Issue No 86 | 02 March 2001 | |
NewsTest Case: Is Redundancy a Universal Right?
A Sydney architect is testing whether redundancy provisions are a guaranteed right because they are part of an International Labour Organisation convention.
APESMA is seeking to have a full bench of the Australian Industrial Relations Commission confirm a ruling that it's member, Stephen Craig, was enetitled to redundancy. APESMA last year successfully argued that Craig should be paid redundancy, despite the fact that neither his contract of employment or relevant award, contained termination provisions. Instead, the union relied on Article 12 of the ILO's Termination of Employment Convention, to guarantee redundancy to all workers. If successful, the APESMA case will be relevant to thousands of workers who's contracts are not formally covered by these types of provisions. The full bench decision is expected to be handed down later this year.
|
Interview: Master of Opposition Over the past five years, John Faulkner has turned the Senates Estimates structure into his own House of Pain. He explains the art of Opposition. Politics: Beazley the Bridge Builder? As the Howard Government flounders, Brett Evans looks at the challenges Kim Beazley faces as his hour of destiny approaches. Unions: Lashing & Loathing at Patricks Three years since one of the Howard Government�s most infamous episodes, the Waterfront War, Zoe Reynolds discovers how casuals are now doing the doing the dirty work on the docks. Legal: Workers Without Rights Mark Morey outlines the legal status and (lack of) rights for foreigners in Australia on working visas. International: Dispatch from the Dispossessed Mahendra Chaudhry, Leader of the People's Coalition and the Fiji Labour Party comments on this week�s court decision. Economics: Business Power and Mobility The US election season makes it patently clear how Big Business is able to transform its financial resources into political power via campaigncontributions. History: The Spoilers and the Split The Movement, Groupers, the DLP and The Doc. All have been blamed in various ways for the ALP split in the 1950s, ensuring the ALP was kept out of federal government until 1972. Can One Nation return the favour? Review: The New Hard Politics Dennis Glover argues that policy has taken over from spin as the political battleground of the new century. Satire: Bradman Latest: Family In Dramatic Court Action The family of the late Sir Donald Bradman yesterday sought a restraining order against Prime Minister John Howard after it became apparent that he wants to be involved in every single detail of the The Don's funeral.
Notice Board View entire latest issue
|
© 1999-2000 Labor Council of NSW LaborNET is a resource for the labour movement provided by the Labor Council of NSW URL: http://workers.labor.net.au/86/news4_apesma.htmlLast Modified: 15 Nov 2005 [ Privacy Statement | Disclaimer | Credits ] LaborNET is proudly created, designed and programmed by Social Change Online for the Labor Council of NSW |