CLOSING LOOPHOLES THAT UNDERCUT PAY AND CONDITIONS FOR AUSTRALIAN WORKERS
The Albanese Labor Government is supporting Australian workers by closing loopholes that undercut pay and conditions.
The Government’s Closing Loopholes Bill has been introduced to Parliament.
We were elected on a pledge to get wages moving again after a decade where keeping wages low was a deliberate design feature of the previous government.
Last year’s Secure Jobs, Better Pay legislation was about raising the floor – to improve working conditions and get wages moving again. This reached into every workplace in the country.
This year’s legislation is about closing the loopholes that undercut pay and conditions for workers.
Most workers will be unaffected by what happens this year, but for those who are affected – this will be life-changing.
The four major elements of the Closing Loopholes Bill are:
Criminalising wage theft
Introducing minimum standards for workers in the gig economy
Closing the forced permanent casual worker loophole
Closing the labour hire loophole
The Government announced these policies when we were in Opposition two-and-a-half years ago and we took them to the Australian people last year.
The introduction of this Bill follows months of extensive consultations, including with employer groups and unions.
Other elements of the Closing Loopholes Bill include:
Allowing the Fair Work Commission to set minimum standards for the road transport industry
Continuing to implement the Boland Review to introducing an offence for industrial manslaughter and increasing penalties
Better support for first responders diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder
Expanding the functions of the Asbestos Safety and Eradication Agency to include silica safety and silica-related diseases
Stronger workplace protections for survivors of family or domestic violence
Provide specific protections for delegates, greater legal powers to challenge unfair contract terms, and cracking down on sham contracting
Better representation for safety and compliance issues in the workplace, including expanding the powers of the Fair Work Commission to permit right of entry to investigate suspected underpayments
All of these measures are designed to close loopholes that have undercut secure jobs, better pay and safe workplaces.
ENDS