Plans & Pricing

Affordable plans to meet every business need and budget.

Not sure which plan?

We’re here to assist. Book a demo:

HR News

Keep informed and up-to-date about important HR and employment laws matters. Access tips to help you achieve a more productive workforce.

> Subscribe to get our newsletter/updates

Why BetterHR?

We’ve helped thousands of business owners and managers like you – and we’ve never lost a claim!

> Explainer Video

Contact us

Open: Mon to Fri – 9am to 5pm AEST

> General enquiries

Not yet a subscriber?

Already a subscriber?

The Fair Work Commission has largely confirmed its provisional views on casual terms in modern awards.

After considering the casual provisions in six “stage one” awards they chose the Commission ruled on the changes necessary to comply with the Omnibus Bill’s changes to regulation of casual work under the Fair Work Act.

The Act’s new s15A defines a “casual employee” as one who accepts a job offer from an employer knowing there is no firm advance commitment to continuing work with an agreed pattern, and NES casual conversion arrangements in Part 2-2 Division 4A.

The amendment says casual status is “assessed on the basis of the offer of employment and the acceptance of that offer, not on the basis of any subsequent conduct of either party”.

The Commission:

  • held to its view that the “engaged as a casual” definition is inconsistent with new the new Fair Work Act definition;
  • maintained its view that “paid by the hour definitions are also inconsistent with s15A; and
  • backed its tentative view that “residual category” definitions, such as those in the retail and pastoral awards, might not be “directly inconsistent”, but such definitions “should give rise to relevant interaction difficulties or uncertainty because of differently expressed casuals definitions in s15A and in the awards”.

The Commission also held to the view that replacing existing definitions in awards with the definition in s15A or referring to s15A would make the award consistent with the amended Act.

It said it would follow that course with the retail, hospitality, manufacturing, teachers and pastoral awards and that the variations would take effect from September 27.

The Commission also endorsed its provisional view that it should not vary awards to specify the entitlements for which casual loading compensates.

It further held to its provisional view that the model award casual conversion clause is less beneficial than the NES casual conversion entitlements.

It stuck by its provisional view that it should remove the model clause from awards and replace it with a reference to the NES provisions.

It also adhered to one of the approaches it took in its provisional views on the casual conversion clauses in the manufacturing award, saying it would remove them and replace them with references to the NES casual conversion entitlements.

It took a similar approach with the conversion clause in the hospitality award.

The Commission will now issue draft determinations to vary the six test case awards to reflect Friday’s ruling and this will provide the template for changes to the remaining 150 modern awards in “stage two”.

The review of the awards must be finalised by the statutory deadline of September 27.

Need help with HR Software & HR Advice?

BetterHR helps businesses implement effective people management strategies as well as best practice HR compliance.  Every day, our HR software and expert HR advice helps employers manage over 50,000 workers.

Already a subscriber?

ACCESS YOUR PLAN

Not yet a subscriber?

Contact us to discuss your HR needs.

REQUEST A CALLBACK