:

L Saunders, Counsel for the Applicant
M Follett and J MacLean, Counsel for the Respondent
C Fogliani, Solicitor for the AMWU

Hearing details:

2024
Brisbane (by Video)
21 August.


[1] Exhibit 1.

[2] Exhibit 2.

[3] Exhibit 3.

[4] Exhibit 4.


Printed by authority of the Commonwealth Government Printer

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