As Parliamentโs Christmas break approaches, the federal government is optimistic that amendments to its industrial relations reform package, including tweaks to its multi-employer bargaining plans, could secure its support in the Senate.
The passage of Laborโs industrial relations omnibus bill through the Senate hinges on support from the crossbench, but key independents Jacqui Lambie and David Pocock have both called for more time to assess its implications on the business community.
Labor hopes to pass the legislation before December 1, when politicians depart Canberra for the festive season.
But with eight sitting days left for the Senate in 2022, many of them crowded out by estimates hearings, the government has knuckled down on consultations with Australian business lobbyists to assuage concerns about the billโs most contentious measures.
Groups involved include the Council of Small Business Organisations Australia, which has suggested multi-employer bargaining streams could assist small businesses locked out of the enterprise bargaining system through cost and complexity.
The Business Council of Australia, the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, and the Australian Industry Group โ all of which take a harsher view of multi-employer bargaining concessions โ have also locked into discussions with the government in recent days.
Speaking to Sky Newsโ Sunday Agenda, Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations Tony Burke said those consultations have already resulted in changes to multi-employer bargaining provisions.
โOne of the concerns, which was a reasonable concern, was the concept that you could have in a multi-employer agreement, one employer where thereโs a heap of staff, another where itโs much smaller numbers and effectively the bigger workplace, overwhelming the vote of the smaller one,โ Burke said.
Changes to the legislation will mean a majority of workers in each business must push for the multi-employer agreement, instead of a majority of employees across a particular sector.
โItโll be changed so that to be part of an agreement where youโre getting a majority of the staff, itโs employer by employer, where thatโs counted similarly for industrial action, similarly to agree to an agreement,โ Burke said.
Responding to calls from the Business Council of Australia to lift the multi-employer bargaining eligibility threshold from 15-person businesses to 100-person businesses, Burke said there โwill be a conversationโ before the legislation reaches the Senate.
Burke added that there are โsome drafts going back and forthโ regarding the โgraceโ period offered to businesses before they fall under multi-employer agreements sought by their employees.
โTo have a period where you can continue to negotiate is something where we are getting close on that,โ Burke said, with the government chasing six months, rather than business group calls for a 12-month amnesty period.
While those changes are well and truly on the governmentโs agenda, Labor is yet to carve away the multi-employer bargaining measures from the broader bill, a move which could allow it to pass less contentious measures by the end of the year.
Speaking on ABC News Breakfast Monday morning, Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones said the government had a solid chance of working through its thorniest proposals.
โMy experience is when you put a good case and we work through it logically and rationally, deal with their objections to things, we will come to a settlement on that, and I think we will do that with the IR laws,โ he said.
After crossbenchers Lambie and Pocock expressed their misgivings over Laborโs proposed timeframe, Jones also defended the governmentโs plan to legislate its reform package as soon as possible.
โWe got elected on a platform of doing something to get paid moving again and frankly Iโm surprised at some of the voices that have been out there saying this is going to be the end of the world,โ he said.
โIt wonโt, itโs a more efficient, effective way to get paid moving for low-paid Australians, and I have to ask, who could be against that?โ