27 March 2023
THE HON TONY BURKE MP
MINISTER FOR EMPLOYMENT AND WORKPLACE RELATIONS
MINISTER FOR THE ARTS
LEADER OF THE HOUSE
DAN REPACHOLI MP
FEDERAL MEMBER FOR HUNTER
ENSURING FAIR LONG SERVICE LEAVE ENTITLEMENTS FOR COAL WORKERS
The Albanese Labor Government is fixing unfair laws that reduce the long-service leave entitlements of casual employees in the black coal mining industry.
The Government is introducing legislation that will prevent casual workers in this industry from being disadvantaged compared to their permanent counterparts, just because of their employment status.
Currently, casual employees accrue long-service leave through a calculation that leads to their working hours being unfairly counted. Casuals in the industry may work a compressed fortnightly roster – longer hours in the first week and shorter hours in the second – but current weekly counting of these working hours reported by employers is denying casuals equality in their entitlements.
Minister for Workplace Relations Tony Burke said the fix will benefit an estimated 6,000 workers.
“There’s no excuse for dudding workers out of their entitlements,” Minister Burke said.
“Casuals in the black coal mining industry deserve fair treatment. They deserve the long-service leave entitlements they earned.”
Federal Member for Hunter, Dan Repacholi, said the change would make a real difference.
“This Bill will iron out the unfair laws current disadvantaging casual workers in the coal mining sector” Mr Repacholi said.
“Workers deserve to paid what they are entitled to, and the averaging of hours across a roster cycle will mean 6,000 workers are getting a fair long service leave balance so that when they take the leave they aren’t taking a pay cut.”
Casuals in the industry will also benefit from an amendment that makes it clear that the amount paid out as part of an employee’s long-service leave entitlement must include casual loading.
Levies paid by employers to the Coal Mining Industry (Long-Service Leave Funding) Scheme must also include casual loading. This will ensure that casuals do not take a pay cut when accessing their long-service leave entitlement.
These changes were recommended by an independent review in 2021 into the Coal Mining Industry (Long-Service Leave Funding) Scheme, to ensure that casual employees are treated no less favourably than permanent employees in the industry.