Intentional wage theft will be criminalised, and โsame job, same payโ rules for labour hire workers will come into effect, after select measures from the Albanese governmentโs Closing Loopholes Bill passed in the Senate on Thursday.
A surprise deal between Workplace Relations Minister Tony Burke and Senate crossbenchers David Pocock and Jacqui Lambie allowed the governmentโs omnibus industrial relations bill to be carved in two, ensuring its legislation on the last parliamentary sitting day of the year.
As a result, the following measures will come into law:
- โSame job, same payโ rules for labour hire workers occupying identical roles to a host companyโs employees;
- The criminalisation of intentional wage and superannuation theft;
- The criminalisation of industrial manslaughter;
- Expanding access to workers compensation for first responders in relation to post-traumatic stress disorder;
- Reshaping the Asbestos Safety and Eradication Agency so it covers include silica and silica-based illnesses;
- Boosting protections for those experiencing family and domestic violence so they do not face discrimination in the workplace;
- The closure of a loophole that allowed medium-sized businesses to avoid redundancy payment obligations when downsizing.
Debate over the remainder of the Closing Loopholes Bill, which includes a plan to set new standards in the gig economy, and establish a formal definition of casual work, will resume next year.
The deal marks a reversal from the Albanese government, which until Thursday had publicly signalled it would not carve non-contentious measures from the omnibus bill so they could be passed before the holiday break.
Speaking in the Senate, Lambie thanked Burkeโs office for โcoming to the tableโ after weeks of public debate over the contentious split proposal.
The Greens also backed the split-up IR reforms, after putting forward the superannuation theft amendment to Laborโs original Bill.
However, speaking in the Upper House on Thursday morning, Shadow Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations Michaelia Cash said Burke deserved an โOlympic gold medal for the backflip that has been doneโ.
The deal marks a โdevastating day for Australian businessesโ, she continued.
Nationals Senator Bridget McKenzie said the changes will โcreate more complexity and uncertainty, add more cost to small businesses and farmers, make Australians pay more, do nothing to increase productivity and actually will put jobs at riskโ.
Crossbenchers pledge protections for small business
In the three-way deal, Senators Lambie and Pocock said they also secured protections for small businesses set to be covered by the new legislation.
Senator Lambie secured extra funding for the Fair Work Ombudsman to assist small businesses in becoming aware of their new obligations.
The criminalisation of wage and superannuation theft will only come into effect once a small business Code of Conduct is established, giving small business employers leeway if they can prove under- or nonpayment was a genuine error.
โThis is only intentional wage theft, because we know that mistakes are made,โ Pocock said in the upper house.
โIn this legislation weโve ensured that small businesses are looked after, with these provisions not starting until the small business code is in place and, as Senator Lambie said, there is further resourcing for the Fair Work Ombudsman to engage with small businesses.โ
Lambie also flagged she would fight for small business protections in the second half of the omnibus Bill.
โWe also need to be careful about the impact on the smaller businesses,โ she said, reflecting on the measures around the new casual work conversion proposal.
Under the government plan, casual employees at small businesses will be able to access the new conversion pathway after 12 months, instead of six months for big businesses.
โWe want to make sure that that stays in place and there arenโt unintended consequences for small businesses from this, even though they are exempt,โ Lambie said.
โI will work in good faith with the government โ as we always do, regardless of whoโs in government โ and the minister on part 2 of the Closing Loopholes Bill.
โBut I can assure you that it is a long way from being a free pass.โ