Industrial Relations Act 1979
Western Australia
Industrial Relations Act 1979
Contents
Part I — Introductory
1.Short title2
2.Commencement2
3.Application of Act off‑shore2
4.Repeal5
6.Objects of Act5
7.Terms used6
Part II — The Western Australian Industrial Relations Commission
Division 1 — Constitution of the Commission
8.Commission constituted20
9.Qualifications for appointment of Chief Commissioner21
10.Age limit for commissioners21
11.Oath of office and secrecy22
12.Commission is court of record etc.22
13.Protection of commissioners and others22
14.Exercise of powers and jurisdiction of Commission23
14A.Dual federal and State appointments23
14B.Performance of duties by dual federal and State appointees23
15.Constitution of Full Bench and Commission in Court Session24
16.Chief Commissioner’s functions25
16A.Delegation by Chief Commissioner27
17.Appointment of acting commissioners28
18.Extending appointments28
19.Duty of commissioners29
20.Conditions of service of commissioners29
21.Resignation from office31
22.Tenure subject to good behaviour32
Division 2 — General jurisdiction and powers of the Commission
22A.Terms used32
22B.Commission to act with due speed33
23.Jurisdiction of Commission33
23A.Unfair dismissal claims, Commission’s powers on36
23B.Third party involvement in employment claim, Commission’s powers to prevent etc.38
24.Industrial matters, Commission may decide what are39
25.Allocation of industrial matters by Chief Commissioner39
26.Commission to act according to equity and good conscience40
27.Powers of Commission44
28.Powers in s. 27 may be exercised at any time after matter lodged47
29.Who may refer industrial matters to Commission48
29AA.Certain claims not to be determined49
29A.Proposed award etc., service of etc.51
29B.Parties to proceedings53
30.Minister may intervene on behalf of State53
31.Representation of parties to proceedings53
32.Conciliation and arbitration of industrial matters55
32A.Conciliation and arbitration functions of Commission are unlimited57
33.Evidence before Commission57
34.Decisions of Commission, form of and review of59
35.Decision to be first drawn up as minutes60
36.Copy of decision must be given to parties and be available for inspection61
Division 2A — Awards
36A.Non‑award employees, interim award for etc.62
37.Effect, area of operation and duration of award62
37A.Public sector awards and enterprise awards63
37B.Private sector awards: general63
37C.Private sector awards: limitations on making and varying64
37D.Private sector awards: variations of the Commission’s own motion65
38.Named parties to awards66
39.When award operates67
40.Varying and cancelling awards generally68
40A.Incorporation of industrial agreement provisions into awards by consent69
40B.Power to vary awards to reflect statutory etc. requirements, to promote efficiency and to facilitate implementation70
Division 2B — Industrial agreements
40C.Terms used71
41.Industrial agreements, making, registration and effect of72
41A.Which industrial agreements must not be registered under s. 4174
42.Bargaining for industrial agreement, initiating75
42A.Response to initiation of bargaining76
42B.Bargaining for industrial agreements, good faith required etc.77
42C.Code of good faith78
42D.Duty of good faith does not require concluded industrial agreement79
42E.Commission may assist bargaining79
42F.Commission’s power over negotiating parties restricted80
42G.Parties may agree to Commission making orders as to terms of agreement80
42H.Commission may declare that bargaining has ended81
42I.Enterprise order, applying for and making81
42J.Enterprise order, effect of83
42K.Enterprise order, term of and varying etc.84
42L.When bargaining ends85
42M.Regulations for this Division85
43.Industrial agreement, varying, renewing and cancelling85
Division 2C — Holding of compulsory conferences
44.Compulsory conference, summoning, holding etc.86
Division 2D — Miscellaneous provisions relating to awards, orders and agreements
46.Interpretation of awards and orders by Commission91
47.Defunct awards etc., cancelling; employers not in business etc., deleting from awards etc.92
48.Board of Reference for each award94
48A. Awards etc. to provide for dispute resolution96
48B.Superannuation, provisions about in awards etc.97
Division 2E — Appeals to the Full Bench
49.Appeal from Commission’s decision99
Division 2F — Keeping of and access to employment records and pay slips
49D.Employer’s duties as to employment records102
49DA.Employer obligations in relation to pay slips105
49E.Access to employment records107
49F.Enforcement of this Division108
Division 2G — Right of entry and inspection by authorised representatives
49G.Terms used108
49H.Entry for discussions with employees109
49I.Entry to investigate certain breaches109
49J.Authorising authorised representatives111
49K.No entry to premises used for habitation113
49L.Authority must be shown on request113
49M.Obstructing etc. rights etc. under this Division etc.114
49N.Entry and inspection, provisions in awards etc. as to114
49O.Enforcement of this Division115
Division 3 — General Orders
50.General Orders, nature of and making115
50A.Rates of pay etc. for MCE Act and awards, annual State Wage order as to117
50B.Apprentices, matters relevant to setting rates for in State Wage order120
51A.Public sector discipline, General Orders as to122
51B.General Order not to set minimum condition set by MCE Act123
51BA.Notice of hearing to make General Order124
51BB.Right to be heard before General Order made124
51BC.Commissioner may deal with certain proceedings124
51BD.Awards etc. affected by General Order, publication of125
51BE.Publication of order125
Division 3AA — Workers bullied or sexually harassed at work
51BF.Terms used125
51BG.Person conducting a business or undertaking126
51BH.Worker127
51BI.Worker bullied or sexually harassed at work128
51BJ.Stop bullying or sexual harassment application129
51BK.Dealing with a stop bullying or sexual harassment application129
51BL.Power to dismiss stop bullying or sexual harassment applications involving covert operations130
51BM.Commission may make stop bullying or sexual harassment orders130
51BN.Contravening stop bullying or sexual harassment order131
Division 3A — MCE Act functions
Subdivision 1 — Preliminary
51C.Term used: Commission132
Subdivision 3 — Casual employees’ loading
51I.Casual employees’ loading, setting for MCE Act s. 11132
Subdivision 4 — Orders under this Division generally
51J.Notice of hearings under this Division133
51K.Right to be heard before order made under this Division133
51L.Orders under this Division, restrictions on133
51M.Publication of orders134
51N.Variation and rescission of s. 51I orders134
Division 3B — Equal remuneration
51O.Equal remuneration orders134
51P.Employer not to reduce remuneration135
51Q.Alternative remedies136
51R.Remuneration‑related action137
Division 4 — Industrial organisations and associations
52.Terms used137
52A.Counterpart federal body138
53.Organisations of employees, which can be registered140
54.Organisations of employers, which can be registered140
55.Applications for registration under s. 53 or 54141
56.Rules of organisations to provide for secret ballots etc. at elections143
56A.Casual vacancies, rules as to filling145
57.Elections by direct voting system to be by secret postal ballot146
58.Registering organisations, rules etc.147
59.Names of registered organisations, restrictions on148
60.Organisation becomes incorporated on registration148
61.Effect of registration149
62.Altering registered rules149
63.Records, organisations’ duties as to etc.150
64.Membership register, Registrar may direct rectification of etc.151
64A.Resigning from an organisation152
64B.Membership ends if subscription not paid153
64C.Effect of s. 64A and 64B in relation to organisation’s rules153
64D.Purging register, organisation’s rules to provide for153
65.Accounts of organisation, audit and filing of154
65A.Auditor’s powers154
66.Power of Chief Commissioner to deal with rules of organisation155
67.Industrial associations, registering157
68.Declaration as to certain functions158
69.Election, conduct of by Registrar or Electoral Commissioner158
70.Offences in relation to elections161
71.Rules of State and federal organisations as to membership and offices162
71A.State organisation may adopt rules of federal organisation166
72.Amalgamated organisations, registration of167
72A.Employee organisations, orders as to whom they represent168
72B.AMA may represent interests of medical practitioners170
73.Cancelling and suspending registration of organisation, procedure for172
Division 5 — Duties of officers of organisations
74.Finance official’s duties176
75.Auditor to report on compliance with s. 74 duties178
77.Duty under s. 74, enforcing178
78.Failure to comply with s. 77(2)(e) order180
79.Proceedings under s. 77, effect on or of other proceedings180
80.Disqualification from office for breach of s. 74 duty181
Part 2AA — Employers declared not to be national system employers
Division 1 — Declarations
80A.Employers declared not to be national system employers183
Division 2 — Change from federal to State system
80B.Terms used183
80BA.Operation of awards, industrial agreements or orders184
80BB.New State instruments185
80BC.Amendment of new State instruments186
80BD.Ability to carry over matters186
80BE.References in new State instruments to federal industrial authority and General Manager187
80BF.References in new State instruments to provisions of Commonwealth laws187
80BG.References in new State instruments to federal organisations188
80BH.Named parties to new State instruments188
80BI.Employment under old federal instrument188
80BJ.Leave accrued immediately before relevant day189
80BK.Leave taken under old federal instrument189
Part IIA — Constituent authorities
Division 2 — Public service arbitrator and appeal boards
80C.Terms used and construction and application of Division191
80D.Public service arbitrators, appointment of etc.194
80E.Jurisdiction of Arbitrator194
80F.Who may refer matters to Arbitrator197
80G.Part II Div. 2 to 2G, application of197
80H.Public Service Appeal Board, members of etc.198
80I.Board’s jurisdiction199
80J.Institution of appeals under s. 80I200
80K.Proceedings of Board200
80L.Certain provisions of Part II Div. 2 apply200
Division 3 — Railways Classification Board
80M.Terms used201
80N.Railways Classification Board, members of etc.202
80O.Terms of office etc.204
80P.Extending appointments206
80Q. Validity of acts of Board206
80R.Board’s jurisdiction207
80S.Who may refer matters to Board210
80U.Vacant salaried position, reclassification of210
80V.Proceedings of Board211
80W.Part II Div. 2 to 2G, application of211
Part IIB — Enquiries
80ZE.Minister may refer matter to Commission for enquiry213
Part IIC — Arrangements with other industrial authorities
80ZF.Term used: FW Commission214
80ZG.Joint proceedings of Commission and FW Commission214
80ZH.Referring matters to FW Commission for determination under this Act215
80ZI.Conferences with other industrial authorities216
80ZJ.Commission may exercise powers conferred by FW Act or prescribed enactments216
Part III — Enforcement of Act, awards, industrial agreements and orders
Division 1 — Industrial magistrate’s court
81.Industrial magistrate’s courts established218
81A.Jurisdiction under this Act of industrial magistrate’s court218
81AA.Jurisdiction under other Acts of industrial magistrate’s court219
81B.Industrial magistrate’s courts, constitution of219
81C.Sittings of industrial magistrate’s courts220
81CA.Procedure etc. of industrial magistrate’s courts221
81CB.Industrial magistrate’s court judgments, enforcement of222
81D. Clerks of industrial magistrate’s courts223
81E.Representation of parties in industrial magistrate’s court223
81F.Industrial magistrate’s court records, access to223
81G.Industrial inspectors may assist industrial magistrate’s court225
Division 2 — Enforcement generally
82.Jurisdiction of Full Bench225
82A.Time limit for certain applications226
83.Enforcing awards etc.226
83A.Underpayment of employee, orders to remedy228
83B.Unfair dismissal, enforcing s. 23A order as to229
83C.Costs of enforcement orders under s. 83, 83A and 83B232
83D.Offences under this Act, jurisdiction as to233
83E.Civil penalty provision, proceedings for contravening233
83EA.Serious contravention of entitlement provision or civil penalty provision236
83EB.Employer to have burden of disproving certain allegations by applicant under s. 83238
83F.Costs and penalties, payment of239
84.Appeal from industrial magistrate’s court to Full Bench239
84AA.Illegal contracts of employment may be treated as valid241
84A.Certain contraventions of Act, enforcement of before Full Bench241
Division 3 — Civil infringement notices
84B.Terms used243
84C.Giving civil infringement notice244
84D.Content of civil infringement notice244
84E.Amount of civil infringement notice penalty245
84F.Time for payment of civil infringement notice penalty246
84G.Extension of time to pay civil infringement notice penalty246
84H.Withdrawal of civil infringement notice247
84I.Effect of payment of civil infringement notice penalty248
84J.Refund of civil infringement notice penalty248
Division 4 — Enforceable undertakings
84K.Terms used248
84L.Application of Division249
84M.Enforceable undertaking249
84N.Enforcement of enforceable undertakings249
Division 5 — Compliance notices
84O.Terms used250
84P.Application of Division250
84Q.Giving compliance notice250
84R.Relationship with enforceable undertakings251
84S.Relationship with proceedings under s. 83252
84T.Person must comply with compliance notice252
84U.Review of compliance notices253
84V.Withdrawal of compliance notice253
Part IV — Western Australian Industrial Appeal Court
85.Constitution of Court254
86.Jurisdiction of Court255
87.Decision of Court256
88.Judgments, enforcement of256
90.Appeal from Commission to Court257
91.Representation before Court258
91A.Court’s power to order costs and expenses259
92.Contempt, Court’s powers as to259
Part V — The Registrar and other officers of the Commission
93.Appointment and duties of officers261
94.Authority of officers to do acts as directed263
95.Deputy registrar’s functions263
96.Delegation by Commission to Registrar264
Part VIA — Freedom of association
96A.Terms used267
96B.Awards etc. not to contain certain provisions about membership of organisations267
96C.Discrimination because of membership of organisation, offence268
96D.Discriminatory etc. acts against persons performing work for employers because of membership or non‑membership of employee organisation, offence269
96E.Discriminatory etc. acts against persons because of non‑membership of employee organisation, offence271
96F.Penalties under s. 96C, 96D and 96E, provisions about273
96G.Criminal responsibility of officers etc. for offences in s. 96C, 96D and 96E274
96H.Criminal responsibility of corporations etc. for offences in s. 96C, 96D and 96E275
96I.Evidentiary provisions for s. 96C, 96D and 96E275
96J.Court may order compliance with s. 96C, 96D or 96E276
96K.Appeal against decision under s. 96J277
96L.Other court orders after conviction under s. 96C, 96D or 96E278
Part 6B — Protection of employee rights
Division 1 — Preliminary
97.Terms used279
Division 2 — Damaging action
97A.Damaging action because of inquiry or complaint280
97B.Court orders to employers280
97C.Court orders to third parties281
Division 3 — Sham contracts for services
97D.Misrepresenting contract of employment as contract for services282
97E.Dismissing to engage under contract for services282
97F.False statement to engage under contract for services283
97G.Court orders to employers283
Division 4 — Miscellaneous
97H.Certain advertising prohibited284
Part VID — Employer‑employee agreements
Division 1 — Preliminary
97U.Terms used286
Division 2 — The making of an EEA
97UA.Employer and employee may make EEA288
97UB.EEA may deal with post‑employment matters288
97UC.Other provisions about making EEA288
97UD.Making of EEA by person with a mental disability289
97UE.Effect of EEA289
97UF.EEA not to be made while industrial agreement in operation290
97UG.Documents etc. to be given to employee before EEA signed290
97UH.Application of s. 97UG if draft EEA amended292
97UI.EEA information statement, form of (s. 97UG(2)(b))292
97UJ.Bargaining agents, appointing etc.293
97UK.Prohibited conduct relating to bargaining agents294
Division 3 — Form and content of EEA
97UL.Form of EEA294
97UM.Additional formalities for EEA made with employee under 18295
97UN.EEA must provide for resolution of disputes296
97UO.EEA dispute provisions, content of296
97UP.Industrial authority may be specified as arbitrator297
Division 4 — Commencement, duration and variation
97UQ.New employee, when EEA commences298
97UR.Existing employee, when EEA commences298
97US.Expiry of EEA298
97UT.Employment conditions applicable on expiry of EEA299
97UU.EEA cannot be varied299
97UV.Cancelling EEA300
97UW.Termination of employment, effect of on EEA300
Division 5 — Registration of EEAs
Subdivision 1 — Preliminary
97UX.Delegation by Registrar300
Subdivision 2 — Registration
97UY.Lodgment of EEA for registration301
97UZ.EEA with new employee, effect of not lodging302
97V.Recovery of money if s. 97UZ applies302
97VA.Employment conditions of new employee if EEA not lodged303
97VB.Registrar to be satisfied EEA is in order for registration304
97VC.Registrar’s powers for s. 97VB304
97VD.Registrar to notify parties of certain deficiencies in EEA305
97VE.Parties may correct deficiencies in EEA305
97VF.Registration of EEA306
97VG.Refusal of registration of EEA306
97VH.When refusal has effect306
97VI.EEA for new employee refused registration, effect ceases307
97VJ.Recovery of money if s. 97VI applies307
97VK.Employment conditions of new employee if registration refused308
97VL.Registrar to provide copy of registered EEA308
Subdivision 3 — Appeal against refusal of registration
97VM.Appeal against refusal of registration309
97VN.Relevant industrial authority to notify parties of certain deficiencies in EEA309
97VO.Parties may correct deficiencies in EEA310
97VP.Determination of appeal310
97VQ.Procedure on appeal311
Division 6 — No‑disadvantage test
Subdivision 1 — Definition
97VR.Terms used311
97VS.No‑disadvantage test defined312
97VT.Determining which award etc. is relevant for s. 97VS313
97VU.All entitlements to be considered314
97VV.Application of test if Supported Wage System applies314
Subdivision 2 — Principles to be followed in application of no‑disadvantage test
97VW.Term used: Commission315
97VX.Commission to establish principles and guidelines315
97VY.Registrar and Commission to give effect to s. 97VX instrument316
97VZ.Minister or peak industry body may seek amendment etc. of s. 97VX instrument316
97W.Public comment to be sought before s. 97VX instrument amended etc.317
97WA.How public comment to be sought317
Division 7 — Register
97WB.Terms used318
97WC.Register of EEAs318
97WD.Inspection of register319
97WE.Commission may exempt an EEA from inspection319
97WF.Protected information not to be disclosed319
97WG.Certified copies of EEAs320
Division 8 — Disputes
97WH.Terms used321
97WI.Arbitration jurisdiction of relevant industrial authority321
97WJ.Representation of parties321
97WK.Alleged delay in dispute resolution, referral of to relevant industrial authority etc.322
97WL.Several disputes may be subject of one arbitration323
97WM.Arbitrator’s power to obtain information323
97WN.Orders and determinations of arbitrators324
97WO.Orders and determinations, form of etc.325
97WP.Enforcing orders and determinations325
97WQ.Industrial magistrate’s court not bound by arbitrator’s interpretation of EEA326
Division 9 — EEAs for persons with mental disabilities
Subdivision 1 — Preliminary
97WR.Terms used326
97WS.Guardianship and Administration Act 1990, relationship of this Division to327
97WT.Registrar to notify Public Advocate of applications and orders for approval of representative328
97WU.Public Advocate to notify Registrar of relevant guardianship orders328
Subdivision 2 — Approval of person to act on behalf of person with a mental disability
97WV.Application for approval329
97WW.Requirements for s. 97WV application330
97WX.Forms for s. 97WW to be prescribed330
97WY.Who may be approved as a representative331
97WZ.Approval of representative332
97X.Effect of s. 97WZ order332
97XA.Refusal of approval333
97XB.Appeal against refusal of approval333
97XC.Determination of appeal333
Subdivision 3 — Functions of representative
97XD.Functions334
97XE.Effect of acts of representative335
97XF.Duties of representative335
Subdivision 4 — Termination of representative’s authority to act
97XG.Duration of order approving representative336
97XH.Resignation of representative336
97XI.Revocation order, application to SAT for337
97XJ.Right to be heard on s. 97XI application337
97XK.SAT may make revocation order338
97XL.Guardianship and Administration Act 1990, application of for s. 97XK339
Subdivision 5 — Approval of new representative
97XM.Application for new approval where representative dies or approval is revoked339
97XN.Approval of representative340
97XO.Effect of s. 97XN order341
97XP.Refusal of approval341
97XQ.Appeal against refusal of approval342
Subdivision 6 — Miscellaneous
97XR.Registrar’s powers for s. 97WV and 97XM342
97XS.EEA not affected by revocation of order or vacancy in position of representative342
97XT.Register of s. 97WZ and 97XN orders342
97XU.Certified copies of registered entry343
97XV.Information obtained under this Division not to be disclosed343
97XW.Procedure in proceedings under this Division344
Division 10 — Certain conduct prohibited
97XX.Purpose of this Division345
97XY.Enforcing prohibitions in this Division345
97XZ.Making employment etc. conditional on EEA being entered into prohibited345
97Y.Certain advertising prohibited346
97YA.Exception to s. 97XZ and 97YB346
97YB.Employer offering EEA to also offer other employment arrangements347
97YC.Order for compliance with s. 97YB348
97YD.Threats and intimidation as to EEA prohibited348
97YE.Misinformation prohibited349
97YF.Dismissal etc. because of refusal to make or cancel EEA prohibited349
97YG.Breach of s. 97YF, court orders that may be made for350
97YH.Burden of proof in s. 97YF proceedings351
Division 11 — General
97YI.Review of Div. 5, 6 and 7352
97YJ.Regulations352
Part VII — Miscellaneous
98.Industrial inspectors, designation and functions of etc.353
98A.Information obtained under s. 98 not to be disclosed356
99A.Identity cards for industrial inspectors357
99B.Production of identity card358
99C.Staff for Department358
99D.Designation of officers, generally359
99.Wage rates in awards not affected by repeal of basic wage provisions359
102.Obstruction etc. prohibited360
102A.Institution of certain proceedings, powers of Registrar etc. for361
103.Certain applications may relate to more than one breach362
104.Prosecutions362
105.Awards etc., evidence of363
106.Official signatures and appointments, judicial notice of364
107.No costs to be awarded against Registrar, deputy registrar or industrial inspector364
108.Organisations and associations not affected by certain Imperial Acts364
109.Dues payable to organisation or association may be sued for365
110.Disputes between organisation or association and its members, how to be determined365
111.No premiums etc. to be taken for employment366
112.Certain rules of organisation as to penalties invalid366
112A.Industrial agents, registration of367
113.Regulations370
114.Contracting out from awards etc. prohibited373
115.Police officers, application of Act to (Sch. 3)373
116.Transitional provisions for Industrial Relations Amendment Act 2018373
117.Savings and transitional provisions for Industrial Relations Legislation Amendment Act 2021374
Schedule 1 — Matters to be published in the “Western Australian Industrial Gazette”
Schedule 3 — Police officers
1.Term used: Arbitrator376
2.Application of Act to police officer376
3.Western Australian Police Union of Workers, status of377
Schedule 4 — Registration requirements for EEAs
1.When EEA is in order for registration378
Schedule 5 — Powers to obtain information, and related provisions
1.Authorised person’s powers to obtain information380
2.Obstructing authorised person380
3.False statement to authorised person380
4.Failure to comply with cl. 1 requirement381
5.Legal professional privilege overridden381
6.Incriminating answers or documents381
Schedule 6 — Transitional provisions
Division 1 — Preliminary
1.Terms used383
Division 2 — Provisions for President
2.Acting President: continuation in office383
3.Past President’s pension entitlements384
4.Judicial notice of signature and appointment of President384
Division 3 — Provisions for pending matters
5.Pending matters384
6.Order under former s. 49 does not begin hearing of appeal385
7.Notices and applications under former s. 55385
8.Summonses under former s. 73386
Notes
Compilation table387
Uncommenced provisions table395
Other notes395
Defined terms
Industrial Relations Act 1979
An Act to consolidate and amend the law relating to the prevention and resolution of conflict in respect of industrial matters, the mutual rights and duties of employers and employees, the rights and duties of organisations of employers and employees, and for related purposes.
This Act may be cited as the Industrial Relations Act 1979.
[Section 1 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 4.]
The provisions of this Act shall come into operation on such day or days as is or are, respectively, fixed by proclamation.
3.Application of Act off‑shore
(1)Subject to subsections (5) and (6) where any industry is carried on —
(a)partly within the State and partly within an area to which this subsection applies; or
(b)wholly or partly in an area to which this subsection applies, and —
(i)facilities for servicing or supporting that industry are maintained in the State by or on behalf of the employer concerned; or
(ii)the employer concerned is connected with the State; or
(iii)that industry is carried on from, or on, or by means of, an aircraft, ship, or vessel certificated, registered, or licensed under a law of the State or by a public authority, or which is required to be so certificated, registered, or licensed; or
(iv)that industry is carried on from, or on, or by means of, a rig or other structure, installation, or equipment, the use or function of which is regulated by the State or by the State and the Commonwealth, or is required to be so regulated; or
(v)that industry is authorised or regulated by the State or by the State and the Commonwealth; or
(vi)that industry is carried on pursuant to a law of the State,
then this Act applies to and in relation to that industry in so far as any employment relates to the area to which this subsection applies and in any such case this Act also applies to and in relation to any related industrial matter or industrial action, and any jurisdiction, function, duty, or power exercisable, imposed, or conferred by or under this Act extends to the matter or action.
(2)For the purposes of subsection (1), an employer is connected with the State if that employer —
(a)is domiciled in the State; or
(b)is resident in the State, normally or temporarily; or
(c)being a body corporate, is —
(i)registered, incorporated, or established under a law of the State; or
(ii)taken to be registered in the State; or
(iii)a related body corporate of such a body for the purposes of the Corporations Act 2001 (Commonwealth);
or
(d)in connection with the industry concerned, has an office or a place of business in the State; or
(e)is the holder of a licence, lease, tenement, permit, or other authority, granted under a law of the State or by a public authority under or by virtue of which the industry is carried on.
(3)The areas to which subsection (1) applies are —
(a)that area situate west of 129° of east longitude reckoning from the meridian of Greenwich, that is part of the areas known as and comprised within —
(i)the Australian fishing zone as defined by the Commonwealth Fisheries Act 1952 2; or
(ii)the continental shelf, within the meaning of the Convention on the Continental Shelf a copy of which in the English language is set out in Schedule 1 to the Commonwealth Petroleum (Submerged Lands) Act 1967 3;
(b)any other area seaward of the State to which from time to time the laws of the State apply or, by a law of the Commonwealth, are applied.
(4)For the purposes of any proceedings under this Act an averment in the application or process is, in the absence of proof to the contrary, taken to be proved if it is either of the following —
(a)that an employer was, pursuant to subsection (2), at a specified time or during a specified period or at all material times connected with the State; or
(b)that any conduct, event, circumstance, or matter occurred, or that any place is situate, within an area referred to in subsection (3).
(5)Subsections (1), (2), and (3) must not be construed as applying this Act to or in relation to any person, circumstance, thing, or place by reason only of the operation of paragraph (c) of the interpretation of the term industry set out in section 7(1) unless this Act would also apply by reason of the operation of subsection (1).
(6)Subsections (1), (2), and (3) have effect only where this Act or any provision of this Act would not otherwise apply as a law of the State, or be applied as a law of the Commonwealth, to or in relation to any person, circumstance, thing, or place.
[Section 3 amended: No. 10 of 1982 s. 28; No. 10 of 2001 s. 111; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and (8), 78(1) and (7).]
The Industrial Arbitration Act 1912 is repealed.
[Section 4 amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 78(2).]
[5.Deleted: No. 79 of 1995 s. 66(2).]
The principal objects of this Act are —
(a)to promote goodwill in industry and in enterprises within industry; and
(aa)to provide for rights and obligations in relation to good faith bargaining; and
(ab)to promote the principles of freedom of association and the right to organise; and
(ac)to promote equal remuneration; and
(ad)to promote collective bargaining and to establish the primacy of collective agreements over individual agreements; and
(ae)to ensure all agreements registered under this Act provide for fair terms and conditions of employment; and
(af)to facilitate the efficient organisation and performance of work according to the needs of an industry and enterprises within it, balanced with fairness to the employees in the industry and enterprises; and
(ag)to encourage employers, employees and organisations to reach agreements appropriate to the needs of enterprises within industry and the employees in those enterprises; and
(b)to encourage, and provide means for, conciliation with a view to amicable agreement and preventing and settling industrial disputes; and
(c)to provide means for preventing and settling industrial disputes not resolved by amicable agreement, including threatened, impending and probable industrial disputes, with the maximum of expedition and the minimum of legal form and technicality; and
(ca)to provide a system of fair wages and conditions of employment; and
(d)to provide for the observance and enforcement of agreements and awards made for the prevention or settlement of industrial disputes; and
(e)to encourage the formation of representative organisations of employers and employees and their registration under this Act and to discourage, so far as practicable, overlapping of eligibility for membership of such organisations; and
(f)to encourage the democratic control of organisations so registered and the full participation by members of such an organisation in the affairs of the organisation; and
(g)to encourage persons, organisations and authorities involved in, or performing functions with respect to, the conduct of industrial relations under the laws of the State to communicate, consult and co‑operate with persons, organisations and authorities involved in, or performing functions with respect to, the conduct or regulation of industrial relations under the laws of the Commonwealth.
[Section 6 inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 5; amended: No. 20 of 2002 s. 114 and 127; No. 30 of 2021 s. 4 and 78(7).]
(1)In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears —
alteration, in relation to rules of an organisation, includes amendment, addition to, variation, rescission or substitution;
apprentice means a person who is an apprentice under a training contract registered under the Vocational Education and Training Act 1996 Part 7 Division 2;
approved form means a form approved by the Chief Commissioner for the purposes of the provision in which the term is used;
association means an association that is registered under Division 4 of Part II;
award —
(a)means an award made by the Commission under this Act; and
(b)for the purposes of section 37C(1), includes an award made under a law of the Commonwealth, another State or a Territory extending to and binding employees;
calling means any trade, craft, occupation, or classification of an employee;
CEO means the chief executive officer of the Department;
Chamber means the body known as the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Western Australia (Inc);
Chief Commissioner includes an acting Chief Commissioner;
civil penalty provision means a provision of this Act, or any other written law, that is specified to be a civil penalty provision for the purposes of section 83E;
Commission means the body continued and constituted under this Act under the name of The Western Australian Industrial Relations Commission;
Commission in Court Session means the Commission constituted as provided by section 15(2);
commissioner means a commissioner appointed under this Act and includes the Chief Commissioner, the Senior Commissioner and an acting commissioner;
constituent authority means the public service arbitrator, a Public Service Appeal Board, or the Railways Classification Board, established or appointed under Part IIA;
Court means the Western Australian Industrial Appeal Court continued and constituted under this Act;
decision includes award, order, declaration or finding;
declaration means a declaration made by the Commission under this Act;
Department means the department of the Public Service principally assisting the Minister in the administration of this Act;
departmental officer means a person employed in the Department as referred to in section 99C(2);
deputy registrar means a person designated as a deputy registrar under this Act;
employee means —
(a)a person who is employed by an employer to do work for hire or reward, including as an apprentice; or
(b)a person whose usual status is that of an employee;
employer means —
(a)a person or public authority employing 1 or more employees; or
(b)except as provided in the Foreign States Immunities Act 1985 (Commonwealth) section 12, a foreign state or consulate employing 1 or more employees; or
(c)a labour hire agency or group training organisation that arranges for an employee (being a person who is a party to a contract of service with the agency or organisation) to do work for another person, even though the employee is working for the other person under an arrangement between the agency or organisation and the other person;
employer‑employee agreement or EEA means an employer‑employee agreement provided for by section 97UA;
employment record means a record kept under section 49D;
enterprise award means an award that extends to and binds a single employer who is not a body or entity referred to in the definition of public sector award;
enterprise order has the meaning given by section 42I(1);
entitlement provision means —
(a)a provision of any of the following —
(i)an award;
(ii)an industrial agreement;
(iii)an employer‑employee agreement;
(iv)an order made by the Commission, other than an order made under section 23A, 32(8), 44(6) or 66;
or
(b)a provision of the LSL Act Part III; or
(c)a minimum condition of employment as defined in the MCE Act section 3(1);
equal remuneration means equal remuneration for men and women for work of equal or comparable value;
equal remuneration order has the meaning given in section 51O(2);
federal organisation means an organisation of employees registered under the FW (Registered Organisations) Act;
final offer arbitration means arbitration in which an issue is decided by the Commission by awarding, without qualification or amendment, that one of the final proposals made by the parties concerned which, viewed in its entirety is, in the opinion of the Commission, the more or the most reasonable, as the case may be;
finding means a decision, determination or ruling made in the course of proceedings that does not finally decide, determine or dispose of the matter to which the proceedings relate;
Full Bench means the Commission constituted as provided by section 15(1);
FW Act means the Fair Work Act 2009 (Commonwealth);
FW Commission means the body established by the FW Act section 575;
FW (Registered Organisations) Act means the Fair Work (Registered Organisations) Act 2009 (Commonwealth);
FW (Transitional) Act means the Fair Work (Transitional Provisions and Consequential Amendments) Act 2009 (Commonwealth);
group training organisation means an organisation that manages the employment and training of apprentices under contracted work based arrangements for the purpose of hosting those apprentices out to other employers;
industrial action means any act, omission, or circumstance done, effected, or brought about by an organisation or employer or employee or by any other person for the purpose, or in the opinion of the Commission for the purpose, of compelling an employer or an employee or an organisation to accept any terms or conditions of employment or to enforce compliance with any demand relating to employment not including an application made under this Act;
industrial agreement means an agreement registered by the Commission under this Act as an industrial agreement;
Industrial Gazette means the Western Australian Industrial Gazette published pursuant to this Act;
industrial inspector means a person designated as an industrial inspector under this Act;
industrial instrument means —
(a)an award; or
(b)an order of the Commission under this Act; or
(c)an industrial agreement; or
(d)for the purposes of section 49D or in relation to a SWIIP — an employer‑employee agreement;
industrial magistrate’s court means industrial magistrate’s court established under section 81(1);
industrial matter means any matter affecting or relating or pertaining to the work, privileges, rights, or duties of employers or employees in any industry or of any employer or employee in the industry and, without limiting the generality of that meaning, includes any matter affecting or relating or pertaining to —
(a)the wages, salaries, allowances, or other remuneration of employees or the prices to be paid in respect of their employment;
(b)the hours of employment, leave of absence, sex, age, qualification, or status of employees and the mode, terms, and conditions of employment including conditions which are to take effect after the termination of employment;
(c)the employment of children or young persons, or of any person or class of persons, in any industry, or the dismissal of or refusal to employ any person or class of persons;
(ca)the relationship between employers and employees;
(d)any established custom or usage of any industry, either generally or in the particular locality affected;
(e)the privileges, rights, or duties of any organisation or association or any officer or member of an organisation or association in or in respect of any industry;
(f)in respect of apprentices, these additional matters —
(i)their wage rates and, subject to the Vocational Education and Training Act 1996 Part 7 Division 2, other conditions of employment; and
(ii)the wages, allowances and other remuneration to be paid to them, including for time spent in performing their obligations under training contracts registered under the Vocational Education and Training Act 1996 Part 7 Division 2, whether at their employers’ workplaces or not; and
(iii)without limiting subparagraphs (i) and (ii), those other rights, duties and liabilities of them and their employers under such contracts that do not relate to the training and assessment they are to undergo, whether at their employers’ workplaces or not;
(g)any matter relating to the collection of subscriptions to an organisation of employees with the agreement of the employee from whom the subscriptions are collected including —
(i)the restoration of a practice of collecting subscriptions to an organisation of employees where that practice has been stopped by an employer; or
(ii)the implementation of an agreement between an organisation of employees and an employer under which the employer agrees to collect subscriptions to the organisation;
[(h)deleted]
(i)any matter, whether falling within the preceding part of this interpretation or not, where —
(i)an organisation of employees and an employer agree that it is desirable for the matter to be dealt with as if it were an industrial matter; and
(ii)the Commission is of the opinion that the objects of this Act would be furthered if the matter were dealt with as an industrial matter;
and also includes any matter of an industrial nature the subject of an industrial dispute or the subject of a situation that may give rise to an industrial dispute but does not include —
(j)compulsion to join an organisation of employees to obtain or hold employment; or
(k)preference of employment at the time of, or during, employment by reason of being or not being a member of an organisation of employees; or
(l)non‑employment by reason of being or not being a member of an organisation of employees; or
(m)any matter relating to the matters described in paragraph (j), (k) or (l);
industry includes each of the following —
(a)any business, trade, manufacture, undertaking, or calling of employers;
(b)the performance of the functions of any public authority;
(c)any calling, service, employment, handicraft, or occupation or vocation of employees,
whether or not, apart from this Act, it is, or is considered to be, industry or of an industrial nature, and also includes —
(d)a branch of an industry or a group of industries;
irregularity, in relation to an election for an office, includes a breach of the rules of an organisation, and any act, omission, or other means by which the full and free recording of votes, by persons entitled to record votes, and by no other persons, or a correct ascertainment or declaration of the results of the voting is, or is attempted to be, prevented or hindered;
judge means a judge of the Supreme Court;
labour hire agency means a person or entity that conducts a business of the kind commonly known as a labour hire agency;
LSL Act means the Long Service Leave Act 1958;
MCE Act means the Minimum Conditions of Employment Act 1993;
Mines and Metals Association means the body known as the Australian Mines and Metals Association (Incorporated);
office in relation to an organisation means —
(a)the office of a member of the committee of management of the organisation; and
(b)the office of president, vice president, secretary, assistant secretary, or other executive office by whatever name called of the organisation; and
(c)the office of a person holding, whether as trustee or otherwise, property of the organisation, or property in which the organisation has any beneficial interest; and
(d)an office within the organisation for the filling of which an election is conducted within the organisation; and
(e)any other office, all or any of the functions of which are declared by the Commission under section 68 to be those of an office in the organisation,
but does not include the office of any person who is an employee of the organisation and who does not have a vote on the committee of management of the organisation;
officer means a person who carries out, or whose duty is or includes the carrying out of, the whole or part of the functions of an office in an organisation;
officer of the Commission means —
(a)the Registrar, a deputy registrar or any other Registrar’s Department officer assisting the Commission in the performance of its functions; or
(b)an officer appointed under section 93(1a);
officer of the Court means the clerk of the Court or any other Registrar’s Department officer assisting the Court in the performance of its functions;
organisation means an organisation that is registered under Division 4 of Part II;
post‑secondary education institution means an institution or part of an institution established or continued by or under the University of Western Australia Act 1911, the Curtin University Act 1966, the Murdoch University Act 1973, the Edith Cowan University Act 1984 or the Vocational Education and Training Act 1996;
premises includes any land, building, structure, mine, mine working, aircraft, ship or other vessel, vehicle and place, and any part of it;
presiding commissioner, of the Full Bench, means the presiding commissioner under section 15(1A);
presiding judge means the presiding judge of the Court;
principal executive officer in relation to an organisation or association means the president or chairperson of that organisation or association;
private sector award means an award other than a public sector award or enterprise award;
produce includes exhibit, send or deliver;
public authority means the Crown, the Governor in Executive Council, any Minister of the Crown in right of the State, the President of the Legislative Council or the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly or the President of the Legislative Council and the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly, acting jointly, as the case requires, under the Parliamentary and Electorate Staff (Employment) Act 1992, the Governor or the Governor’s delegate under the Governor’s Establishment Act 1992, State Government department, State trading concern, State instrumentality, State agency, or any public statutory body, corporate or unincorporate, established under a written law but does not include a local government, regional local government or regional subsidiary;
public hospital means a public hospital as defined in the Health Services Act 2016 section 6;
public sector award means an award that only extends to and binds the following —
(a)a public sector body as defined in the Public Sector Management Act 1994 section 3(1);
(b)an entity specified in the Public Sector Management Act 1994 Schedule 1 column 2;
public service officer means a public service officer within the meaning of the Public Sector Management Act 1994;
published in the required manner means published in the next available issue of the Industrial Gazette and —
(a)in a newspaper circulating throughout the State; or
(b)on an internet website maintained by the Commission;
record means any thing or process —
(a)upon or by which information is recorded or stored; or
(b)by means of which a meaning can be conveyed by any means in a visible or recoverable form,
whether or not the assistance of some electronic, electrical, mechanical, chemical or other machine or process is required to convey the information or meaning;
record‑related civil penalty provision means the following —
(a)section 49D(1), (6) or (8);
(b)section 49DA(1) or (3);
(c)section 49E(1);
(d)section 102(1)(a);
(e)the LSL Act section 7I(2), 26(1) or (2) or 26A(1);
Registrar means the chief executive officer of the Registrar’s Department or, if another person is designated as the Registrar under this Act, that person;
Registrar’s Department means the department of the Public Service known as the Department of the Registrar Western Australian Industrial Relations Commission;
Registrar’s Department officer means a person employed in the Registrar’s Department as referred to in section 99C(3);
registration, in relation to an organisation, means registration under Division 4 of Part II by authority of the Commission in Court Session;
repealed Act means the Act repealed by section 4;
representative has the meaning given by section 97X or 97XO;
represented person has the meaning given by section 97X or 97XO;
secondary office, in relation to a person who holds the office of commissioner and is subsequently appointed to an office of the FW Commission under section 14A, means the office of member of the FW Commission;
Senior Commissioner includes an acting Senior Commissioner;
serious contravention has the meaning given in section 83EA(2);
subscription means any subscription, fee or dues payable by a member for or in respect of membership of an organisation;
supported wage industrial instrument provision or SWIIP means a provision of an industrial instrument that —
(a)applies to an employee with a disability; and
(b)provides a means (a wage assessment tool) for the assessment of whether, and the extent to which, the employee’s productive capacity is reduced because of the disability; and
(c)provides that the employer may pay a wage that —
(i)relates to the employee’s productive capacity as assessed using the wage assessment tool; and
(ii)may be less than the applicable minimum wage in the industrial instrument;
Supported Wage System or SWS means the scheme known by that name established by the Commonwealth Government to enable the assessment of whether, and the extent to which, a person’s productive capacity is reduced because of a disability;
vary in relation to an award or industrial agreement means to add a new provision or to add to, alter, amend or rescind an existing provision.
(1a)A matter relating to —
(a)the dismissal of an employee by an employer; or
(b)the refusal or failure of an employer to allow an employee a benefit under the employee’s contract of service,
is and remains an industrial matter for the purposes of this Act even though their relationship as employee and employer has ended.
(2)In subsection (2A) —
bullying or sexual harassment means behaviour to which section 51BI(1) or (3) applies;
worker has the meaning given in section 51BH.
(2A)A matter relating or pertaining to the bullying or sexual harassment of a worker is an industrial matter.
(3)Any matter within the Commission’s jurisdiction conferred by the Work Health and Safety Act 2020 Schedule 1 clause 27(1) is not an industrial matter.
(4)Subsections (3) and (4) of section 34 do not apply to a determination that is made contrary to subsection (3) or to any proceeding based on that determination, and in the determination of any application for a prerogative writ or declaratory judgment regard must not be had to the existence of any right of appeal under this Act.
[(5)deleted]
(6)Subject to subsection (7), for the purposes of the definitions of employee and employer in subsection (1), if a person (the principal) engages a person, or a group of persons, under a contract to personally give a performance as, or as part of, musical, theatrical, dance or comic entertainment, the principal is to be regarded as employing the person, or each person in the group, to do work.
(7)Subsection (6) has effect only to the extent necessary to enable a claim of the kind referred to in section 29(1)(d) to be referred to and dealt with by the Commission in respect of a person who would not be an employee but for the operation of subsection (6).
(8)Notes in this Act are provided to assist understanding and do not form part of the Act.
[Section 7 inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 6; amended: No. 83 of 1987 s. 38; No. 119 of 1987 s. 5; No. 73 of 1990 s. 45; No. 99 of 1990 s. 4; No. 44 of 1991 s. 5; No. 40 of 1992 s. 8; No. 15 of 1993 s. 4; No. 32 of 1994 s. 14; No. 103 of 1994 s. 18; No. 1 of 1995 s. 4, 26 and 49; No. 30 of 1995 s. 77; No. 79 of 1995 s. 30; No. 14 of 1996 s. 4; No. 42 of 1996 s. 71; No. 3 of 1997 s. 29 5 and 35; No. 36 of 1999 s. 247; No. 20 of 2002 s. 6, 128, 142, 149, 178, 185, 190(1), 191(1) and (2) and 194(2); Gazette 15 Aug 2003 p. 3686; No. 65 of 2003 s. 41(2); No. 51 of 2004 s. 70(2); No. 59 of 2004 s. 112; No. 68 of 2004 s. 87(2); No. 13 of 2005 s. 49(2)(b); No. 36 of 2006 s. 24 and 67; No. 35 of 2007 s. 97(2); No. 21 of 2008 s. 668(2); No. 44 of 2008 s. 53(2)‑(6); No. 53 of 2011 s. 32, 39 and 40; No. 11 of 2016 s. 295(2); No. 26 of 2016 s. 62; No. 32 of 2016 s. 183; No. 39 of 2018 s. 4; No. 36 of 2020 s. 358; No. 30 of 2021 s. 5, 75(1), 76(8), 77(1) and (13) and 78(7); No. 9 of 2022 s. 424.]
[Part 1A (s. 7A‑7G) deleted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 111(4) and 113(1).]
Part II — The Western Australian Industrial Relations Commission
[Heading amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 7.]
Division 1 — Constitution of the Commission
(1)The Commission by the name The Western Australian Industrial Commission established under the repealed Act is continued in existence subject to this Act under the name The Western Australian Industrial Relations Commission.
(2)The Commission is to consist of —
[(a)deleted]
(b)a Chief Commissioner; and
(c)a Senior Commissioner; and
(d)such number of other commissioners as may, from time to time, be necessary for the purposes of this Act,
who are respectively appointed to their offices by the Governor by commission under the Public Seal of the State.
(3A)At least 1 commissioner must, in addition to the other attributes required for appointment, have —
(a)knowledge of, or experience in, the field of work health and safety; and
(b)knowledge of the Work Health and Safety Act 2020,
sufficient for exercising the jurisdiction that the commissioner designated under section 16(2A) is required to exercise.
(3)The order of seniority of commissioners is —
(a)Chief Commissioner;
(b)Senior Commissioner;
(c)other commissioners according to the dates of their appointments unless 2 or more of their appointments are made on the same day in which case their order of seniority is such as is assigned to them by the Governor when appointing them.
[Section 8 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 8 and 66; No. 51 of 2004 s. 70(3); No. 68 of 2004 s. 87(3); No. 13 of 2005 s. 49(3); No. 35 of 2007 s. 97(3); No. 36 of 2009 s. 18; No. 39 of 2018 s. 5; No. 36 of 2020 s. 359; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(3) and 78(2).]
9.Qualifications for appointment of Chief Commissioner
[(1)-(1a)deleted]
(2)A person must not be appointed Chief Commissioner unless —
(a)the person has had experience at a high level in industrial relations; or
(b)the person has, not less than 5 years previously, obtained a degree of a university or an educational qualification of similar standard after studies considered by the Governor to have substantial relevance to the duties of the Chief Commissioner.
[Section 9 inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 9; amended: No. 99 of 1990 s. 5; No. 21 of 2008 s. 668(3); No. 39 of 2018 s. 6; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and 77(2).]
10.Age limit for commissioners
A person who has reached 70 years of age is ineligible for appointment as a commissioner and each commissioner must retire from office upon reaching 70 years of age.
[Section 10 inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 9; amended: No. 39 of 2018 s. 7; No. 30 of 2021 s. 6.]
(1)Subject to subsection (2), before entering upon office each commissioner must make oath before a judge that the commissioner will faithfully and impartially perform the duties of office of commissioner and will not, except in the discharge of those duties, disclose to any person any evidence or other matter brought before the Commission.
(2)When a commissioner is appointed the Chief Commissioner or the Senior Commissioner the commissioner is not required to make again the oath referred to in subsection (1).
[Section 11 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 66; No. 39 of 2018 s. 8; No. 30 of 2021 s. 77(13).]
12.Commission is court of record etc.
(1)The Commission is a court of record and must have an official seal.
(2)All courts, judges, and persons acting judicially must take judicial notice of the seal of the Commission affixed to a document and must presume that it has been duly so affixed.
[Section 12 amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
13.Protection of commissioners and others
Each of the following persons has the same protection and immunity as a judge has when performing functions of a judge —
(a)a commissioner when performing the functions of a commissioner;
(b)an industrial magistrate appointed under section 81B when performing the functions of an industrial magistrate;
(c)a member of a Board of Reference referred to in section 48 when performing the functions of a member of a Board of Reference;
(d)a constituent authority or a member of a constituent authority, as the case requires, when performing the functions of a constituent authority or a member of a constituent authority.
[Section 13 inserted: No. 39 of 2018 s. 9.]
14.Exercise of powers and jurisdiction of Commission
[(1)deleted]
(2)A commissioner sitting or acting alone constitutes the Commission and, except as otherwise provided in this Act, the commissioner has and may exercise while so sitting or acting, all the powers and jurisdiction of the Commission.
(3)Where more than one commissioner is sitting or acting at the same time in the exercise of the jurisdiction of the Commission, each such commissioner constitutes the Commission.
[Section 14 amended: No. 39 of 2018 s. 10; No. 30 of 2021 s. 77(13).]
14A.Dual federal and State appointments
A commissioner may be appointed as a member of the FW Commission, and a person so appointed may, subject to section 22(2)(c), at the same time hold the office of commissioner and member of the FW Commission but not otherwise.
[Section 14A inserted: No. 99 of 1990 s. 6; amended: No. 53 of 2011 s. 39; No. 39 of 2018 s. 11; No. 30 of 2021 s. 75(1).]
14B.Performance of duties by dual federal and State appointees
(1)As agreed from time to time by the Chief Commissioner and the President of the FW Commission, a person who holds the office of commissioner and an office of member of the FW Commission —
(a)may perform the duties of the secondary office; and
(b)may exercise, in relation to a particular matter —
(i)any powers that the person has as a commissioner; and
(ii)any powers that the person has as a member of the FW Commission.
(2)The Minister may give directions in writing to the Chief Commissioner with respect to agreements under subsection (1) and the Chief Commissioner must give effect to every such direction and must not enter into any agreement under subsection (1) that is contrary to those directions.
(3)Directions under subsection (2) must be limited to matters of administration and must not deal with matters of conciliation or arbitration.
(4)The Minister must cause a copy of any direction given under subsection (2) to be laid before each House of Parliament within 15 sitting days of that House after the date on which the direction was given.
[Section 14B inserted: No. 99 of 1990 s. 6; amended: No. 53 of 2011 s. 39; No. 39 of 2018 s. 12; No. 30 of 2021 s. 75(1) and 76(2).]
15.Constitution of Full Bench and Commission in Court Session
(1)The Full Bench is to be constituted by 3 commissioners, at least 1 of whom must be the Chief Commissioner or the Senior Commissioner, sitting or acting together.
(1A)The presiding commissioner of the Full Bench is the most senior of the commissioners who constitute the Full Bench.
(2)The Commission in Court Session must be constituted by not less than 3 commissioners sitting or acting together.
[Section 15 amended: No. 39 of 2018 s. 13; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
16.Chief Commissioner’s functions
(1)In subsections (1AA) to (1ac) —
Commission includes the Full Bench, the Commission in Court Session and a constituent authority.
(1AA)The Chief Commissioner is responsible for matters of an administrative nature relating to the Commission and commissioners, including the following —
(a)giving directions about the practices and procedures to be followed by the Commission;
(b)developing and implementing performance standards and setting benchmarks for the Commission;
(c)overseeing the proper use of the resources of the Commission;
(d)managing the business of the Commission, including by ensuring that the Commission operates efficiently and effectively and continually improves the way in which it carries out its functions;
(e)providing leadership and guidance to the Commission and engendering cohesiveness and collaboration amongst commissioners;
(f)being responsible for promoting the training, education and professional development of commissioners.
(1ab)Subject to this Act, the Chief Commissioner may allocate and reallocate the work of the Commission and may assign or appoint commissioners for the purposes of constituting the Commission, or altering the constitution of the Commission, in relation to a matter.
(1ac)When it is continuing to deal with and deciding a matter that has been reallocated, or in relation to which its constitution has been altered, the Commission can have regard to —
(a)any record of the proceedings of the Commission in relation to the matter before the reallocation or alteration; or
(b)any evidence taken in the proceedings before the reallocation or alteration.
(1AD)Except as provided in subsection (1AE), subsections (1AA) to (1ac) apply, with the necessary modifications, to commissioners appointed under section 81B(2A) as industrial magistrates.
(1AE)Directions under subsection (1AA)(a) cannot limit the judicial independence of commissioners appointed as industrial magistrates.
(1a)The Chief Commissioner may assign a commissioner to sit or act alone as the Commission or to sit or act as a member of the Full Bench or the Commission in Court Session notwithstanding that that commissioner is for the time being appointed as or to a constituent authority.
(2A)The Chief Commissioner must, in writing, designate 1 commissioner, who satisfies the additional requirements referred to in section 8(3A), to exercise the jurisdiction conferred by the Work Health and Safety Act 2020 Schedule 1 clause 27(1).
(2AA)Without limiting subsection (2A), the Chief Commissioner may be designated under that subsection.
(2B)Without affecting the Chief Commissioner’s duty under subsection (2A) to ensure that, at any one time, one commissioner is designated, the Chief Commissioner —
(a)may at or after the time when a commissioner is designated under subsection (2A), in writing, specify a date when the designation ceases to have effect; and
(b)may, in writing, vary any date so specified.
(2C)The designation of a commissioner under subsection (2A) to exercise the jurisdiction conferred by the Work Health and Safety Act 2020 Schedule 1 clause 27(1) does not preclude the commissioner from also performing other functions as a commissioner under this Act.
[(2D), (2E)deleted]
(2)The Chief Commissioner —
[(a)deleted]
(b)must, before 1 October in each year, make a written report to the Minister relating to the operation of this Act up to the last preceding 30 June; and
[(c)deleted]
(d)may require the commissioners to attend a conference of commissioners for the purposes of paragraph (b) or for any other purpose.
(3)Where the Chief Commissioner is unable to attend to duties under this Act, whether on account of illness or otherwise, or where there is a vacancy in the office of Chief Commissioner, the duties and powers of the Chief Commissioner devolve on the commissioner who is next in order of seniority and not absent or unable to perform those duties, unless the Governor appoints some other person to be acting Chief Commissioner.
(4)The Chief Commissioner may do all things necessary or convenient to be done in the performance of the Chief Commissioner’s functions.
[Section 16 amended: No. 121 of 1982 s. 4; No. 94 of 1984 s. 10 and 66; No. 1 of 1995 s. 53; No. 14 of 2005 s. 4; No. 36 of 2009 s. 19; No. 39 of 2018 s. 14; No. 36 of 2020 s. 360; No. 30 of 2021 s. 7, 76(2) and 77(3) and (13).]
16A.Delegation by Chief Commissioner
(1)The Chief Commissioner may delegate to another commissioner any power or duty of the Chief Commissioner under another provision of this Act.
(2)The delegation must be in writing signed by the Chief Commissioner.
(3)A person to whom a power or duty is delegated in accordance with this section cannot delegate that power or duty.
(4)A person exercising or performing a power or duty that has been delegated to the person in accordance with this section is taken to do so in accordance with the terms of the delegation unless the contrary is shown.
(5)Nothing in this section limits the ability of the Chief Commissioner to perform a function through an officer or agent.
[Section 16A inserted: No. 14 of 2005 s. 5; amended: No. 39 of 2018 s. 15.]
17.Appointment of acting commissioners
(1)Where a commissioner is, or is expected to be, unable to attend to their duties under this Act, whether on account of illness or otherwise, the Governor may appoint a person to be acting Chief Commissioner, acting Senior Commissioner or an acting commissioner, as the case may require, for such period as the Governor determines.
(2)A person must not be appointed acting Chief Commissioner unless the person holds the relevant qualifications prescribed in section 9.
[(3)deleted]
(4)If, under this section, a person receives an appointment to act in an office, the rights and obligations of the person in relation to the office are, subject to the terms of that appointment, as prescribed for the office.
[Section 17 amended: No. 121 of 1982 s. 5; No. 94 of 1984 s. 11; No. 1 of 1995 s. 53; No. 14 of 2005 s. 6; No. 39 of 2018 s. 16.]
(1)Notwithstanding the retirement of a commissioner or the expiry of the period for which an acting commissioner has been appointed under this Act, the Governor may extend the commissioner’s period of office for such further period as the Governor determines, in order to enable the commissioner to complete all matters, proceedings, or inquiries that the commissioner has entered upon and has not completed before the retirement or the expiry.
(2)The Governor may from time to time extend any further period determined by the Governor under subsection (1) notwithstanding the expiry of that further period for such further period or periods as the Governor thinks fit.
(3)The continuation in office of a retired commissioner under subsection (1) does not prevent the appointment of a person to fill the office from which the commissioner retired.
(4)The continuation in office of an acting commissioner under subsection (1) does not prevent the appointment of another person to act in the office in which the acting commissioner acted.
[Section 18 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 12; No. 14 of 2005 s. 7; No. 39 of 2018 s. 17; No. 30 of 2021 s. 77(13).]
Each commissioner must keep acquainted with industrial affairs and conditions.
[Section 19 inserted: No. 39 of 2018 s. 18.]
20.Conditions of service of commissioners
[(1)deleted]
(2)The offices of commissioners are to be regarded, for the purposes of the Salaries and Allowances Act 1975 and any other written law, as having been prescribed for the purposes of section 6(1)(e) of that Act.
(3)If a commissioner has, under section 81B(2A), been appointed as an industrial magistrate, the commissioner’s remuneration must be the higher of that provided under —
(a)subsection (2); or
(b)the Magistrates Court Act 2004 Schedule 1 clause 5(2).
(4)The Chief Commissioner may, in exceptional circumstances, approve the taking by a commissioner appointed as an industrial magistrate of paid sick leave in addition to any paid sick leave that the commissioner’s conditions of service may have entitled the commissioner to take.
(5)A commissioner appointed as an industrial magistrate may, subject to section 22(3), at the same time hold the office of commissioner and industrial magistrate but not otherwise.
[(6), (7)deleted]
(8)A commissioner holding office is taken to be an employee within the meaning of and for the purposes of the Superannuation and Family Benefits Act 1938 6, 7.
(8a)For the purposes of any calculation or determination under the Superannuation and Family Benefits Act 1938 6, the following are taken to be increased by 100% —
(a)the period of any service by a person as a commissioner that occurs after the commencement day; and
(b)any period for which a person is taken to have continued in service under the State following retirement as a commissioner on or after the commencement day; and
(c)any period for which a person might have remained in service under the State but for —
(i)the person’s death after the commencement day while serving as a commissioner; or
(ii)the person’s retirement as a commissioner on or after the commencement day on the ground of invalidity or physical or mental incapacity to perform the person’s duties.
(8b)In subsection (8a) commencement day means the day of the coming into operation of section 3 of the Industrial Arbitration Amendment Act (No. 2) 1984 7.
(9)Where a commissioner was immediately before being appointed as a commissioner, an officer of the Public Service of the State, the commissioner retains any existing and accruing rights and for the purpose of determining those rights, the service as a commissioner must be taken into account as if it were service within the Public Service of the State.
(10)The rights of a commissioner to paid leave of absence and to lump sum payments on ceasing to hold office for the money equivalent of leave of absence cannot be less than those of a permanent officer under the Public Sector Management Act 1994.
[Section 20 amended: No. 121 of 1982 s. 6; No. 92 of 1984 s. 3 and 4; No. 82 of 1987 s. 8; No. 99 of 1990 s. 7; No. 20 of 2002 s. 186(1); No. 28 of 2003 s. 89; No. 39 of 2018 s. 19; No. 30 of 2021 s. 8, 76(2) and (8), 77(3), (4) and (13) and 78(3).]
A commissioner may resign office by writing addressed to the Governor and the resignation takes effect on the day on which it is received by the Governor or such later day as is specified in the writing.
[Section 21 amended: No. 39 of 2018 s. 20.]
22.Tenure subject to good behaviour
(1)Subject to subsection (2)(c), commissioners hold their offices during good behaviour, subject to a power of removal by the Governor upon the address of both Houses of Parliament.
(2)The office of a commissioner becomes vacant if the commissioner —
(a)is removed from office under subsection (1); or
(b)retires under section 10 or resigns under section 21; or
(c)except with the approval of the Governor, accepts the office of member of the FW Commission.
(3)A commissioner appointed as an industrial magistrate must not work as a legal practitioner (whether for financial reward or not), or engage in other work for financial reward, outside the functions of a commissioner and industrial magistrate, unless permitted to do so by the Governor.
[Section 22 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 13; No. 99 of 1990 s. 8; No. 1 of 1995 s. 53; No. 53 of 2011 s. 39; No. 39 of 2018 s. 21; No. 30 of 2021 s. 9 and 75(1).]
Division 2 — General jurisdiction and powers of the Commission
In this Division and Divisions 2A to 2G —
Commission means the Commission constituted otherwise than as a constituent authority;
industrial matter does not include a matter in respect of which, subject to Division 3, a constituent authority has exclusive jurisdiction under this Act.
[Section 22A inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 14; amended: No. 20 of 2002 s. 121(1).]
22B.Commission to act with due speed
In the performance of its functions the Commission is to act with as much speed as the requirements of this Act and a proper consideration of the matter before it permit.
[Section 22B inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 150.]
(1)Subject to this Act, the Commission has cognizance of and authority to enquire into and deal with any industrial matter.
(2)Where by or under any other Act power is conferred on a person or body to appoint officers or employees for the purposes of that Act or to fix or determine the salaries, wages, or other remuneration, or other conditions of employment, of officers or employees appointed for those purposes, or to do both of those things —
(a)the jurisdiction that the Commission would have but for that other Act to hear and determine any matter or dispute relating to the salaries, wages, or other remuneration, or other conditions of employment, of those officers or employees is not affected by that power conferred by or pursuant to that other Act; and
(b)where there is any inconsistency between a decision of the Commission relating to any such matter or dispute and any decision in the exercise or purported exercise of that power conferred by or under that other Act, to the extent of the inconsistency the former prevails and the latter is of no force or effect.
(2a)Notwithstanding subsections (1) and (2), the Commission does not have jurisdiction to enquire into or deal with any matter in respect of which a procedure referred to in section 97(1)(a) of the Public Sector Management Act 1994 is, or may be, prescribed under that Act.
(3)The Commission in the exercise of the jurisdiction conferred on it by this Part must not —
(a)prohibit the employment of employees on any day of the week or restrict in any other way the number of days or hours in the week during which any operation may be carried on in any industry or by any employer but nothing in this paragraph —
(i)prevents the registration with the Commission of any industrial agreement that contains or provides for any such prohibition or restriction; or
(ii)prevents the Commission from fixing the rates for overtime, work on holidays, shift work, weekend work, and other special work, including allowances as compensation for overtime or any such work;
(b)regulate the rates of salary or wages, or the conditions of employment of any person who holds an office for which the remuneration payable is determined or recommended pursuant to the Salaries and Allowances Act 1975;
(c)except as provided in section 49K(3), make an award or order empowering a representative of an organisation to enter any part of —
(i)the premises of an employer, the principal use of which premises is for habitation by the employer and the employer’s household; or
(ii)a private home in which a person engaged in domestic service is employed by an employer, who is not the owner or occupier of that private home, but who provides that owner or occupier with the services of the person so engaged;
(d)regulate the suspension from duty in, discipline in, dismissal from, termination of, or reinstatement in, employment of any employee or any one of a class of employees if there is provision, however expressed, by or under any other Act for or in relation to a matter of that kind and there is provision, however expressed, by or under that other Act for an appeal in a matter of that kind;
(e)provide for —
(i)compulsion to join an organisation to obtain or hold employment; or
(ii)non‑employment by reason of being or not being a member of an organisation;
(f)provide for preference of employment at the time of, or during, employment by reason of being or not being a member of an organisation;
(g)limit the working hours of employees engaged in the agricultural and pastoral industry but nothing in this paragraph prevents the registration with the Commission of any industrial agreement that contains or provides for any such limitation;
(h)on a claim of harsh, oppressive or unfair dismissal —
(i)in the case of an application under section 44, make any order except an order that is authorised by section 23A or 44; and
(ii)in any other case, make any order except an order that is authorised by section 23A.
[Section 23 amended: No. 82 of 1980 s. 2; No. 121 of 1982 s. 7; No. 94 of 1984 s. 15 and 66; No. 119 of 1987 s. 7; No. 15 of 1993 s. 6; No. 1 of 1995 s. 27 and 40; No. 3 of 1997 s. 30 5; No. 20 of 2002 s. 137 and 143; No. 30 of 2021 s. 10, 76(2) and 77(13).]
[23AA.Deleted: No. 3 of 1997 s. 22 5.]
23A.Unfair dismissal claims, Commission’s powers on
(1)The Commission may make an order under this section if the Commission determines that the dismissal of an employee was harsh, oppressive or unfair.
(2)In determining whether the dismissal of an employee was harsh, oppressive or unfair the Commission must have regard to the following —
(a)whether, at the time of the dismissal, the employee —
(i)was employed for a probationary period agreed between the employer and employee; and
(ii)had been employed on that basis for a period of less than 3 months;
(b)whether, at the time of the dismissal, the employee was employed in a private home to provide services directly to the employer or a member of the employer’s family or household.
(3)The Commission may order the employer to reinstate the employee to the employee’s former position on conditions at least as favourable as the conditions on which the employee was employed immediately before dismissal.
(4)If the Commission considers that reinstatement would be impracticable, the Commission may order the employer to re‑employ the employee in another position that the Commission considers —
(a)the employer has available; and
(b)is suitable.
(5)The Commission may, in addition to making an order under subsection (3) or (4), make either or both of the following orders —
(a)an order it considers necessary to maintain the continuity of the employee’s employment;
(b)an order to the employer to pay to the employee the remuneration lost, or likely to have been lost, by the employee because of the dismissal.
(6)If, and only if, the Commission considers reinstatement or re‑employment would be impracticable, the Commission may, subject to subsections (7) and (8), order the employer to pay to the employee an amount of compensation for loss or injury caused by the dismissal.
(7)In deciding an amount of compensation for the purposes of making an order under subsection (6), the Commission is to have regard to —
(a)the efforts (if any) of the employer and employee to mitigate the loss suffered by the employee as a result of the dismissal; and
(b)any redress the employee has obtained under another enactment where the evidence necessary to establish the claim for that redress is also the evidence necessary to establish the claim before the Commission; and
(c)any other matter that the Commission considers relevant.
(8)The amount ordered to be paid under subsection (6) is not to exceed 6 months’ remuneration of the employee.
(9)For the purposes of subsection (8) the Commission may calculate the amount on the basis of an average rate received by the employee during any relevant period of employment.
(10)For the avoidance of doubt, an order under subsection (6) may permit the employer concerned to pay the compensation required in instalments specified in the order.
(11)An order under this section may require that it be complied with within a specified time.
(12)The Commission may make any ancillary or incidental order that the Commission thinks necessary for giving effect to any order made under this section.
[Section 23A inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 138(1); amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 11.]
23B.Third party involvement in employment claim, Commission’s powers to prevent etc.
(1)In this section —
employment claim means a claim made to the Commission in which any of the following is an issue —
(a)the refusal or failure of an employer to employ a person (the affected person);
(b)an employer’s employment or transfer of an employee to work at a particular place or site, or refusal or failure to employ or transfer an employee to work at a particular place or site;
(c)the reinstatement or re‑employment of an employee who has been dismissed by an employer;
third party, in relation to an employment claim, means any person, other than the employer on whom a copy of the claim has been served.
(2)The Commission may, if it considers it necessary to do so in the interests of equity, good conscience and the substantial merits of an employment claim, order a third party to refrain from preventing, hindering or interfering with, or doing anything that would have the effect of preventing, hindering or interfering with —
(a)the employment of the affected person; or
(b)the employment or transfer of the employee to work at a particular place or site; or
(c)the reinstatement or re‑employment of the employee.
(3)Subsection (2) is not to be taken as limiting the persons in respect of whom the Commission can make other orders under this Act.
[Section 23B inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 138(1).]
24.Industrial matters, Commission may decide what are
(1)The Commission has jurisdiction to determine in any proceedings before it whether any matter to which those proceedings relate is an industrial matter and a finding by the Commission on that question is, subject to sections 49 and 90, final and conclusive with respect to those proceedings.
(2)A determination under subsection (1) is not a decision for the purposes of section 49 or 90 unless and until —
(a)those proceedings have been concluded; or
(b)leave to appeal is granted by the Commission making that determination.
[Section 24 amended: No. 15 of 1993 s. 8; amended: Gazette 15 Aug 2003 p. 3686.]
25.Allocation of industrial matters by Chief Commissioner
(1)For the purposes of section 16(1ab), in allocating the work of the Commission under this Division and Divisions 2A to 2G the Chief Commissioner may —
(a)allocate matters to a commissioner; and
(b)allocate matters directly to the Commission in Court Session; and
(c)notwithstanding that the Chief Commissioner has allocated a matter to a commissioner, revoke that allocation and allocate the matter to another commissioner or directly to the Commission in Court Session.
(2)Subsection (1) —
(a)has effect subject to any provision of this Division or Division 2A to 2G under which the Commission is to be constituted in a particular way; and
(b)does not affect the operation of Part IIC.
[Section 25 inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 16; amended: No. 20 of 2002 s. 121(2) and (3); No. 14 of 2005 s. 8; No. 30 of 2021 s. 77(13).]
26.Commission to act according to equity and good conscience
(1)In the exercise of its jurisdiction under this Act the Commission —
(a)must act according to equity, good conscience, and the substantial merits of the case without regard to technicalities or legal forms; and
(b)must not be bound by any rules of evidence, but may inform itself on any matter in such a way as it thinks just; and
(c)must have regard for the interests of the persons immediately concerned whether directly affected or not and, where appropriate, for the interests of the community as a whole; and
(d)must take into consideration to the extent that it is relevant —
(i)the state of the national economy;
(ii)the state of the economy of Western Australia;
(iii)the capacity of employers as a whole or of an individual employer to pay wages, salaries, allowances or other remuneration and to bear the cost of improved or additional conditions of employment;
(iv)the likely effects of its decision on the economies referred to in subparagraphs (i) and (ii) and, in particular, on the level of employment and on inflation;
(v)any changes in productivity that have occurred or are likely to occur;
(vi)the need to facilitate the efficient organisation and performance of work according to the needs of an industry and enterprises within it, balanced with fairness to the employees in the industry and enterprises;
(vii)the need to encourage employers, employees and organisations to reach agreements appropriate to the needs of enterprises and the employees in those enterprises.
(2A)In making a public sector decision the Commission must take into consideration the following —
(a)any Public Sector Wages Policy Statement that is applicable in relation to negotiations with the public sector entity;
(b)the financial position and fiscal strategy of the State as set out in the following —
(i)the most recent Government Financial Strategy Statement released under the Government Financial Responsibility Act 2000 section 11(1) and made publicly available under section 9 of that Act;
(ii)the Government Financial Projections Statement;
(iii)any submissions made to the Commission on behalf of the public sector entity or the State government;
(c)the financial position of the public sector entity as set out in the following —
(i)the part of the most recent budget papers tabled in the Legislative Assembly that deals with the public sector entity under the title “Agency Information in Support of the Estimates” or, if the regulations prescribe another part of those budget papers, that other part;
(ii)any submissions made to the Commission on behalf of the public sector entity or the State government.
(2B)In subsection (2A) —
Government Financial Projections Statement means whichever is the most recent of the following —
(a)the most recent Government Financial Projections Statement that is —
(i)released under the Government Financial Responsibility Act 2000 section 12(1); and
(ii)made publicly available in the budget papers tabled in the Legislative Assembly under the title “Economic and Fiscal Outlook” or, if the regulations prescribe another part of the budget papers, that other part;
(b)the most recent Government Mid-year Financial Projections Statement that is —
(i)released under the Government Financial Responsibility Act 2000 section 13(1); and
(ii)made publicly available under section 9 of that Act;
public sector decision means any of the following —
(a)an order made under section 42G that will be included in an agreement that will extend to and bind a public sector entity or its employing authority (as defined in the Public Sector Management Act 1994 section 5);
(b)an enterprise order that will extend to and bind a public sector entity or its employing authority (as defined in the Public Sector Management Act 1994 section 5);
(c)if the matters set out in subsection (2A)(a), (b) and (c) are relevant to the decision, any other decision (except an equal remuneration order) that will extend to and bind a public sector entity or its employing authority (as defined in the Public Sector Management Act 1994 section 5);
public sector entity means either of the following —
(a)a public sector body as defined in the Public Sector Management Act 1994 section 3(1);
(b)an entity that is —
(i)mentioned in the Public Sector Management Act 1994 Schedule 1; and
(ii)prescribed by regulations made by the Governor;
Public Sector Wages Policy Statement means —
(a)the Public Sector Wages Policy Statement 2014 issued by the State government that applies to industrial agreements expiring after 1 November 2013; or
(b)if any Public Sector Wages Policy Statement is issued in substitution for that statement, the later statement.
(2C)The matters the Commission is required to take into consideration under subsection (2A) are in addition to any matter it is required to take into consideration under subsection (1)(d).
(2D)Subsection (2A) —
(a)does not apply in relation to —
(i)an order made under section 42G in respect of an agreement proposed to be made in substitution for an industrial agreement that specifies a nominal expiry date that is earlier than 1 November 2013; or
(ii)an enterprise order made in substitution for an enterprise order that provides for an expiry day that is earlier than 1 November 2013;
but
(b)except as provided in paragraph (a), applies in relation to any public sector decision in respect of a matter arising before, on or after the commencement of the Workforce Reform Act 2014 section 4.
(2E)Subsections (1)(d) and (2A) do not apply when the Commission is exercising its jurisdiction under section 50A.
(2)In granting relief or redress under this Act the Commission is not restricted to the specific claim made or to the subject matter of the claim.
(3)Where the Commission, in deciding any matter before it proposes or intends to take into account any matter or information that was not raised before it on the hearing of the matter, the Commission must, before deciding the matter, notify the parties concerned and afford them the opportunity of being heard in relation to that matter or information.
(4)Subsections (1) to (3) inclusive do not, in any particular case, prevent the use by the Commission, with the consent of the parties concerned, of final offer arbitration.
[Section 26 amended: No. 121 of 1982 s. 9; No. 94 of 1984 s. 17; No. 79 of 1995 s. 9; No. 20 of 2002 s. 129; No. 36 of 2006 s. 10; No. 8 of 2014 s. 4; No. 30 of 2021 s. 12, 76(2) and 77(13).]
[26A.Deleted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 111(6).]
(1)Except as otherwise provided in this Act, the Commission may, in relation to any matter before it —
(a)at any stage of the proceedings dismiss the matter or any part of it or refrain from further hearing or determining the matter or part if it is satisfied —
(i)that the matter or part is trivial; or
(ii)that further proceedings are not necessary or desirable in the public interest; or
(iii)that the person who referred the matter to the Commission does not have a sufficient interest in the matter; or
(iv)that for any other reason the matter or part should be dismissed or the hearing of it discontinued, as the case may be;
and
(b)take evidence on oath or affirmation; and
(c)order any party to the matter to pay to any other party such costs and expenses including expenses of witnesses as are specified in the order, but so that no costs are allowed for the services of any legal practitioner, or agent; and
(d)proceed to hear and determine the matter or any part of the matter in the absence of any party who has been duly summoned to appear or duly served with notice of the proceedings; and
(e)sit at any time and place; and
(f)adjourn to any time and place; and
[(g)deleted]
(h)direct any person, whether a witness or intending witness or not, to leave the place in which the proceedings are being conducted; and
(ha)determine the periods that are reasonably necessary for the fair and adequate presentation of the respective cases of the parties to the proceedings and require that the cases be presented within the respective periods; and
(hb)require evidence or argument to be presented in writing, and decide the matters on which it will hear oral evidence or argument; and
(i)refer any matter to an expert and accept the expert’s report as evidence; and
(j)direct parties to be struck out or persons to be joined; and
(k)permit the intervention, on such terms as it thinks fit, of any person who, in the opinion of the Commission has a sufficient interest in the matter; and
(l)allow the amendment of any proceedings on such terms as it thinks fit; and
(m)correct, amend, or waive any error, defect, or irregularity whether in substance or in form; and
(n)extend any prescribed time or any time fixed by an order of the Commission; and
(o)make such orders as may be just with respect to any interlocutory proceedings to be taken before the hearing of any matter, the costs of those proceedings, the issues to be submitted to the Commission, the persons to be served with notice of proceedings, delivery of particulars of the claims of all parties, admissions, discovery, inspection, or production of documents, inspection or production of property, examination of witnesses, and the place and mode of hearing; and
(p)enter upon any manufactory, building, workshop, factory, mine, mine‑working, ship or vessel, shed, place, or premises of any kind in, or in respect of which any industry is or is reputed to be carried on, or any work is being or has been done or commenced, or anything is taking or has taken place, which is the subject of, or related to, a matter before the Commission; and
(q)inspect and view any work, material machinery, appliance, article, book, record, document, matter, or other thing being in any manufactory, building, workshop, factory, mine, mine‑working, ship or vessel, shed, place or premises of a kind referred to in paragraph (p); and
(r)question any person who may be in or upon any such manufactory, building, workshop, factory, mine, mine‑working, ship or vessel, shed, place or premises in respect or in relation to any such matter or thing; and
(s)consolidate or divide proceedings relating to the same industry and all or any matters before the Commission; and
(t)with the consent of the Chief Commissioner refer the matter or any part of the matter, including any question of interpretation of the rules of an organisation arising in the matter, to the Commission in Court Session for hearing and determination by the Commission in Court Session; and
(u)with the consent of the Chief Commissioner refer to the Full Bench for hearing and determination by the Full Bench any question of law arising in the matter, other than a question of interpretation of the rules of an organisation; and
(v)generally give all such directions and do all such things as are necessary or expedient for the expeditious and just hearing and determination of the matter.
(1a)Except as otherwise provided in this Act, the Commission must, in relation to any matter before it, conduct its proceedings in public unless the Commission, at any stage of the proceedings, is of the opinion that the objects of the Act will be better served by conducting the proceedings in private.
(2)The powers contained in subsection (1)(p), (q) and (r) may, if the Commission so directs in any case, be exercised by an officer of the Commission or by an expert to whom any matter has been referred by the Commission.
[Section 27 amended: No. 121 of 1982 s. 10; No. 94 of 1984 s. 18 and 66; No. 20 of 2002 s. 122; No. 39 of 2018 s. 22; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and (4), 77(13), 78(4), (5) and (7).]
28.Powers in s. 27 may be exercised at any time after matter lodged
The powers conferred on the Commission by section 27 may be exercised in relation to a matter at any time after the matter has been lodged in the Commission notwithstanding that the procedures prescribed under this Act have not at that time been complied with to the extent necessary to enable the matter to be heard and determined by the Commission.
29.Who may refer industrial matters to Commission
(1)An industrial matter may be referred to the Commission —
(a)in any case, by —
(i)an employer with a sufficient interest in the industrial matter; or
(ii)an organisation in which persons to whom the industrial matter relates are eligible to be enrolled as members or an association that represents such an organisation; or
(iii)the Minister;
and
(b)except as provided in section 51Q(2), in the case of an equal remuneration order — by an application made by any of the following —
(i)an employee to be covered by the order;
(ii)an organisation in which employees to be covered by the order are eligible to be enrolled as members;
(iii)an organisation in which employers of employees to be covered by the order are eligible to be enrolled as members;
(iv)UnionsWA;
(v)the Chamber;
(vi)the Minister;
(vii)the Commissioner for Equal Opportunity;
and
(c)in the case of a claim by an employee that the employee has been harshly, oppressively or unfairly dismissed from the employee’s employment — by the employee; and
(d)in the case of a claim by an employee that the employer has not allowed the employee a benefit, other than a benefit under an award or order, to which the employee is entitled under the contract of employment — by the employee; and
(e)in the case of an industrial matter mentioned in section 7(2A) — by the worker.
(1a)A party to an employer‑employee agreement has the right to refer to the Commission constituted by a commissioner where the Commission so constituted is the relevant industrial authority under Part VID —
(a)any question, dispute or difficulty that the Commission as so constituted has jurisdiction to determine under section 97WI; or
(b)an allegation referred to in section 97WK(2).
(2)Subject to subsection (3), a referral under subsection (1)(c) is to be made not later than 28 days after the day on which the employee’s employment is terminated.
(3)The Commission may accept a referral by an employee under subsection (1)(c) that is out of time if the Commission considers that it would be unfair not to do so.
[Section 29 inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 19; amended: No. 15 of 1993 s. 10; No. 1 of 1995 s. 7 and 43; No. 3 of 1997 s. 24; No. 36 of 1999 s. 247; No. 20 of 2002 s. 7 and 139; No. 30 of 2021 s. 13.]
29AA.Certain claims not to be determined
(1)Subject to subsection (2), the Commission must not determine a claim of harsh, oppressive or unfair dismissal from employment if the dismissed employee has lodged an application with the FW Commission for relief in respect of the termination of that employment.
(2)Despite subsection (1) the Commission may determine the claim if the application to the FW Commission is —
(a)withdrawn; or
(b)rejected or dismissed on the ground that it is not within the jurisdiction of the FW Commission to determine the application.
(3)The Commission must not determine a claim of harsh, oppressive or unfair dismissal from employment if —
(a)an industrial instrument does not apply to the employment of the employee; and
(b)the employee’s contract of employment provides for a salary exceeding the prescribed amount.
(4)The Commission must not determine a claim that an employee has not been allowed by an employer a benefit to which the employee is entitled under a contract of employment if —
(a)an industrial instrument does not apply to the employment of the employee; and
(b)the employee’s contract of employment provides for a salary exceeding the prescribed amount.
(5)In this section —
industrial instrument means —
(a)an award; or
(b)an order of the Commission under this Act that is not an order prescribed by regulations made by the Governor for the purposes of this section; or
(c)an industrial agreement; or
(d)an employer‑employee agreement;
prescribed amount means —
(a)$90 000 per annum; or
(b)the salary specified, or worked out in a manner specified, in regulations made by the Governor for the purposes of this section.
[Section 29AA inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 140(1); amended: No. 53 of 2011 s. 39; No. 39 of 2018 s. 23; amended: Gazette 15 Aug 2003 p. 3686; No. 30 of 2021 s. 75(1) and 77(13).]
29A.Proposed award etc., service of etc.
(1)Where an industrial matter has been referred to the Commission pursuant to section 29, the claimant or applicant must specify the nature of the relief sought.
(1a)In this section —
area and scope provisions means the parts of an award or industrial agreement that relate to the area of operation and scope of the award or industrial agreement.
(1b)Subject to subsection (2A), the following must be published in the required manner —
(a)area and scope provisions of a proposed award or industrial agreement; and
(b)proposed variations to the area and scope provisions of an existing award or industrial agreement.
(2)Subject to any direction given under subsection (2A), if the reference of an industrial matter to the Commission seeks the issuance of an award or the registration of an industrial agreement, or the variation of the area and scope provisions of an existing award or agreement, the Commission must not hear the claim or application until the area and scope provisions of the proposed award or industrial agreement have, or the proposed variation has, been published in the required manner and a copy of the claim or application has been served —
(a)in the case of a proposed award or variation of an award, on —
(i)UnionsWA, the Chamber, the Mines and Metals Association and the Minister; and
(ii)such organisations, associations and employers as the Commission may direct being, in the case of employers, such employers as constitute, in the opinion of the Commission, a sufficient number of employers who are reasonably representative of the employers who would be bound by the proposed award or the award as proposed to be varied, as the case may be;
(b)in the case of the proposed registration or variation of an industrial agreement, on UnionsWA, the Chamber, the Mines and Metals Association and the Minister.
(2A)The Chief Commissioner may, if of the opinion that it is appropriate to do so in the circumstances, direct that the area and scope provisions of the proposed award or industrial agreement —
(a)need not be published in the Industrial Gazette; or
(b)need not be published at all.
(2b)Nothing in subsection (2A) affects or dispenses with any requirement of subsection (2) that a copy of a claim or application be served on any person, body or authority referred to in subsection (2)(a) or (b).
(2c)The area and scope provisions of an award may be amended under section 40A without the proposed variation having been published in the required manner.
(3)Unless otherwise directed by the Commission, where the reference of an industrial matter to the Commission seeks the variation of an award or industrial agreement, other than a variation of the kind mentioned in subsection (2), the Commission must not hear the claim or application until the named parties to the award or the parties to the industrial agreement, as the case requires, have been served with a copy of the claim.
(4)Where the reference of an industrial matter to the Commission seeks the issuance or variation of an order or declaration, other than of a kind referred to in subsection (2) or (3) the Commission must not hear the claim or application until the persons sought to be bound by the decision in the proceedings have been served with a copy of the claim or application.
[Section 29A inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 19; amended: No. 119 of 1987 s. 8; No. 15 of 1993 s. 31; No. 20 of 2002 s. 115; No. 53 of 2011 s. 41 and 48; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and (8).]
Subject to section 27(1)(j) the parties to proceedings before the Commission are —
(a)the claimant or applicant by whom or which the proceedings were initiated; and
(b)the other persons, bodies, organisations or associations upon whom or which a copy of the claim or application is served.
[Section 29B inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 19; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(4).]
30.Minister may intervene on behalf of State
(1)The Minister may, by giving the Registrar notice in writing of the Minister’s intention to do so, and by leave of the Commission, intervene on behalf of the State in any proceedings before the Commission in which the State has an interest.
[(2)deleted]
[Section 30 inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 19; amended: No. 36 of 2006 s. 11; No. 30 of 2021 s. 77(13).]
31.Representation of parties to proceedings
(1)Any party to proceedings before the Commission, and any other person or body permitted by or under this Act to intervene or be heard in proceedings before the Commission, may appear —
(a)in person; or
(b)by an agent; or
(c)where —
(i)that party, person or body, or any of the other parties, persons or bodies permitted to intervene or be heard, is UnionsWA, the Chamber, the Mines and Metals Association, the Minister or the Minister of the Commonwealth administering the Department of the Commonwealth that has the administration of the FW Act; or
(ii)the proceedings are in respect of a claim referred to the Commission under section 29(1)(c) or (d) or involve the hearing and determination of an application under section 44(7)(a)(iii); or
(iii)all parties to the proceedings expressly consent to legal practitioners appearing and being heard in the proceedings; or
(iv)the Commission, under subsection (4), allows legal practitioners to appear and be heard in the proceedings,
by a legal practitioner.
(2)An organisation or association is taken to have appeared in person if it is represented by its secretary or by any officer of the organisation or association.
(3)A person or body appearing by a legal practitioner or agent is bound by the acts of that legal practitioner or agent.
(4)Where a question of law is raised or argued or is likely in the opinion of the Commission to be raised or argued in proceedings before the Commission, the Commission may allow legal practitioners to appear and be heard.
(5)The Commission may make regulations prescribing the manner in which authorisation of any agent is to be given, either generally or for a particular case.
[Section 31 amended: No. 121 of 1982 s. 12; No. 94 of 1984 s. 20 and 66; No. 15 of 1993 s. 31; No. 1 of 1995 s. 8; No. 36 of 1999 s. 247; No. 21 of 2008 s. 668(4); No. 53 of 2011 s. 33 and 48; No. 30 of 2021 s. 14, 75(1), 76(3) and 78(3).]
32.Conciliation and arbitration of industrial matters
(1)Where an industrial matter has been referred to the Commission the Commission must, unless it is satisfied that the resolution of the matter would not be assisted by so doing, endeavour to resolve the matter by conciliation.
(2)In endeavouring to resolve an industrial matter by conciliation the Commission must do all such things as appear to it to be right and proper to assist the parties to reach an agreement on terms for the resolution of the matter.
(3)Without limiting the generality of subsection (2) the Commission may, for the purposes of that subsection —
(a)arrange conferences of the parties or their representatives presided over by the Commission;
(b)arrange for the parties or their representatives to confer among themselves at a conference at which the Commission is not present.
(4)The Commission must —
(a)if it gives or makes a direction, order or declaration orally under subsection (8), reduce the direction, order or declaration to writing as soon as is practicable; and
(b)preface each direction, order or declaration given or made by it under subsection (8) —
(i)if so given or made in writing, at the time of that giving or making; or
(ii)if so given or made orally, at the time of the reduction of that direction, order or declaration to writing,
with a preamble in writing setting out the circumstances which led to the giving or making of that direction, order or declaration; and
(c)make the text of each direction, order or declaration given or made by it under subsection (8), and of any preamble to it, available to the parties as soon as is practicable after that giving or making.
[(5)deleted]
(6)Where the Commission does not endeavour to resolve a matter by conciliation or, having endeavoured to do so —
(a)is satisfied that further resort to conciliation would be unavailing; or
(b)is requested by all the parties to the proceedings to decide the matter by arbitration,
the Commission may decide the matter by arbitration.
(7)Where a matter is decided by arbitration the Commission must endeavour to ensure that the matter is resolved on terms that could reasonably have been agreed between the parties in the first instance or by conciliation.
(8)For the purposes of this section the Commission may —
(a)give such directions and make such orders as will in the opinion of the Commission —
(i)prevent the deterioration of industrial relations in respect of the matter until conciliation or arbitration has resolved the matter; or
(ii)enable conciliation or arbitration to resolve the matter; or
(iii)encourage the parties to exchange or divulge attitudes or information which in the opinion of the Commission would assist in the resolution of the matter;
(b)give any direction or make any order or declaration which the Commission is otherwise authorised to give or make under this Act.
[Section 32 inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 21; amended: No. 119 of 1987 s. 9; No. 3 of 1997 s. 36; No. 20 of 2002 s. 187 and 194(3) and (4); No. 8 of 2009 s. 77(2)‑(4); No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and 78(7).]
32A.Conciliation and arbitration functions of Commission are unlimited
(1)The functions of the Commission under this Act as to the resolution of matters by conciliation (conciliation functions) and the determination of matters by arbitration (arbitration functions) —
(a)are to and may be performed at any time and from time to time as and when their performance is necessary or expedient; and
(b)are not limited by any other provision of this Act.
(2)Without limiting subsection (1), nothing in this Act prevents the performance of conciliation functions merely because arbitration functions are being or have been performed.
[Section 32A inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 123.]
(1)With respect to evidence in proceedings before the Commission —
(a)the Registrar must, on the application of any party, or by direction of the Commission, issue a summons in the approved form to any person to appear and give evidence before the Commission and the summons may require that person to produce before the Commission any books, papers, or other documents in the person’s possession, or under the person’s control, in any way relating to the proceedings; and
(b)a person who attends the Commission in accordance with such summons is entitled to receive from the party at whose instance the person was summoned an allowance for expenses as determined by the Commission; and
(c)subject to subsection (2), a person duly served with such summons, must not without good cause, proof of which is on the person, fail to attend or to duly produce any book, paper, or document as required or refuse to be sworn as a witness or to answer any question which the person is required by the Commission to answer; and
(d)the Commission may, if the Commission considers it just or convenient so to do, make any order for the examination upon oath or otherwise before the Commission or any officer of the Commission, or any other person, and at any place of any witness or person, and may empower any party to give the deposition of such witness or person in evidence on such terms, if any, as the Commission may direct; and
(e)the Commission must take evidence on oath or affirmation.
(2)Where a summons is issued to, and duly served on, a person to appear and give evidence before the Commission, the person may make application to the Commission for cause to be shown for the person to so appear and, if on the hearing of the application such cause is not shown, the person is not required to so appear.
(3)Evidence relating to any trade secret, or to the profits or financial position of any witness or party, must not be disclosed except to the Commission, or published without the consent of the person entitled to the trade secret or non‑disclosure.
(4)The evidence referred to in subsection (3) must, if the witness or party so requests, be taken in private.
(5)All books, papers, and other documents produced in evidence before the Commission may be inspected by the Commission and also by such of the parties as the Commission allows, but the information obtained from the documents must not be made public without the permission of the Commission, and such parts of the documents as in the opinion of the Commission do not relate to the matter at issue may be sealed up, but such books, papers, and documents relating to any trade secret or to the profits or financial position of any witness or party must not, without the consent of that witness or party, be inspected by any party.
(6)Subsection (1)(a), (b), and (c) do not apply to or in relation to a summons issued pursuant to section 44.
[Section 33 amended: No. 121 of 1982 s. 13; No. 94 of 1984 s. 22 and 65; No. 30 of 2021 s. 73, 76(2), (3) and (8), 77(2), (4) and (5) and 78(7).]
34.Decisions of Commission, form of and review of
(1)The decision of the Commission must be made in the form of an award, order or declaration and must be signed and dated at the time it is made —
(a)in the case of a decision made by the Commission constituted by a single commissioner — by the commissioner; or
(b)in the case of a decision of the Commission in Court Session — by the most senior commissioner of the commissioners who constitute the Commission in Court Session; or
(c)in the case of a decision by the Full Bench or its presiding commissioner — by the presiding commissioner of the Full Bench.
(1A)A decision of the Commission must be sealed with the seal of the Commission.
(2)When the commissioners who constitute the Commission in Court Session are divided in opinion on a question, the question must be decided according to the decision of the majority of the commissioners.
(3)Proceedings before the Commission cannot be impeached or held bad for want of form nor can they be removable to any court by certiorari or otherwise —
(a)on any ground relating to jurisdiction; or
(b)on any other ground.
(4)Except as provided by this Act, no award, order, declaration, finding, or proceeding of the Commission is liable to be challenged, appealed against, reviewed, quashed, or called in question by or in any court —
(a)on any ground relating to jurisdiction; or
(b)on any other ground.
[Section 34 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 23; No. 20 of 2002 s. 124; No. 39 of 2018 s. 24; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(3), (5) and (8).]
35.Decision to be first drawn up as minutes
(1A)In this section —
final decision means a decision, determination or ruling in proceedings that finally decides, determines or disposes of the matter to which the proceedings relate.
(1)Subject to subsection (4), a final decision must, before it is made, be drawn up in the form of minutes which must be handed down to the parties concerned and, unless in any particular case the Commission otherwise determines, its reasons for decision must be published at the same time.
(1AB)Subsection (1) does not apply to an order made for the purposes of section 27(1)(a) or an order or declaration made under section 32(8).
(2)At the discretion of the commissioner giving the decision the minutes and reasons for decision may be handed down by the Registrar.
(3)The parties concerned are, at a time fixed by the Commission, entitled to speak to matters contained in the minutes of the decision and the Commission may, after hearing the parties, vary the terms of those minutes before the final decision is made in the terms of the minutes.
(4)The Commission, with the consent of the parties, may waive the requirements of this section in any case in which it is of the opinion that the procedures prescribed in this section are inappropriate or unnecessary.
[Section 35 amended: No. 121 of 1982 s. 14; No. 94 of 1984 s. 24 and 66; No. 39 of 2018 s. 25; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(8) and 78(7).]
36.Copy of decision must be given to parties and be available for inspection
(1)The Commission must, as soon as practicable after making a decision —
(a)give a copy of the decision to each party to the proceeding; and
(b)deposit a copy of the decision in the office of the Registrar.
(2)A copy of each decision of the Commission lodged in the office of the Registrar must be open to inspection without charge during office hours by any person interested.
[Section 36 inserted: No. 39 of 2018 s. 26.]
[Heading inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 116.]
36A.Non‑award employees, interim award for etc.
(1)In any proceedings in which the Commission is considering the making of an award (the new award) that extends to employees to whom no award currently extends (the employees), the onus is on any party opposing the making of the new award to show that it would not be in the public interest.
(2)The Commission may make an interim award that extends to the employees pending the making of the new award.
(3)An interim award may be made if the Commission considers —
(a)that it would provide a fair basis for the application of the no‑disadvantage test provided for by Part VID Division 6 Subdivision 1; or
(b)that it would protect the existing wages and conditions of employment of the employees until the new award is made; or
(c)that it would be appropriate for any other reason.
[Section 36A inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 116.]
37.Effect, area of operation and duration of award
(1)An award has effect according to its terms.
(2)Except as provided in its terms, an award operates throughout the State, other than in the areas to which section 3(1) applies.
[(3)deleted]
(4)Subject to any variation made under this Act, an award, and any provision of an award, whether or not it has been made for a specified term, remains in force until cancelled, suspended, or replaced under this Act unless, in the case of an award or a provision made for a specified term, it is expressly provided that the award or the provision, as the case may be, ceases to operate upon the expiration of that term.
(5)Subsection (4) does not prevent the cancellation, suspension, or replacement of an award in part.
[Section 37 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 66; No. 30 of 2021 s. 15 and 76(8).]
37A.Public sector awards and enterprise awards
Except as provided in its terms, a public sector award or enterprise award extends to and binds —
(a)employees employed in a calling specified in the award in the industry or industries to which the award applies; and
(b)employers employing those employees.
[Section 37A inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 16.]
37B.Private sector awards: general
(1)Except as provided in its terms, a private sector award extends to and binds —
(a)employers —
(i)of a class or classes specified in the award; or
(ii)specified by name in the award;
and
(b)employees —
(i)of employers referred to in paragraph (a); and
(ii)of a class or classes specified in the award.
(2)For the purposes of subsection (1)(a)(i) and (b)(ii), the class may be described by reference to —
(a)a particular industry or part of an industry; or
(b)a particular kind of work.
(3)A private sector award may be made or varied to —
(a)prevent any overlap with another award; and
(b)extend to and bind a labour hire agency, and any employees of a labour hire agency, conducting business —
(i)in an industry to which the award relates; and
(ii)in relation to employees to whom a classification in the award applies.
[Section 37B inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 16.]
37C.Private sector awards: limitations on making and varying
(1)A private sector award must not be made or varied to extend to and bind a class of employees —
(a)who, because of the seniority of their role, have traditionally not been covered by awards (whether made under laws of the State, the Commonwealth, another State or a Territory); or
(b)who perform work that is not of a similar nature to work that has traditionally been regulated by such awards.
Example for this subsection:
In some industries, managerial employees have traditionally not been covered by awards.
(2)The scope of a private sector award must not be fixed by reference to an industry or part of an industry carried on by an employer if the Commission makes or varies the private sector award to extend to and bind an employer specified by name in the award.
(3)A private sector award must not be made or varied to extend to and bind an employee and employer if a public sector award or enterprise award extends to and binds the employee and employer.
[Section 37C inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 16.]
37D.Private sector awards: variations of the Commission’s own motion
(1)Except as provided in this section, the Commission may vary the scope of a private sector award of its own motion.
(2)A variation must not be made in relation to —
(a)an application under section 50(2) that does not seek the variation of the scope of the private sector award; or
(b)a State Wage order under section 50A.
(3)A variation must specify that the scope of the private sector award extends to and binds —
(a)employers of a class or classes specified in the award, whether or not the employers are also specified by name in the award; and
(b)employees —
(i)of employers referred to in paragraph (a); and
(ii)of a class or classes specified in the award.
(4)For the purposes of subsection (3)(a) and (b)(ii), the class may be described by reference to —
(a)a particular industry or part of an industry; or
(b)a particular kind of work.
(5)A variation that stops the private sector award from extending to and binding particular employers or employees must not be made unless the Commission is satisfied that another appropriate award will extend to and bind them.
(6)The Commission must not make a variation under this section until it has —
(a)published the proposed variation in the required manner; and
(b)given notice of the proposed variation to —
(i)UnionsWA, the Chamber, the Mines and Metals Association and the Minister; and
(ii)any organisations, associations and employers as the Commission may direct (being, in the case of employers, employers constituting, in the opinion of the Commission, a sufficient number of employers reasonably representative of the employers who would be bound by the proposed variation);
and
(c)afforded the persons or bodies referred to in paragraph (b) an opportunity to be heard in relation to the proposed variation.
[Section 37D inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 16.]
(1)The parties to proceedings before the Commission in which an award is made, other than UnionsWA, the Chamber, the Mines and Metals Association and the Minister, must be listed in the award as the named parties to the award.
(1a)If after the commencement of section 12 of the Industrial Relations Amendment Act 1993 —
(a)any party to proceedings in which an award is made, other than UnionsWA, the Chamber, the Mines and Metals Association and the Minister, is not listed in the award as a named party as required by subsection (1); and
(b)the Commission has not ordered that the party is not to be a party to the award,
the party is to be taken to be a named party to the award.
(1b)In subsections (1) and (1a) party does not include an intervener.
(2)At any time after an award has been made the Commission may, by order made on the application of —
(a)any employer who, in the opinion of the Commission, has a sufficient interest in the matter; or
(b)any organisation which is registered in respect of any calling mentioned in the award or in respect of any industry to which the award applies; or
(c)any association on which any such organisation is represented,
add as a named party to the award any employer, organisation or association.
(3)Where an employer who is added as a named party to a public sector award or enterprise award under subsection (2) is, at the time of that addition, engaged in an industry to which the award did not previously apply and the scope of the award is varied by virtue of that addition, the variation is expressly limited to that industry for the purposes of section 37A.
(4)An employer is not to be added as a named party to a public sector award or enterprise award under subsection (2) if that addition would have the effect of extending the award to employees to whom another award already extends.
[Section 38 inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 25; amended: No. 15 of 1993 s. 12 and 31; No. 20 of 2002 s. 117(1); No. 53 of 2011 s. 48; No. 30 of 2021 s. 17 and 76(2).]
(1)An award comes into operation —
(a)on the day on which it is made; or
(b)on such day or days as the Commission fixes and specifies in the award.
[(2)deleted]
(3)The Commission may, by its award, give retrospective effect to the whole or any part of the award —
(a)if and to the extent that the parties to the award so agree; or
(b)if, in the opinion of the Commission, there are special circumstances which make it fair and right so to do,
but in a case to which paragraph (b) applies, not beyond the date upon which the application leading to the making of the award was lodged in the Commission.
(4)For the purpose of subsection (3), an award or a provision of it has retrospective effect if and only if it has effect from a date earlier than the day on which the award is made.
[Section 39 amended: No. 39 of 2018 s. 27.]
40.Varying and cancelling awards generally
(1)Subject to subsections (2), (3) and (4) and to sections 29A, 37C, 37D(5) and 38, the Commission may by order at any time vary an award.
(2)An application to the Commission to vary an award may be made by any organisation or association named as a party to the award or employer bound by the award.
(2A)A variation to the scope of a private sector award must specify that it extends to and binds —
(a)employers of a class or classes specified in the award, whether or not the employers are also specified by name in the award; and
(b)employees —
(i)of employers referred to in paragraph (a); and
(ii)of a class or classes specified in the award.
(2B)For the purposes of subsection (2A)(a) and (b)(ii), the class may be described by reference to —
(a)a particular industry or part of an industry; or
(b)a particular kind of work.
(3)Where an award or any provision of it is limited as to its duration the Commission —
(a)may, subject to such conditions as it considers fit, reserve to any party to the award liberty to apply to vary the award or that provision, as the case may be; and
(b)must not, within the specified term, vary the award or that provision, as the case may be, unless and to the extent that —
(i)it is satisfied that, by reason of circumstances which have arisen since the time at which the specified term was fixed, it would be inequitable and unjust not to do so; or
(ii)on an application made under paragraph (a), it is satisfied that it is fair and right so to do; or
(iii)the parties to the award agree that the award or provision should be varied;
and
(c)may within the specified term cancel the award if the parties to the award agree that it be cancelled.
(4)Section 39 applies, with such modifications as are necessary, to and in relation to an order made under this section.
[Section 40 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 66; No. 30 of 2021 s. 18, 76(2) and 78(7).]
40A.Incorporation of industrial agreement provisions into awards by consent
(1)If —
(a)an award extends to employees to whom an industrial agreement extends; and
(b)a named party to the award who is also a party to the agreement applies to the Commission for the incorporation of some or all of the provisions of the agreement into the award; and
(c)each other party to the agreement consents to the incorporation of those provisions into the award,
the Commission must by order vary the award by incorporating those provisions of the agreement into the award, but the variation must be expressly limited to the employees and employers to whom the agreement extends.
(2)This section does not limit the operation of section 40 and that section applies to any application or order made under this section.
[Section 40A inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 118; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
40B.Power to vary awards to reflect statutory etc. requirements, to promote efficiency and to facilitate implementation
(1)The Commission, of its own motion, may by order at any time vary an award for any one or more of the following purposes —
(a)to ensure that the award does not contain wages that are less than the minimum award wage as ordered by the Commission under section 50A;
(b)to ensure that the award does not contain conditions of employment that are less favourable than those provided by the MCE Act;
(c)to ensure that the award does not contain provisions that discriminate against an employee on any ground on which discrimination in work is unlawful under the Equal Opportunity Act 1984;
(d)to ensure that the award does not contain provisions that are obsolete or need updating;
(e)to ensure that the award is consistent with the facilitation of the efficient organisation and performance of work according to the needs of an industry and enterprises within it, balanced with fairness to the employees in the industry and enterprises.
(2)The Commission must not make an order under this section until it has given notice to the named parties to the award and UnionsWA, the Chamber, the Mines and Metals Association and the Minister and afforded them an opportunity to be heard in relation to the proposed variations.
(3)The Commission must cause a copy of an order made under this section to be —
(a)given to the named parties to the award and to UnionsWA, the Chamber, the Mines and Metals Association and the Minister; and
(b)published in the required manner.
(4)Section 39 applies to and in relation to an order made under this section —
(a)as if the reference in section 39(3) to the date on which an application was lodged in the Commission were a reference to the date on which notice was first given under subsection (2); and
(b)with such other modifications as are necessary.
(5)This section does not prevent or affect the making of an application under section 40 to vary an award for a purpose mentioned in subsection (1).
[Section 40B inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 118; amended: No. 36 of 2006 s. 12; No. 53 of 2011 s. 48; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
Division 2B — Industrial agreements
[Heading inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 130.]
In this Division —
initiating party, in relation to a proposed industrial agreement, means the party that initiated the bargaining for the agreement under section 42(1);
negotiating party, in relation to a proposed industrial agreement, means —
(a)the initiating party; and
(b)a person who notifies the initiating party under section 42A(1) that that person will bargain for the industrial agreement;
prescribed period has the meaning given by section 42A(1) and includes any extension of that period ordered by the Commission.
[Section 40C inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 130.]
41.Industrial agreements, making, registration and effect of
(1)An agreement with respect to any industrial matter or for the prevention or resolution under this Act of any related disputes, disagreements, or questions may be made between an organisation or association of employees and any employer or organisation or association of employers.
(1a)An agreement may apply to a single enterprise or more than a single enterprise.
(1b)For the purposes of subsection (1a) an agreement applies to more than a single enterprise if it applies to —
(a)more than one business, project or undertaking; or
(b)the activities carried on by more than one public authority.
(2)Subject to subsection (3) and sections 41A and 49N, where the parties to an agreement referred to in subsection (1) apply to the Commission for registration of the agreement as an industrial agreement the Commission must register the agreement as an industrial agreement.
(3)Before registering an industrial agreement the Commission may require the parties to effect such variation as the Commission considers necessary or desirable for the purpose of giving clear expression to the true intention of the parties.
(4)An industrial agreement extends to and binds —
(a)all employees who are employed —
(i)in any calling mentioned in the industrial agreement in the industry or industries to which the industrial agreement applies; and
(ii)by an employer who is —
(I)a party to the industrial agreement; or
(II)a member of an organisation of employers that is a party to the industrial agreement or that is a member of an association of employers that is a party to the industrial agreement;
and
(b)all employers referred to in paragraph (a)(ii),
and no other employee or employer, and its scope must be expressly so limited in the industrial agreement.
(5)An industrial agreement operates —
(a)in the area specified in the agreement; and
(b)for the term specified in the agreement.
(6)Notwithstanding the expiry of the term of an industrial agreement, it continues in force in respect of all parties to the agreement, except those who retire from the agreement, until a new agreement or an award in substitution for the first‑mentioned agreement has been made.
(7)At any time after, or not more than 30 days before, the expiry of an industrial agreement any party to the agreement may file in the office of the Registrar a notice in the approved form signifying the party’s intention to retire from the agreement at the expiration of 30 days from the date of the filing, and, on the expiration of that period, the party ceases to be a party to the agreement.
(8)When a new industrial agreement is made and registered, or an award or enterprise order is made, in substitution for an industrial agreement (the first agreement), the first agreement is taken to be cancelled, except to the extent that the new industrial agreement, award or order saves the provisions of the first agreement.
(9)To the extent that an industrial agreement is contrary to or inconsistent with an award, the industrial agreement prevails unless the agreement expressly provides otherwise.
[Section 41 inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 26; amended: No. 15 of 1993 s. 13; No. 20 of 2002 s. 131 and 144; No. 30 of 2021 s. 73, 76(2) and (8), 77(13), 78(4) and (7).]
41A.Which industrial agreements must not be registered under s. 41
(1)The Commission must not under section 41 register an agreement as an industrial agreement unless the agreement —
(a)specifies a nominal expiry date that is no later than 3 years after the date on which the agreement will come into operation; and
(b)includes any provision specified in relation to that agreement by an order referred to in section 42G; and
(c)includes an estimate of the number of employees who will be bound by the agreement upon registration.
(2)The Commission must not under section 41 register an agreement as an industrial agreement to which an organisation or association of employees is a party, unless the employees who will be bound by the agreement upon registration are members of, or eligible to be members of, that organisation or association.
[Section 41A inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 132; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
42.Bargaining for industrial agreement, initiating
(1)Bargaining for an industrial agreement may be initiated by an organisation or association of employees, an employer or an organisation or association of employers giving to an intended party to the agreement a written notice that complies with subsection (3).
(2)A notice under subsection (1) is not to be given to an organisation or association of employers unless that organisation or association has given written consent to being given such notice.
(3)A notice complies with this subsection if it is accompanied by particulars of —
(a)the types of employment to be covered by the agreement; and
(b)the area in which the agreement is to operate; and
(c)the intended parties to the agreement; and
(d)any other matter prescribed by regulations made by the Governor under section 42M.
(4)If there is no applicable industrial agreement or enterprise order in force, bargaining may be initiated under subsection (1) at any time.
(5)If there is an applicable industrial agreement or an applicable enterprise order in force, bargaining must not be initiated under subsection (1) earlier than 90 days before the nominal expiry date of the agreement or order.
(6)Where bargaining is initiated under subsection (1) with more than one intended party to the agreement, all the negotiating parties are to bargain together unless the Commission, on the application of a negotiating party, directs that that negotiating party may negotiate separately with the initiating party.
(7)Nothing in this section prevents or limits a person from bargaining for an industrial agreement when bargaining has not been initiated under subsection (1).
(8)In subsection (5) —
nominal expiry date means the date specified in the agreement or enterprise order as the date on which the agreement or enterprise order expires.
[Section 42 inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 133.]
42A.Response to initiation of bargaining
(1)A person to whom a notice is given under section 42(1) may notify the initiating party within 21 days of receiving the notice (the prescribed period) as to whether that person will, or will not, bargain for an industrial agreement.
(2)The Commission may by order, on application by a person to whom a notice is given under section 42(1), extend by no more than 7 days the period within which that person may respond under subsection (1).
(3)The Commission may make an order under subsection (2) although an application for the order was not made until after the expiration of the prescribed period.
(4)An order under subsection (2) may be made subject to such conditions as the Commission thinks fit.
(5)An application under subsection (2) operates —
(a)as a bar to an application for an enterprise order by a negotiating party; and
(b)as a stay of any application for an enterprise order that has been made by a negotiating party,
until the application under subsection (2) is determined or withdrawn.
(6)Bargaining between negotiating parties for an industrial agreement is initiated when the negotiating party to whom the notice is given notifies the initiating party under subsection (1) that that negotiating party will bargain.
[Section 42A inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 133.]
42B.Bargaining for industrial agreements, good faith required etc.
(1)When bargaining for an industrial agreement, a negotiating party must bargain in good faith.
(2)Without limiting the meaning of the expression, bargaining in good faith by negotiating parties includes doing the following things —
(a)stating their position on matters at issue, and explaining that position;
(b)meeting at reasonable times, intervals and places for the purpose of conducting face‑to‑face bargaining;
(c)disclosing relevant and necessary information for bargaining;
(d)acting honestly and openly, which includes not capriciously adding or withdrawing items for bargaining;
(e)recognising bargaining agents;
(f)providing reasonable facilities to representatives of organisations and associations of employees necessary for them to carry out their functions;
(g)bargaining genuinely and dedicating sufficient resources to ensure this occurs;
(h)adhering to agreed outcomes and commitments made by the parties.
(3)The Commission may, having regard to the circumstances in which the industrial action occurs, determine that engaging in industrial action is a breach of the duty to bargain in good faith.
(4)For the purposes of this section, a person is a bargaining agent if —
(a)that person has been appointed in writing by a negotiating party to an agreement as a bargaining agent of that party in relation to the agreement; and
(b)a copy of the appointment has been provided to the other negotiating party to the agreement; and
(c)the appointment has not been terminated.
(5)An appointment of a bargaining agent may be terminated at any time by notice of termination given by the negotiating party who appointed the agent in writing to the agent.
(6)A copy of a notice of termination must be given to each other negotiating party.
(7)Despite the Legal Profession Uniform Law (WA) section 10, a bargaining agent is authorised to provide advice and other services in relation to bargaining for an industrial agreement.
(8)Nothing in this section affects the requirement of section 112A that only a person who is registered under that section may appear as an agent under section 31, 81E or 91.
[Section 42B inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 133; amended: No. 65 of 2003 s. 41(3); No. 21 of 2008 s. 668(5); No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2); No. 9 of 2022 s. 424.]
(1)The Commission may make a code of good faith to provide guidance about the application of the duty of good faith under section 42B in relation to bargaining for an industrial agreement —
(a)generally; or
(b)in relation to particular types of situations.
(2)The code must not be inconsistent with this Division.
(3)Section 43(7), (8) and (9) of the Interpretation Act 1984 apply to the code as if it were subsidiary legislation.
(4)The Commission may amend or revoke the code or revoke it and substitute another code for it.
(5)The Commission must cause the code, and any amendment or substituted code or any revocation of a code, to be published in the Industrial Gazette for public information.
(6)In this section —
Commission means the Commission in Court Session.
[Section 42C inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 133; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
42D.Duty of good faith does not require concluded industrial agreement
The duty of good faith in section 42B does not require a negotiating party —
(a)to agree on any matter for inclusion in, or exclusion from, an industrial agreement; or
(b)to enter into an industrial agreement.
[Section 42D inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 133.]
42E.Commission may assist bargaining
(1)To assist parties to bargain for an industrial agreement, the Commission may exercise its powers as if it were endeavouring to resolve an industrial matter.
(2)Without limiting subsection (1) the Commission may make orders and give directions for the purpose of —
(a)ensuring that the negotiating parties bargain in good faith; and
(b)otherwise facilitating bargaining in good faith by negotiating parties.
(3)In particular, the Commission may order for the purposes of subsection (2) that a negotiating party do, or refrain from doing, any particular thing.
[Section 42E inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 133.]
42F.Commission’s power over negotiating parties restricted
Except as provided in section 42G, the Commission must not give any direction or make any order or declaration requiring, or having the effect of requiring, a negotiating party to enter into an industrial agreement or to include any matter in, or exclude any matter from, an industrial agreement.
[Section 42F inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 133.]
42G.Parties may agree to Commission making orders as to terms of agreement
(1)This section applies where —
(a)negotiating parties have reached agreement on some, but not all, of the provisions of a proposed agreement; and
(b)an application is made to the Commission for registration of the agreement as an industrial agreement, the agreement to include any further provisions specified by an order referred to in subsection (2); and
(c)an application is made to the Commission by the negotiating parties for an order as to specified matters on which agreement has not been reached.
(2)When registering the agreement, the Commission may order that the agreement include provisions specified by the Commission.
(3)An order referred to in subsection (2) may only be made in relation to matters specified by the negotiating parties in an application referred to in subsection (1)(c).
(4)In deciding the terms of an order the Commission may have regard to any matter it considers relevant.
(5)When an order referred to in subsection (2) is made, the provisions specified by the Commission are, by force of this section, included in the agreement registered by the Commission.
(6)Despite section 49, no appeal lies from an order referred to in subsection (2).
[Section 42G inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 133.]
42H.Commission may declare that bargaining has ended
(1)If, on the application of a negotiating party, the Commission constituted by a single commissioner determines that —
(a)the applicant has bargained in good faith; and
(b)bargaining between the applicant and another negotiating party has failed; and
(c)there is no reasonable prospect of the negotiating parties reaching an agreement,
the Commission may declare that the bargaining has ended between those negotiating parties.
(2)Despite section 49, no appeal lies from a declaration under subsection (1).
[Section 42H inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 133.]
42I.Enterprise order, applying for and making
(1)If —
(a)the Commission declares under section 42H that bargaining has ended between negotiating parties; or
(b)the person to whom a notice is given under section 42(1) does not respond to the notice within the prescribed period or responds with a refusal to bargain,
the Commission may, upon an application under subsection (2), make an order (an enterprise order) —
(c)providing for any matter that might otherwise be provided for in an industrial agreement to which the negotiating parties referred to in paragraph (a), or the initiating party and the person referred to in paragraph (b), were parties, irrespective of the provisions of any award, order or industrial agreement already in force; and
(d)that the Commission considers is fair and reasonable in all of the circumstances.
(2)An application for an enterprise order may be made —
(a)where subsection (1)(a) applies —
(i)if the negotiating party in respect of whom the declaration was made is not an organisation or association of employers, by the negotiating party; and
(ii)if the negotiating party in respect of whom the declaration was made is an organisation or association of employers, by an employer who is a member of the negotiating party;
and
(b)where subsection (1)(b) applies —
(i)if the initiating party is not an organisation or association of employers, by the initiating party;
(ii)if the initiating party is an organisation or association of employers, by an employer who is a member of the initiating party.
(3)An application for an enterprise order may be made —
(a)where subsection (1)(a) applies, within 21 days after the making of the declaration; and
(b)where subsection (1)(b) applies, within 21 days after the end of the prescribed period.
(4)Without limiting section 32A, the Commission may exercise its powers of conciliation in relation to a matter even if an application for an enterprise order has been made in relation to the same matter.
[Section 42I inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 133.]
42J.Enterprise order, effect of
(1)An enterprise order extends to and binds —
(a)all employees who are employed —
(i)in any calling mentioned in the enterprise order in the industry or industries to which the enterprise order applies; and
(ii)by the employer specified in the order under subsection (5)(a);
and
(b)the employer specified in the order under subsection (5)(a),
and no other employee or employer, and its scope is to be expressly so limited in the enterprise order.
(2)An enterprise order operates in the area specified in the order.
(3)To the extent that an enterprise order is in conflict with an award or industrial agreement, the enterprise order prevails.
(4)An enterprise order is enforceable under section 83 as if the order were an award and any organisation or association who is specified in the order under subsection (5) were a named party to the award.
(5)The Commission is to specify in the enterprise order —
(a)the employer to whom the enterprise order extends and who is bound by the enterprise order; and
(b)any organisation or association of employees that is a relevant negotiating party or person referred to in section 42I(1)(b), as the case requires.
(6)The employer specified under subsection (5)(a) is to be —
(a)the applicant for the enterprise order; or
(b)if the applicant for the enterprise order was an organisation or association of employees —
(i)the negotiating party; or
(ii)the person referred to in section 42I(1)(b); or
(iii)the member of an organisation or association of employers that is a negotiating party; or
(iv)the member of an organisation or association of employers that is a person referred to in section 42I(1)(b),
specified in the application for the enterprise order.
[Section 42J inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 133.]
42K.Enterprise order, term of and varying etc.
(1)Subject to this section, an enterprise order operates for the term specified in the order.
(2)An enterprise order must provide for the day on which it expires which cannot be more than 2 years from and including the day on which it comes into operation.
(3)An enterprise order is not to be varied by the Commission unless all of the persons specified in the order under section 42J(5) consent to the variation.
(4)The Commission is not to make an award or another enterprise order in substitution for an enterprise order unless the term of the enterprise order has expired.
(5)The Commission is not to register an industrial agreement in substitution for an enterprise order unless —
(a)the application to the Commission to register the industrial agreement is made by each of the persons specified in the order under section 42J(5); or
(b)the term of the enterprise order has expired.
(6)The Commission is not to cancel an enterprise order unless an industrial agreement has been registered, or an award or order has been made, in substitution for that enterprise order.
(7)Despite the expiry of an enterprise order, the enterprise order continues in force in respect of all the persons specified in the order under section 42J(5) until a new industrial agreement, enterprise order or an award, in substitution for the enterprise order, has been made or registered as the case requires.
[Section 42K inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 133.]
Bargaining initiated under section 42(1) ends —
(a)in relation to negotiating parties who make an agreement, when that agreement is made; and
(b)in relation to negotiating parties specified in a declaration under section 42H, when that declaration is made.
[Section 42L inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 133.]
42M.Regulations for this Division
(1)The Governor may make regulations prescribing any matter that is necessary or convenient to be prescribed for giving effect to the purposes of this Division.
(2)Without limiting subsection (1) the Governor may make regulations for any of the purposes set out in section 113(1) to give effect to the purposes of this Division.
(3)If there is any conflict or inconsistency between a regulation made by the Governor and a regulation made under section 113(1), the regulation made by the Governor prevails to the extent of the conflict or inconsistency.
[Section 42M inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 133.]
43.Industrial agreement, varying, renewing and cancelling
(1)An industrial agreement may be varied, renewed, or cancelled by a subsequent agreement made by and between all the parties and in so far as the agreement relates to an employer, organisation or association of employers, on the one hand, and to an organisation or association of employees, on the other hand, it may be varied, renewed or cancelled by a subsequent agreement between that employer, organisation or association of employers and that organisation or association of employees.
(2)The Commission may vary an industrial agreement for the purpose of including, omitting or varying a provision, however expressed, that authorises an employer to stand‑down an employee.
(3)An application to the Commission to vary an industrial agreement for a purpose mentioned in subsection (2) may be made by any organisation, association or employer which or who is a party to the agreement.
[Section 43 inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 26; amended: No. 15 of 1993 s. 16; No. 1 of 1995 s. 50; No. 30 of 2021 s. 78(4).]
Division 2C — Holding of compulsory conferences
[Heading inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 119(1).]
44.Compulsory conference, summoning, holding etc.
(1)Subject to this section, the Commission constituted by a commissioner may summon any person to attend, at a time and place specified in the summons, at a conference before the Commission.
(2)A summons under this section —
(a)may be given in the prescribed manner; and
(b)when so given is, in any proceedings under this Act relating to the summons, taken to have been served on the person to whom it is directed unless that person, in those proceedings, satisfies the commissioner who caused the summons to be given or the Full Bench, as the case may be, that the person did not receive the summons.
(3)Any person so summoned must, except for good cause, proof of which is on the person, attend the conference at the time and place specified in the summons and continue that attendance as directed by the Commission.
[(4)deleted]
(5)A conference under this section must be held in private unless the Commission, at any stage of the conference, is of the opinion that the objects of the Act will be better served by holding the conference in public.
(5a)In endeavouring to resolve any matter by conciliation the Commission must do all such things as appear to it to be right and proper to assist the parties to a conference under this section to reach an agreement on terms for the resolution of the matter.
(6)The Commission may, at or in relation to a conference under this section, make such suggestions and give such directions as it considers appropriate and, without limiting the generality of this subsection, may —
(a)direct the parties or any of them to confer with one another or with any other person and without a chairperson or with the Registrar or a deputy registrar as chairperson; and
(b)direct that disclosure of any matter discussed at the conference be limited in such manner as the Commission may specify; and
(ba)with respect to industrial matters, give such directions and make such orders as will in the opinion of the Commission —
(i)prevent the deterioration of industrial relations in respect of the matter in question until conciliation or arbitration has resolved that matter; or
(ii)enable conciliation or arbitration to resolve the matter in question; or
(iii)encourage the parties to exchange or divulge attitudes or information which in the opinion of the Commission would assist in the resolution of the matter in question;
and
(bb)with respect to industrial matters —
(i)give any direction or make any order or declaration which the Commission is otherwise authorised to give or make under this Act; and
(ii)without limiting paragraph (ba) or subparagraph (i), in the case of a claim of harsh, oppressive or unfair dismissal of an employee, make any interim order the Commission thinks appropriate in the circumstances pending resolution of the claim;
and
(c)exercise such of the powers of the Commission referred to in section 27(1) as the Commission considers appropriate.
(6a)An order made under subsection (6)(ba) or (bb) —
(a)binds only the parties to the relevant conference under this section; and
(b)may vary the operation of an existing award or industrial agreement in respect of the parties referred to in paragraph (a).
(7)The Commission may exercise the power conferred on it by subsection (1) —
(a)on the application of —
(i)any organisation, association or employer; or
(ii)the Minister on behalf of the State; or
(iii)an employee in respect of a dispute relating to an entitlement to long service leave;
or
(b)on the motion of the Commission itself whenever industrial action has occurred or, in the opinion of the Commission, is likely to occur.
(8)Where, at a conference held in accordance with this section, agreement is reached between the parties or any of them in relation to any industrial matter the Commission may —
(a)make an order in the terms of that agreement binding only on those parties who consented; or
[(b), (c)deleted]
(d)where the nature or subject matter of the agreement does not, in the opinion of the Commission, require that an order in terms of the agreement be made, make, sign, and file a memorandum of the terms of the agreement.
(9)Where at the conclusion of a conference held in accordance with this section any question, dispute, or disagreement in relation to an industrial matter has not been settled by agreement between all of the parties, the Commission may hear and determine that question, dispute, or disagreement and may make an order binding only the parties in relation to whom the matter has not been so settled.
(10)Subject to subsections (11) and (12), the Commission may, for the hearing and determination of a matter under subsection (9), be constituted by the commissioner who presided over the conference.
(11)Where the commissioner referred to in subsection (10) proposes to constitute the Commission for the purpose mentioned in that subsection, the commissioner must, at the conclusion of the conference advise the parties of the commissioner’s intention so to do, and, if any party objects to the Commission being so constituted for that purpose, that commissioner must not enter upon the hearing of the matter concerned unless —
(a)the commissioner has discussed with the Chief Commissioner the propriety of so doing; and
(b)the Chief Commissioner, after interviewing the objecting party, has directed the commissioner so to do.
(12)Where the Chief Commissioner does not give the direction referred to in subsection (11)(b), the Chief Commissioner may —
(a)allocate the matter in dispute for hearing and determination by the Commission constituted by a commissioner other than the commissioner who presided over the conference; and
(b)exercise in relation to the matter such powers of the Commission referred to in section 27(1) as the Chief Commissioner considers appropriate and are not inconsistent with the hearing and determination under paragraph (a).
(12a)Where, at the conclusion of a conference held in accordance with this section, any question, dispute, or disagreement in relation to an industrial matter has not been settled by agreement between all of the parties, and the parties in relation to whom the matter has not been so settled all consent in writing to the commissioner who presided over the conference conclusively determining that question, dispute or disagreement, that commissioner may hear and determine that question, dispute, or disagreement and make an order binding on the parties who so consented.
(12b)Nothing in subsection (12a) authorises the commissioner to use final offer arbitration without the express consent, in writing, of all of the parties concerned.
(12c)Notwithstanding section 49 an appeal does not lie from an order made under subsection (12a).
(12d)As soon as is practicable after giving or making a direction, order or declaration orally under this section, the Commission must —
(a)reduce the direction, order or declaration to writing; and
(b)make the text of the direction, order or declaration available to the parties bound by the order or to which the direction or declaration applies.
(12e)Subsection (12d) does not apply to an order or declaration to which section 35 applies.
(13)Section 39 applies, with such modifications as are necessary, to an order made under this section.
[Section 44 amended: No. 121 of 1982 s. 18; No. 94 of 1984 s. 27, 65 and 66; No. 119 of 1987 s. 10; No. 15 of 1993 s. 17; No. 3 of 1997 s. 37; No. 20 of 2002 s. 141(1), 151 and 194(5); Gazette 15 Aug 2003 p. 3686; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and (8), 77(1)‑(3), (5) and (13), 78(3), (4) and (7).]
[45.Deleted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 66.]
Division 2D — Miscellaneous provisions relating to awards, orders and agreements
[Heading inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 119(2).]
46.Interpretation of awards and orders by Commission
(1)At any time while an award is in force under this Act the Commission may, on the application of any employer, organisation, or association bound by the award —
(a)declare the true interpretation of the award; and
(b)where that declaration so requires, by order vary any provision of the award for the purpose of remedying any defect in, or giving fuller effect to, the provision.
(2)A declaration under this section may be made in the Commission’s reasons for decision but must be made in the form of an order if, within 7 days of the handing down of the Commission’s reasons for decision, any organisation, association, or employer bound by the award so requests.
(3)Subject to this Act, a declaration made under this section is binding on all courts and all persons with respect to the matter the subject of the declaration.
(4)Section 35 does not apply to or in relation to this section unless an order is made under subsection (1)(b) or under subsection (2).
(5)In this section award includes an order, including a General Order, made by the Commission under any provision of this Act other than this section and an industrial agreement.
[Section 46 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 66; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and 78(7).]
47.Defunct awards etc., cancelling; employers not in business etc., deleting from awards etc.
(1)Subject to subsections (3), (4) and (5), where, in the opinion of the Commission, there is no employee to whom an award or industrial agreement applies, the Commission may on its own motion, by order, cancel that award or industrial agreement.
(2)Subject to subsections (3), (4) and (5), where the Commission is of the opinion that a party to an award who is named as an employer is no longer carrying on business as an employer in the industry to which the award applies or is, for any other reason, not bound by the award, the Commission may on its own motion, by order, strike out that party as a named party to the award.
(2a)Subject to subsections (3), (4) and (5), where the Commission is of the opinion that a party to an industrial agreement is no longer carrying on business as an employer referred to in section 41(4)(a)(ii) in relation to the agreement or is, for any other reason, not bound by the agreement, the Commission may on its own motion, by order, strike out that party to the agreement.
(3)The Commission must not make an order under subsection (1), (2) or (2a) unless before making the order —
(a)it has directed the Registrar to make such enquiries as it considers necessary, and the Registrar has reported on the result of those enquiries to the Commission in writing; and
(b)after receiving the report of the Registrar, the Commission has —
(i)caused the Registrar to give general notice by publication in the required manner of the intention of the Commission to make the order; and
(ii)directed the Registrar to serve copies of the notice on such persons as the Commission may specify.
(4)Any person may, within 30 days of the day on which the notice referred to in subsection (3) is first published, object to the Commission making the order referred to in the notice.
(5)If the Commission does not uphold an objection to the making of the order referred to in the notice the Commission may make the order and must, as soon as practicable, direct the Registrar to serve a copy of the order —
(a)where the order relates to an award, on each organisation of employees that is a named party to the award, on such other persons as are bound by the award as the Commission thinks fit, and on UnionsWA, the Chamber and the Mines and Metals Association;
(b)where the order relates to an industrial agreement, on each party to the agreement.
[Section 47 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 28 and 66; No. 15 of 1993 s. 31; No. 1 of 1995 s. 53; No. 20 of 2002 s. 190(2) and (3); No. 53 of 2011 s. 48; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and 78(7).]
48.Board of Reference for each award
(1)For each award in force under this Act there is established a Board of Reference.
(2)Subject to subsection (5), each Board of Reference must consist of a chairperson appointed by the Chief Commissioner and an equal number of employers’ and employees’ members nominated and appointed in the manner prescribed, not being more than 2 in number on each side unless the Chief Commissioner, in any particular case or for the purposes of a specified award, approves the appointment of a greater number.
[(3), (4)deleted]
(5)The Chief Commissioner may appoint a person as chairperson of a Board of Reference —
(a)for the purpose of dealing with a particular matter; or
(b)for a specified period of time,
and, in the case of an appointment in accordance with paragraph (b) may terminate such appointment and make another appointment within that specified period, or may extend that specified period.
(6)A Board of Reference may allow, approve, fix, determine, or deal with —
(a)anything that, under the award, may require to be allowed, approved, fixed, determined, or dealt with by a Board of Reference; and
(b)anything arising under or out of the provisions of an award, not involving the interpretation of any such provision, which the Commission may at any time, by order, authorise a Board of Reference to allow, approve, fix, determine, or deal with,
in the manner and subject to the conditions specified in the award or order, as the case may be.
(7)The powers conferred on a Board of Reference under the provisions of this section may be exercised by the Commission constituted by a commissioner.
(8)Where the nominated employers’ and employees’ members of a Board of Reference are equally divided in opinion on any matter before the Board of Reference the decision of the Board of Reference must be in accordance with the opinion of the chairperson.
(9)The chairperson must, after consultation with the nominated members, record in a memorandum signed by the chairperson —
(a)all facts found by the Board of Reference; and
(b)the decision of the Board of Reference,
and must forward that memorandum to the Registrar for filing in the Registrar’s office.
(10)Subject to subsection (11), the decision referred to in subsection (9) is upon being filed in accordance with that subsection, enforceable under this Act as if it were an award.
(11)Subject to subsection (12), any organisation, association, or employer affected by a decision of a Board of Reference may, within 21 days from the date of that decision appeal against that decision to the Commission in Court Session in the manner prescribed.
(12)An appeal under subsection (11) must be heard and determined on the facts referred to in subsection (9)(a) and the Commission in Court Session may, if it upholds the appeal, rescind or vary the decision in such manner as it sees fit or may remit the matter to the Board of Reference for further hearing and determination.
[(13), (14)deleted]
(15)The Commission may, in any order made by it under this Act, provide that anything arising under or out of the provisions of the order, not involving the interpretation of any such provision, may be allowed, approved, fixed, determined, or dealt with by a Board of Reference and the provisions of this section apply to such an order in all respects as if it were an award.
[Section 48 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 29 and 66; No. 119 of 1987 s. 11; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and (8), 77(1), (6) and (13), 78(5) and (7).]
48A. Awards etc. to provide for dispute resolution
(1)In exercising its jurisdiction under this Part the Commission must not make an award or applicable order, or register an industrial agreement, unless the award, order or industrial agreement makes provision for procedures to be followed in connection with questions, disputes or difficulties arising under the award, order or industrial agreement.
(1a)The procedures referred to in subsection (1) must provide for the persons involved in the question, dispute or difficulty to confer among themselves and make reasonable attempts to resolve questions, disputes or difficulties before taking those matters to the Commission.
(2)The Commission may order persons involved in a question, dispute or difficulty arising under an award, order or industrial agreement that is before the Commission to comply with the dispute settling procedures provided for in that award, order or industrial agreement.
(3)In subsection (1) applicable order means an order with respect to which, in the opinion of the Commission, a question, dispute or difficulty capable of resolution by dispute settling procedures may arise.
[Section 48A inserted as section 49A: No. 79 of 1995 s. 11; amended: No. 3 of 1997 s. 31 5; renumbered as section 48A: No. 20 of 2002 s. 120; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
48B.Superannuation, provisions about in awards etc.
(1)In this section —
complying superannuation fund or scheme means a superannuation fund or scheme —
(a)that is a complying superannuation fund or scheme within the meaning of the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 (Commonwealth); and
(b)to which, under the governing rules of the fund or scheme, contributions may be made by or in respect of the employee permitted to nominate a fund or scheme.
(2)In exercising its jurisdiction under this Part the Commission must not make an award or order, or register an industrial agreement, which requires contribution to a superannuation fund or scheme by an employee or by an employer in respect of an employee unless the award, order or industrial agreement —
(a)permits the employee to nominate a complying superannuation fund or scheme; and
(b)requires the employer to notify the employee of the entitlement to nominate a complying superannuation fund or scheme; and
(c)requires the employer —
(i)if the award, order or industrial agreement specifies one or more complying superannuation funds or schemes to which contributions may be made, to make contributions to that fund or scheme, or one of those funds or schemes nominated by the employer, until the employee nominates a complying superannuation fund or scheme; or
(ii)if the award, order or industrial agreement does not specify a complying superannuation fund or scheme to which contributions may be made, to make contributions to a complying fund or scheme nominated by the employer until the employee nominates such a fund or scheme;
and
(d)requires the employee and employer to be bound by the nomination of the employee unless the employee and employer agree to change the complying superannuation fund or scheme to which contributions are to be made; and
(e)provides that an employer must not unreasonably refuse to agree to a change of complying superannuation fund or scheme requested by an employee.
(3)The Governor may make regulations —
(a)prescribing procedures to be followed by an employer in notifying an employee of entitlement to nominate a complying superannuation fund or scheme; and
(b)prescribing procedures to be followed by an employee in nominating a complying superannuation fund or scheme.
(4)A person must not by threats or intimidation persuade or attempt to persuade —
(a)an employee or prospective employee to nominate a particular superannuation fund or scheme; or
(b)an employer to make contributions to a particular superannuation fund or scheme.
Penalty for this subsection:
(a)in the case of an individual — a fine of $1 000;
(b)in any other case — a fine of $5 000.
(5)In subsection (4) —
threats includes any conduct by an employer that clearly indicates to an employee or prospective employee that employment or promotion is conditional upon the employee nominating, or changing to, a complying superannuation fund or scheme suggested by the employer.
[Section 48B inserted as section 49C: No. 79 of 1995 s. 13(1); renumbered as section 48B: No. 20 of 2002 s. 120; No. 30 of 2021 s. 72(1), 76(2) and 78(1).]
Division 2E — Appeals to the Full Bench
[Heading inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 119(3).]
49.Appeal from Commission’s decision
(1)In subsections (2) to (6a) the Commission means the Commission constituted by a commissioner, but does not include the Commission exercising jurisdiction under section 80ZE or subsection (11).
(2)Subject to this section, an appeal lies to the Full Bench in the manner prescribed from any decision of the Commission.
(2a)An appeal does not lie under this section from a finding unless, in the opinion of the Full Bench, the matter is of such importance that, in the public interest, an appeal should lie.
(2b)An appeal does not lie under this section from a determination —
(a)of a relevant industrial authority —
(i)under section 97VP; or
(ii)in an arbitration under any EEA dispute provision of the kind referred to in section 97UP;
or
(b)of the Commission under section 97XC or 97XQ.
(3)An appeal under this section must be instituted within 21 days of the date of the decision against which the appeal is brought and may be instituted by —
(a)any party to the proceedings in which the decision was made; or
(b)any person who was an intervener in those proceedings.
(4)An appeal under this section —
(a)must be heard and determined on the evidence and matters raised in the proceedings before the Commission; and
(b)must, if brought by a person referred to in subsection (3)(b), be dismissed unless, on the hearing of the appeal, that person obtains leave of the Full Bench,
and, for the purpose of paragraph (a), proceedings includes any proceedings arising under section 35(3).
(5)In the exercise of its jurisdiction under this section the Full Bench may, by order —
(a)dismiss the appeal; or
(b)uphold the appeal and quash the decision or, subject to subsection (6), vary it in such manner as the Full Bench considers appropriate; or
(c)suspend the operation of the decision and remit the case to the Commission for further hearing and determination.
(6)Where the Full Bench varies a decision under subsection (5)(b) the decision as so varied must be in terms which could have been awarded by the Commission that gave the decision.
(6a)The Full Bench is not to remit a case to the Commission under subsection (5)(c) unless it considers that it is unable to make its own decision on the merits of the case because of lack of evidence or for other good reason.
[(7)deleted]
(8)When the commissioners who constitute the Full Bench are divided on a question, the question must be decided according to the decision of a majority of them but, if their decisions on the question are equally divided, the question must be decided according to the decision of the presiding commissioner of the Full Bench.
(9)When any question of law arises in any proceedings before the Full Bench, the presiding commissioner of the Full Bench may state a case for the decision of the Court and must do so if a majority of the members of the Full Bench so request.
(10)Subsections (8), and (9) apply to and in relation to all proceedings before the Full Bench whether under this section or otherwise.
(11)At any time after an appeal to the Full Bench has been instituted under this section a person who has a sufficient interest may apply to the Commission for an order that the operation of the decision appealed against be stayed, wholly or in part, pending the hearing and determination of the appeal.
(12)For the purposes of hearing and determining an application under subsection (11) for an order in respect of a decision, the Commission must be constituted by the presiding commissioner of the Full Bench allocated the appeal against the decision.
[Section 49 amended: No. 121 of 1982 s. 20; No. 94 of 1984 s. 30 and 66; No. 119 of 1987 s. 12; No. 1 of 1995 s. 9; No. 36 of 1999 s. 247; No. 20 of 2002 s. 8 and 125; No. 39 of 2018 s. 28; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and 78(7).]
[49A.Renumbered as section 48A: No. 20 of 2002 s. 120.]
[49AB, 49B.Deleted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 145.]
[49C.Renumbered as section 48B: No. 20 of 2002 s. 120.]
Division 2F — Keeping of and access to employment records and pay slips
[Heading inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 146(1); amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 19.]
49D.Employer’s duties as to employment records
(1)Employment records relating to an employee must be kept in accordance with this section.
(2)An employer must ensure that the following employment records are kept —
(a)the employee’s name and, if the employee is under 21 years of age, the employee’s date of birth;
(aa)the employer’s name and Australian Business Number (if any);
(b)any industrial instrument that applies;
(c)the date on which the employee commenced employment with the employer;
(d)for each day —
(i)the time at which the employee started and finished work; and
(ii)the period or periods for which the employee was paid; and
(iii)details of work breaks including meal breaks;
(e)for each pay period —
(i)the employee’s designation; and
(ii)the gross and net amounts paid to the employee under an industrial instrument or the MCE Act and any amount withheld as tax; and
(iii)all deductions and the reasons for them;
(ea)any incentive based payment, bonus, loading, penalty rates or another monetary allowance or separately identifiable entitlement;
(f)all leave taken by the employee, whether paid, partly paid or unpaid;
(fa)any agreement under the MCE Act section 8(1), including details of —
(i)the benefit for, and the amount of, annual leave that was foregone; and
(ii)when the benefit was paid;
(g)the information necessary for the calculation of, and payment for, long service leave under the LSL Act, the Construction Industry Portable Paid Long Service Leave Act 1985 or an industrial instrument;
(h)any other information in respect of the employee required under an industrial instrument to be recorded;
(i)any information, not otherwise covered by this subsection, that is necessary to show that the remuneration and benefits received by the employee comply with an industrial instrument or other entitlement provision;
(j)the following matters relating to superannuation —
(i)the amount of the superannuation contributions made;
(ii)the period over which the superannuation contributions were made;
(iii)the date on which each superannuation contribution was made;
(iv)the name of any fund to which a superannuation contribution was made;
(v)how the employer worked out the amount of superannuation owed;
(vi)any election made by the employee as to the fund to which the contributions are to be made and the date the election was made;
(k)termination‑related matters, including —
(i)whether the employee’s employment was terminated by consent, notice, summarily or in some other specified manner; and
(ii)the name of the person who terminated the employee’s employment.
(3)The employer must ensure that —
(a)the employment records are kept in accordance with regulations made by the Governor; and
(b)each entry in relation to annual and long service leave is retained —
(i)during the employment of the employee; and
(ii)for not less than 7 years after the employment terminates;
and
(c)each other employment record is retained for not less than 7 years after it is made.
(4)An employer who enters into an agreement under the MCE Act section 8(1) must ensure that a copy of the agreement is kept as an employment record.
(5)If the SWS or a SWIIP applies to an employee with a disability, an employer must ensure that the following are kept as employment records in relation to the employee —
(a)any agreement entered into under the SWS or a SWIIP by the employer and the employee;
(b)any other document required to be kept by the SWS or a SWIIP relating to the determination of a wage for the employee.
(6)The employer must, as soon as practicable, lodge with the Registrar a copy of an agreement entered into under the SWS that is required to be kept under subsection (5)(a).
(7)If an employer makes a payment to an employee in cash, the employer must provide a record of payment to the employee and ensure that a copy of the record of payment is kept as an employment record.
(8)An employer must not make or keep an employment record for the purposes of this section that the employer knows, or could reasonably be expected to know, is false or misleading.
(9)Subsection (8) does not apply if the employment record is not false or misleading in a material particular.
[Section 49D inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 146(1); amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 20 and 77(7).]
49DA.Employer obligations in relation to pay slips
(1)An employer must, in accordance with this section, give a pay slip (in hard copy or electronic form) to each employee within 1 working day after paying an amount to the employee in relation to the performance of work.
(2)The pay slip must include the following information —
(a)the employer’s name and Australian Business Number (if any);
(b)the employee’s name;
(c)the period to which the pay slip relates;
(d)the date on which the payment referred to in the pay slip was made;
(e)the gross and net amounts of the payment and any amount withheld as tax;
(f)any incentive based payment, or payment of a bonus, loading, penalty rates or another monetary allowance or separately identifiable entitlement;
(g)if an amount is deducted from the gross amount of the payment —
(i)the name of the person in relation to whom or which the deduction was made; and
(ii)if the deduction was paid into a fund or account — the name, or the name and number, of the fund or account; and
(iii)the purpose of the deduction;
(h)if the employee is paid at an hourly rate of pay —
(i)the rate of pay for the employee’s ordinary hours; and
(ii)the number of hours worked during the period to which the pay slip relates; and
(iii)the amount of the payment made at that rate;
(i)if the employee is paid at a weekly or an annual rate of pay — the rate as at the latest date to which the payment relates;
(j)if the employer is required to make superannuation contributions for the benefit of the employee —
(i)the amount of each contribution that the employer made during the period to which the pay slip relates and the name, or the name and number, of any fund to which the contribution was made; or
(ii)the amounts of contributions that the employer is liable to make in relation to the period to which the pay slip relates, and the name, or the name and number, of any fund to which the contributions will be made.
(3)An employer must not give a pay slip for the purposes of this section if the pay slip is false or misleading.
(4)Subsection (3) does not apply if —
(a)the employer gives the pay slip without knowing, or being reasonably expected to know, that it is false or misleading; or
(b)the pay slip is not false or misleading in a material particular.
[Section 49DA inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 21.]
49E.Access to employment records
(1)An employer, on written request by a relevant person, must —
(a)produce to the person the employment records relating to an employee; and
(b)let the person inspect the employment records.
(2)The duty placed on an employer by subsection (1) —
(a)continues so long as the employment records are required to be kept under section 49D; and
(b)is not affected by the fact that the employee is no longer employed by the employer or that the industrial instrument no longer applies to the employee; and
(c)includes the further duties —
(i)to let the relevant person enter premises of the employer for the purpose of inspecting the records; and
(ii)to let the relevant person take copies of or extracts from the records;
and
(d)must be complied with not later than —
(i)at the end of the next pay period after the request is received; or
(ii)the seventh day after the day on which the request was made to the employer.
(3)Nothing in this section limits or otherwise affects the powers of an industrial inspector in relation to the inspection of employment records.
(4)In this section —
relevant person means —
(a)the employee concerned; and
(b)if the employee is a represented person, the employee’s representative; and
(c)a person authorised in writing by the employee; and
(d)a Registrar’s Department officer authorised in writing by the Registrar.
[Section 49E inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 146(1); amended: No. 39 of 2018 s. 29; No. 30 of 2021 s. 22 and 77(7) and (13).]
49F.Enforcement of this Division
A contravention of section 49D(1), (6) or (8), 49DA(1) or (3) or 49E(1) is not an offence but those subsections are civil penalty provisions for the purposes of section 83E.
[Section 49F inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 146(1); amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 23.]
Division 2G — Right of entry and inspection by authorised representatives
[Heading inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 146(1).]
In this Division —
authorised representative means a person who holds an authority in force under this Division;
relevant employee, when used in connection with the exercise of a power by an authorised representative of an organisation, means an employee who is a member of the organisation or who is eligible to become a member of the organisation.
[Section 49G inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 146(1).]
49H.Entry for discussions with employees
(1)An authorised representative of an organisation may enter, during working hours, any premises where relevant employees work, for the purpose of holding discussions at the premises with any of the relevant employees who wish to participate in those discussions.
(2)If an award, order or industrial agreement that extends to the relevant employees makes provision as to entry onto premises by an authorised representative and —
(a)does not require notice to be given by the representative; or
(b)requires a specified period of notice to be given by the representative,
the authorised representative is not required to give notice under this section.
(3)If subsection (2) does not apply, the authorised representative is not entitled to exercise a power conferred by this section unless the authorised representative has given the employer of the employees concerned at least 24 hours’ written notice.
[Section 49H inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 146(1).]
49I.Entry to investigate certain breaches
(1)An authorised representative of an organisation may enter, during working hours, any premises where relevant employees work, for the purpose of investigating any suspected breach of this Act, the LSL Act, the MCE Act, the Work Health and Safety Act 2020, the Construction Industry Portable Paid Long Service Leave Act 1985 or an award, order, industrial agreement or employer‑employee agreement that applies to any such employee.
(2)For the purpose of investigating any such suspected breach, the authorised representative may —
(a)subject to subsections (3) and (6), require the employer to produce for the representative’s inspection, during working hours at the employer’s premises or at any mutually convenient time and place, any employment records of employees or other documents kept by the employer that are related to the suspected breach; and
(b)make copies of the entries in the employment records or documents related to the suspected breach; and
(c)during working hours, inspect or view, and take photographs, films and audio, video or other recordings of, any work, material, machinery, or appliance, that is relevant to the suspected breach.
(3)The authorised representative is not entitled to require an employer to produce an employment record of an employee if the employee —
(a)is a party to an employer‑employee agreement; and
(b)has made a written request to the employer that the record not be available for inspection by an authorised representative.
(4)A written request under subsection (3)(b) —
(a)may be withdrawn by written notice given by the employee to the employer; and
(b)has effect until it is so withdrawn.
(5)An authorised representative is not entitled to exercise a power conferred by this section for the purpose of investigating a suspected breach of an employer‑employee agreement to which a relevant employee is a party unless the authorised representative is authorised in writing by that relevant employee to carry out the investigation.
(6)An authorised representative is not entitled to require the production of employment records or other documents unless, before exercising the power, the authorised representative has given the employer concerned —
(a)if the records or other documents are kept on the employer’s premises, at least 24 hours’ written notice; or
(b)if the records or other documents are kept elsewhere, at least 48 hours’ written notice.
(7)The Commission may, on the ex parte application of an authorised representative, waive the requirement to give the employer concerned notice of an intended exercise of a power under subsection (6) if the Commission is satisfied that to give such notice would defeat the purpose for which the power is intended to be exercised.
(8)If the requirement for notice is waived under subsection (7) —
(a)the Commission must give the authorised representative a certificate authorising the exercise of the power without notice; and
(b)the authorised representative must, after entering the premises and before requiring the production of the records or documents, give the person who is apparently in charge of the premises the certificate or a copy of the certificate.
[Section 49I inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 146(1); amended: Gazette 15 Aug 2003 p. 3686; No. 36 of 2020 s. 361; No. 30 of 2021 s. 24.]
49J.Authorising authorised representatives
(1)The Registrar, on application by the secretary of an organisation of employees to issue an authority for the purposes of this Division to a person nominated by the secretary in the application, must issue the authority.
(2)The Registrar must not issue an authority for the purposes of this Division to a person who has held an authority under this Division that has been revoked under subsection (5) unless the Commission in Court Session on application by any person has ordered that the authority be so issued.
(3)A person to whom an authority is issued is an authorised representative of the organisation on whose behalf the application for the authority was made.
(4)The authority remains in force unless it is revoked or suspended under this section.
(5)The Commission constituted by a commissioner may, by order, on application by any person, revoke, or suspend for a period determined by the Commission, the authority if satisfied that the person to whom it was issued has —
(a)acted in an improper manner in the exercise of any power conferred on the person by this Division; or
(b)intentionally and unduly hindered an employer or employees during their working time.
(6)The Registrar may, on application by the secretary of the organisation of employees on whose behalf the application for the authority was made, revoke the authority.
(6a)The Registrar must not revoke an authority under subsection (6) if —
(a)proceedings pursuant to an application made under subsection (5) in relation to the authority are pending or in progress; or
(b)appeal proceedings in respect of a decision made under subsection (5) in relation to the authority are pending or in progress, or the time within which such proceedings may be instituted has not elapsed.
(7)An application for the revocation of an authority under subsection (5) is to set out the grounds on which the application is made.
(8)Despite section 49 —
(a)no appeal lies from a decision of the Commission under subsection (2); and
(b)section 49(2a) does not apply to an appeal from a decision under subsection (5).
(9)A person to whom an authority has been issued under this section must, within 14 days after the revocation of the authority, return the authority to the Registrar.
[Section 49J inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 146(1); amended: No. 36 of 2006 s. 8.]
49K.No entry to premises used for habitation
(1)Except as provided in subsection (3), an authorised representative does not have authority under this Division to enter any part of premises principally used for habitation by an employer or a member of the employer’s household (habitation premises).
(2)An authorised representative may apply to the Commission for an order permitting the authorised representative to enter habitation premises under section 49I(1).
(3)The Commission may make the order only if it is satisfied that exceptional circumstances exist warranting the making of the order.
[Section 49K inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 25.]
49L.Authority must be shown on request
(1)If —
(a)a person proposes to enter, or is on, premises in accordance with section 49H or 49I; and
(b)the occupier requests the person to show the person’s authority,
the person is not entitled under that section to enter or remain on the premises unless the person shows the occupier the authority in force under this Division.
(2)In this section —
occupier includes a person in charge of the premises.
[Section 49L inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 146(1); amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 77(8) and (9).]
49M.Obstructing etc. rights etc. under this Division etc.
(1)The occupier of premises must not refuse, or intentionally and unduly delay, entry to the premises by a person entitled to enter the premises under section 49H or 49I.
(2)A person must not intentionally and unduly hinder or obstruct an authorised representative in the exercise of the powers conferred by this Division.
(3)A person must not purport to exercise the powers of an authorised representative under this Division if the person is not the holder of a current authority issued by the Registrar under this Division.
[Section 49M inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 146(1).]
49N.Entry and inspection, provisions in awards etc. as to
(1)The Commission does not have jurisdiction to make an award or order or register an agreement conferring, or making provision for the exercise of, powers of entry and inspection that are additional to, or inconsistent with, the powers of entry and inspection under Division 2F and this Division and the provisions as to the exercise of those powers.
(2)Nothing in subsection (1) prevents or limits the Commission from specifying in an award or order, or registering an agreement that specifies, the period of notice required to be given by an authorised representative to an employer before entering premises where relevant employees work.
(3)To the extent that the provisions of an award, order or industrial agreement confer or make provision for the exercise of powers of entry and inspection that are additional to, or inconsistent with, the powers of entry and inspection under Division 2F and this Division or the provisions as to the exercise of those powers, those provisions have no effect.
[Section 49N inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 146(1); amended: No. 50 of 2016 s. 16.]
49O.Enforcement of this Division
A contravention of section 49J(9) or 49M(1), (2) or (3) is not an offence but those subsections are civil penalty provisions for the purposes of section 83E.
[Section 49O inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 146(1).]
50.General Orders, nature of and making
(1)In this Division Commission means Commission in Court Session.
(2)Subject to this Act, the Commission may, of its own motion or on the application of UnionsWA, the Chamber, the Mines and Metals Association or the Minister —
(a)make General Orders relating to industrial matters in accordance with and subject to this Division; and
(b)add to, vary, or rescind any General Order so made.
(3)A General Order may be made to apply generally to employees throughout the State whether or not they are employed under and subject to awards or industrial agreements or may be limited to employees —
(a)who are employed under and subject to awards or industrial agreements; or
(b)who are not so employed,
but does not apply to any employee whose conditions of employment may not be determined by the Commission.
(4)A General Order applying to or with respect to employees of the kind referred to in subsection (3)(a) may add to or vary all awards and industrial agreements or may be limited in its effect to such awards and industrial agreements or awards or industrial agreements as may be specified in the General Order.
(5)A General Order that varies the scope of a private sector award must specify that it extends to and binds —
(a)employers of a class or classes specified in the award, whether or not the employers are also specified by name in the award; and
(b)employees —
(i)of employers referred to in paragraph (a); and
(ii)of a class or classes specified in the award.
(6)For the purposes of subsection (5)(a) and (b)(ii), the class may be described by reference to —
(a)a particular industry or part of an industry; or
(b)a particular kind of work.
(7)A General Order must not be made in respect of preference of employment at the time of, or during, employment by reason of being or not being a member of an organisation.
[Section 50 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 32 and 66; No. 15 of 1993 s. 18 and 31; No. 20 of 2002 s. 179 and 190(4); No. 36 of 2006 s. 13; No. 53 of 2011 s. 48; No. 30 of 2021 s. 26 and 76(2) and (8).]
50A.Rates of pay etc. for MCE Act and awards, annual State Wage order as to
(1AA)In this section —
instrument‑governed employee with a disability means an employee —
(a)whose contract of employment is governed by an industrial instrument that includes a SWIIP that incorporates the SWS; and
(b)whose productive capacity has been assessed under the SWS as being reduced because of a disability; and
(c)who is not employed by a supported employment service as defined in the Disability Services Act 1986 (Commonwealth) section 7; and
(d)who is being paid a weekly rate of pay determined by the SWS under the SWIIP.
(1)The Commission must before 1 July in each year, of its own motion make a General Order (the State Wage order) —
(a)setting the following —
(i)the minimum weekly rate of pay applicable under section 12 of the MCE Act to employees who have reached 21 years of age and who are not apprentices;
(ii)the minimum weekly rate or rates of pay applicable under section 14 of the MCE Act to apprentices;
(iii)the minimum amount payable under the MCE Act section 17(2);
and
(b)adjusting rates of wages paid under awards; and
(c)having regard to the statement of principles issued under paragraph (d) —
(i)varying each award affected by the exercise of jurisdiction under paragraph (b) to ensure that the award is consistent with the order; and
(ii)if the Commission considers it appropriate to do so, making other consequential changes to specified awards;
and
(d)setting out a statement of principles to be applied and followed in relation to the exercise of jurisdiction under this Act to —
(i)set the wages, salaries, allowances or other remuneration of employees or the prices to be paid in respect of their employment; and
(ii)ensure employees receive equal remuneration.
(1A)The amount set by the Commission under subsection (1)(a)(iii) must be the same as that set by the FW Commission in the national minimum wage order under the FW Act section 285(2)(c) for an eligible employee whose productive capacity is, under the SWS, assessed as reduced because of a disability.
(1B)For the purposes of subsection (1)(b), the Commission must, in relation to an instrument‑governed employee with a disability, order the highest of the following —
(a)that the minimum amount payable is to be the same as in the previous State Wage order;
(b)that the minimum amount payable is to be the same as that set by the FW Commission in the national minimum wage order under the FW Act section 285(2)(c) for an eligible employee whose productive capacity is, under the SWS, assessed as reduced because of a disability.
(2)The Commission may, in relation to awards generally or specified awards, do any or all of the following for the purposes of subsection (1)(b) —
(a)adjust all rates of wages;
(b)adjust individual rates of wages;
(c)adjust a series of rates of wages;
(d)adjust specialised rates of wages.
(3)In making an order under this section, the Commission must take into consideration —
(a)the need to —
(i)ensure that Western Australians have a system of fair wages and conditions of employment; and
(ii)meet the needs of the low paid; and
(iii)provide fair wage standards in the context of living standards generally prevailing in the community; and
(iv)contribute to improved living standards for employees; and
(v)protect employees who may be unable to reach an industrial agreement; and
(vi)encourage ongoing skills development; and
(vii)provide equal remuneration;
and
(b)the state of the economy of Western Australia and the likely effect of its decision on that economy and, in particular, on the level of employment, inflation and productivity in Western Australia; and
(c)to the extent that it is relevant, the state of the national economy; and
(d)to the extent that it is relevant, the capacity of employers as a whole to bear the costs of increased wages, salaries, allowances and other remuneration; and
(e)for the purposes of subsection (1)(b) and (c), the need to ensure that the Western Australian award framework represents a system of fair wages and conditions of employment; and
(f)relevant decisions of other industrial courts and tribunals; and
(g)any other matters the Commission considers relevant.
(4)Without limiting the generality of this section and section 26(1), in the exercise of its jurisdiction under subsection (1)(b) and (c) the Commission must ensure, to the extent possible, that there is consistency and equity in relation to the variation of awards.
(5)A State Wage order takes effect on 1 July in the year it is made and is applicable in respect of an employee or apprentice on and from the commencement of the first pay period of the employee or apprentice on or after that date.
(6)A State Wage order in effect under this section when a subsequent order is made under subsection (1) ceases to apply in respect of an employee or apprentice on the day on which the subsequent order commences to apply in respect of the employee or apprentice.
(7)A State Wage order must not be added to or varied.
(8)Nothing in subsection (7) affects the Commission’s powers under section 27(1)(m).
[Section 50A inserted: No. 36 of 2006 s. 14; amended: No. 44 of 2008 s. 53(7)‑(9); No. 30 of 2021 s. 27 and 76(2).]
50B.Apprentices, matters relevant to setting rates for in State Wage order
(1)For the purposes of section 50A(1)(a)(ii), the Commission may —
(a)set a minimum weekly rate of pay in relation to apprentices generally; or
(b)subject to subsections (2) and (3), set a minimum weekly rate of pay in relation to apprentices who belong to particular classes of apprentice; or
(c)do a combination of the things authorised by paragraphs (a) and (b).
(2)The Commission may set a minimum weekly rate of pay in relation to apprentices who have reached 21 years of age that is different from a rate or rates for apprentices who are under 21 years of age.
(3)The Commission must ensure that at any particular time there is applicable in relation to each class of apprentice —
(a)a minimum weekly rate of pay set in respect of that class; or
(b)the minimum weekly rate of pay in relation to apprentices generally.
(4)In setting a minimum weekly rate of pay in relation to apprentices generally or in relation to apprentices who belong to a particular class of apprentice, the Commission may use such means as in its opinion are appropriate including, but not limited to —
(a)setting the rate in figures; or
(b)setting the rate as a proportion of —
(i)the minimum weekly rate of pay referred to in section 50A(1)(a)(i); or
(ii)any award or other wages instrument;
or
(c)adopting some or all of the provisions of any award or other wages instrument; or
(d)setting out any other method for the calculation or assessment of the rate.
[Section 50B inserted: No. 36 of 2006 s. 14; amended: No. 44 of 2008 s. 53(10)‑(13); No. 30 of 2021 s. 28 and 76(2).]
[51.Deleted: No. 36 of 2006 s. 15.]
51A.Public sector discipline, General Orders as to
(1)Subject to this Act, the Commission may in respect of a public authority and its employees, on application by the Minister, UnionsWA or an organisation with sufficient interest in the matter —
(a)make a General Order or General Orders with respect to one or more of the following —
(i)suspension from duty in employment; and
(ii)discipline in employment; and
(iii)dismissal from employment; and
(iv)termination of employment,
and with respect to any related matter; and
(b)add to, vary or rescind any General Order so made.
(2)A General Order referred to in subsection (1) may be made so as to apply to —
(a)public authorities and their employees generally;
(b)a specified public authority or specified public authorities and its or their employees;
(c)public authorities and their employees bound by a specified award or specified awards;
(d)a specified class of employees employed in a public authority or public authorities.
(3)In subsection (2) specified means specified in the General Order.
(4)A General Order in relation to a matter referred to in subsection (1)(a) must not be made so as to apply to —
(a)any employee whose conditions of employment may not be determined by the Commission; or
(b)any employee in relation to whom —
(i)there is provision, however expressed, by or under any other Act for or in relation to that matter; and
(ii)there is provision by or under that other Act for an appeal in that matter;
or
(c)any member of the academic staff of a post‑secondary education institution.
(5)A General Order referred to in subsection (1) must not be made under subsection (2)(c) so as to apply to any employee covered by an award where an organisation that is a party to that award does not consent to the General Order being so made.
[Section 51A inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 33; amended: No. 53 of 2011 s. 48; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and 78(7).]
51B.General Order not to set minimum condition set by MCE Act
(1)Except as provided in section 50A, the Commission does not have power under this Division to make a General Order setting a minimum condition in relation to a matter if the matter is the subject of a minimum condition of employment as defined in the MCE Act.
(2)Nothing in subsection (1) prevents the Commission from making a General Order under this Division in relation to a matter that is the subject of a minimum condition of employment as defined in the MCE Act if the General Order is more favourable to employees than the minimum condition of employment.
[Section 51B inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 180; amended: No. 36 of 2006 s. 16.]
51BA.Notice of hearing to make General Order
(1)The Commission must ensure that notice of each initial hearing to be conducted for the purposes of making a General Order under this Division is —
(a)given by written notice to UnionsWA, the Chamber, the Mines and Metals Association, the Minister, and any other person the Commission is of the opinion may be of assistance; and
(b)published in the required manner and in any other manner the Commission thinks fit.
(2)Subsection (1) does not apply when the Commission is exercising its jurisdiction under section 51A.
[Section 51BA inserted: No. 36 of 2006 s. 17; amended: No. 53 of 2011 s. 48; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
51BB.Right to be heard before General Order made
The Commission must not make a General Order under this Division until it has afforded —
(a)each person given notice under section 51BA(1)(a); and
(b)any other employer, employee, or other person permitted by the Commission to be heard,
an opportunity to be heard in relation to the matter.
[Section 51BB inserted: No. 36 of 2006 s. 17; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
51BC.Commissioner may deal with certain proceedings
The Chief Commissioner may direct a commissioner to deal with any conciliation or interlocutory or procedural matter arising during the determination of a General Order under this Division.
[Section 51BC inserted: No. 36 of 2006 s. 17.]
51BD.Awards etc. affected by General Order, publication of
When the Commission makes a General Order under this Division which affects awards and industrial agreements, or awards or industrial agreements, in force under this Act, the Commission may, in respect of each award or industrial agreement so affected, direct the Registrar to prepare and publish in the required manner the provisions of that award or industrial agreement resulting from the operation of that General Order.
[Section 51BD inserted: No. 36 of 2006 s. 17.]
The Registrar must publish in the required manner any General Order made under this Division.
[Section 51BE inserted: No. 36 of 2006 s. 17; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
Division 3AA — Workers bullied or sexually harassed at work
[Heading inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 29.]
In this Division —
bullied, at work, has the meaning given in section 51BI(1);
person conducting a business or undertaking includes a public authority conducting the business or undertaking;
sexually harassed, at work, has the meaning given in section 51BI(3);
stop bullying or sexual harassment application has the meaning given in section 51BJ(1);
stop bullying or sexual harassment order has the meaning given in section 51BM(1);
volunteer means a person who is acting on a voluntary basis (irrespective of whether the person receives out‑of‑pocket expenses);
WA Police means the Police Force of Western Australia provided for by the Police Act 1892;
worker has the meaning given in section 51BH.
[Section 51BF inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 29.]
51BG.Person conducting a business or undertaking
(1)A reference in section 51BH to a person conducting a business or undertaking includes a reference to the following —
(a)a person conducting the business or undertaking —
(i)whether alone or with others; and
(ii)whether or not for profit or gain;
(b)a partnership, or an unincorporated association, conducting the business or undertaking;
(c)in the case of a partnership (other than an incorporated partnership) referred to in paragraph (b) — each partner in the partnership.
(2)A reference in section 51BH to a person conducting a business or undertaking does not include a reference to the following —
(a)an individual engaged solely as a worker in the business or undertaking;
(b)in the case of a business or undertaking conducted by a local government or a regional local government — a member of the council of the local government or regional local government;
(c)a volunteer association;
(d)a person of a prescribed class.
(3)In subsection (2)(c) —
volunteer association means a group of volunteers working together for 1 or more community purposes where none of the volunteers, whether alone or jointly with any other volunteers, employs any person to carry out work for the volunteer association.
[Section 51BG inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 29.]
(1)A person is a worker if the person carries out work in any capacity for a person conducting a business or undertaking, including work as any of the following —
(a)an employee;
(b)a contractor or subcontractor;
(c)an employee of a contractor or subcontractor;
(d)an employee of a labour hire agency who has been assigned to work in the person’s business or undertaking;
(e)an outworker;
(f)an apprentice or trainee;
(g)a student gaining work experience;
(h)a volunteer;
(i)a person of a prescribed class.
(2)A police officer is —
(a)a worker of WA Police; and
(b)at work throughout the time when the officer is on duty or lawfully performing the functions of a police officer, but not otherwise.
(3)A person conducting the business or undertaking referred to in subsection (1) is also a worker if the person is an individual who carries out work in that business or undertaking.
[Section 51BH inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 29.]
51BI.Worker bullied or sexually harassed at work
(1)A worker is bullied at work if, while the worker is at work —
(a)an individual, or group of individuals, repeatedly behaves unreasonably towards —
(i)the worker; or
(ii)a group of workers of which the worker is a member;
and
(b)that behaviour creates a risk to the safety or health of the worker.
(2)Subsection (1) does not apply to reasonable management action carried out in a reasonable manner.
(3)A worker is sexually harassed at work if, while the worker is at work, an individual, or group of individuals —
(a)makes an unwelcome sexual advance, or an unwelcome request for sexual favours, to the worker in circumstances a reasonable person, having regard to all the circumstances, would have anticipated the possibility that the worker would be offended, humiliated or intimidated; or
(b)engages in other unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature in relation to the worker in circumstances a reasonable person, having regard to all the circumstances, would have anticipated the possibility that the worker would be offended, humiliated or intimidated.
(4)In subsection (3)(b) —
conduct of a sexual nature, in relation to a worker, includes the following —
(a)making to, or in the presence of, the worker or another person a statement of a sexual nature concerning the worker, whether by visual, oral, written or electronic communication;
(b)publishing a statement of a sexual nature concerning the worker on the Internet or any other form of communication.
[Section 51BI inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 29.]
51BJ.Stop bullying or sexual harassment application
(1)A worker who reasonably believes that the worker has been bullied or sexually harassed at work may make an application (a stop bullying or sexual harassment application) to the Commission for a stop bullying or sexual harassment order.
(2)The application must be accompanied by any fee prescribed by the regulations.
(3)The Work Health and Safety Act 2020 section 115 does not apply in relation to a stop bullying or sexual harassment application.
[Section 51BJ inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 29; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 30.]
51BK.Dealing with a stop bullying or sexual harassment application
(1)The Commission must start to deal with a stop bullying or sexual harassment application within 14 days after the application is made.
(2)Section 44 does not apply to a stop bullying or sexual harassment application.
(3)Section 48A(2) or any other enactment providing for the resolution of grievances or disputes by workers does not limit the power of the Commission to deal with a stop bullying or sexual harassment application under this Division.
[Section 51BK inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 29.]
51BL.Power to dismiss stop bullying or sexual harassment applications involving covert operations
(1)In this section —
exercise of a power includes the performance of a function.
(2)The Commission may dismiss a stop bullying or sexual harassment application if the Commission considers that the application might involve matters that relate to the exercise of a power of a police officer in circumstances where —
(a)a covert operation is undertaken by WA Police for the purpose of obtaining information about criminal activity; and
(b)unless the exercise of the power is secret or confidential, it would be likely that —
(i)the effectiveness of the exercise of the power is reduced; or
(ii)a person is exposed to the danger of physical harm arising from the actions of another person.
[Section 51BL inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 29.]
51BM.Commission may make stop bullying or sexual harassment orders
(1)The Commission may make any order it considers appropriate (other than an order requiring payment of a pecuniary amount by way of compensation to a worker) to prevent a worker from being bullied or sexually harassed at work by an individual or group of individuals (a stop bullying or sexual harassment order) if —
(a)the worker has made a stop bullying or sexual harassment application; and
(b)the Commission is satisfied that —
(i)the worker has been bullied or sexually harassed at work by an individual or group of individuals; and
(ii)there is a risk that the worker will continue to be bullied or sexually harassed at work by the individual or group of individuals.
(2)In considering the terms of the order, the Commission must take into account —
(a)if the Commission is aware of any final or interim outcomes arising out of an investigation into the matter that is being, or has been, undertaken by another person or body — those outcomes; and
(b)if the Commission is aware of any procedure available to the worker to resolve grievances or disputes — that procedure; and
(c)if the Commission is aware of any final or interim outcomes arising out of any procedure available to the worker to resolve grievances or disputes — those outcomes; and
(d)any matters that the Commission considers relevant.
[Section 51BM inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 29.]
51BN.Contravening stop bullying or sexual harassment order
(1)A person to whom a stop bullying or sexual harassment order applies must not contravene a term of the order.
(2)A contravention of subsection (1) is not an offence but the subsection is a civil penalty provision for the purposes of section 83E.
[Section 51BN inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 29.]
Division 3A — MCE Act functions
[Heading inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 181.]
[Heading inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 181.]
(1)In this Division —
Commission means the Commission in Court Session.
(2)Subject to subsection (1), words and expressions in this Division that are defined in the MCE Act have the meanings that they have in that Act.
[Section 51C inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 181; amended: No. 36 of 2006 s. 18.]
[Subdivision 2 (s. 51D‑51H) deleted: No. 36 of 2006 s. 19.]
Subdivision 3 — Casual employees’ loading
[Heading inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 181.]
51I.Casual employees’ loading, setting for MCE Act s. 11
(1)Subject to subsection (2), the Commission may, by way of order, set a percentage that is higher than 20% to be the prescribed percentage for the purposes of section 11 of the MCE Act.
(2)An order under subsection (1) can only be made on an application made —
(a)by UnionsWA, the Chamber, the Mines and Metals Association or the Minister; and
(b)at least 12 months after the determination of the most recent application for an order under subsection (1).
[Section 51I inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 181; amended: No. 53 of 2011 s. 48.]
Subdivision 4 — Orders under this Division generally
[Heading inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 181.]
51J.Notice of hearings under this Division
The Commission must ensure that notice of each initial hearing to be conducted for the purposes of making or reviewing an order under this Division is given —
(a)by giving written notice to UnionsWA, the Chamber, the Mines and Metals Association, the Minister and each organisation; and
(b)by publication in the required manner.
[Section 51J inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 181; amended: No. 53 of 2011 s. 48; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
51K.Right to be heard before order made under this Division
The Commission must not make an order under this Division until it has afforded UnionsWA, the Chamber, the Mines and Metals Association, the Minister and any other person permitted by the Commission to be heard, an opportunity to be heard in relation to the matter.
[Section 51K inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 181; amended: No. 53 of 2011 s. 48; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
51L.Orders under this Division, restrictions on
An order made under this Division must not —
(a)provide for a penalty rate or allowance of any kind; or
(b)provide for a loading of any kind other than that referred to in section 51I; or
(c)be made in respect of preference of employment at the time of, or during employment by reason of being or not being a member of an organisation.
[Section 51L inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 181; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
The Commission must direct the Registrar to prepare and publish in the Industrial Gazette the provisions of all orders made under this Division.
[Section 51M inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 181; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
51N.Variation and rescission of s. 51I orders
[(1)deleted]
(2)An order made under section 51I cannot be added to, varied or rescinded except in accordance with section 51I(2).
(3)Nothing in subsection (2) affects the Commission’s powers under section 27(1)(m).
[Section 51N inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 181; amended: No. 36 of 2006 s. 20; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(5).]
Division 3B — Equal remuneration
[Heading inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 31.]
(1)In this section —
statement of principles means the statement of principles referred to in section 50A(1)(d)(ii).
(2)On an application under section 29(1)(b), the Commission must make an order (an equal remuneration order) to ensure that an employee receives equal remuneration if the Commission is satisfied that the employee does not receive that remuneration.
(3)The equal remuneration order may relate to any matter the Commission considers appropriate, including (but not limited to) the following —
(a)reclassifying work;
(b)establishing new career paths;
(c)implementing changes to incremental pay scales;
(d)providing for increases in remuneration rates, including —
(i)minimum rates of pay in awards, industrial agreements and enterprise orders; and
(ii)new allowances;
(e)reassessing definitions and descriptions of work to properly reflect the value of the work.
(4)The Commission must apply the statement of principles, with any necessary modifications, in —
(a)determining whether an employee receives equal remuneration; and
(b)deciding the terms of an equal remuneration order.
(5)For the purposes of subsection (3), this Division prevails over the statement of principles to the extent of any inconsistency.
(6)An equal remuneration order may introduce measures to ensure equal remuneration —
(a)immediately; or
(b)progressively, in stages specified in the order.
[Section 51O inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 31.]
51P.Employer not to reduce remuneration
(1)An employer must not reduce an employee’s remuneration because an equal remuneration order, or an application for the order, has been made in relation to the employee.
(2)The purported reduction is of no effect.
[Section 51P inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 31.]
(1)Except as provided in subsection (3), this Division does not limit a right a person might otherwise have to a remedy (an alternative remedy) to secure equal remuneration under another provision of this Act or another enactment.
(2)A person who has applied for an alternative remedy in relation to an employee cannot apply for an equal remuneration order in relation to the employee unless the proceedings for the alternative remedy have been withdrawn or determined.
(3)A person who has applied for an equal remuneration order in relation to an employee cannot commence proceedings for an alternative remedy in relation to the employee unless the application for the equal remuneration order has been withdrawn or determined.
(4)Subsection (3) does not prevent an organisation from commencing proceedings —
(a)that relate, in part or as a whole, to the securing of equal remuneration for the employee; and
(b)that comprise any of the following —
(i)an application to vary an award under section 40;
(ii)an application for the registration of an industrial agreement under section 41;
(iii)an initiation of bargaining under section 42(1);
(iv)an application under section 42G for an order regarding provisions of an industrial agreement;
(v)an application under section 42I for an enterprise order.
[Section 51Q inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 31.]
51R.Remuneration‑related action
(1)In this section —
remuneration‑related action means —
(a)the registration of an industrial agreement under section 41; or
(b)the making of an award under this Act; or
(c)the making of an order under this Act.
(2)The Commission must not take remuneration‑related action that —
(a)prohibits or restricts the making of an application for an equal remuneration order; or
(b)is inconsistent with, or prohibits or restricts the application of, an equal remuneration order.
[Section 51R inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 31.]
[51S, 51T.Deleted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 31.]
Division 4 — Industrial organisations and associations
[Heading amended: No. 119 of 1987 s. 14.]
In this Division, unless a contrary intention appears —
collegiate electoral system, in relation to an election for an office in an organisation, means a method of election comprising a first stage, at which persons are elected to a number of offices by a direct voting system, and a subsequent stage or subsequent stages at which persons are elected by secret ballot by and from the persons elected at the immediately preceding stage;
counterpart federal body has the meaning given in section 52A;
direct voting system, in relation to an election for an office in an organisation, means a method of election by secret postal ballot at which all financial members, or all financial members included in such branch, section, or other division, or in such class, as is appropriate, having regard to the nature of the office, are, subject to reasonable provisions with respect to enrolment, eligible to vote;
one‑tier collegiate electoral system means a collegiate electoral system comprising only one stage after the first stage;
postal ballot means a ballot for the purposes of which a ballot paper is sent by prepaid post to each person entitled to vote and facilities are provided for the return of the completed ballot paper by post by the voter without expense to the person;
State organisation means an organisation that is registered under this Division.
[Section 52 amended: No. 119 of 1987 s. 15; No. 30 of 2021 s. 32.]
(1)In this section —
rules, of a branch of a federal organisation, means —
(a)rules relating to the qualifications of persons for membership; and
(b)rules prescribing the offices that exist within the branch.
(2)A Western Australian branch of a federal organisation is a counterpart federal body in relation to a State organisation if the rules of the branch are, or in accordance with section 71(2) or (4) are taken to be, the same as the rules of the State organisation relating to the corresponding subject matter.
(3)A federal organisation is a counterpart federal body of a State organisation even though the body does not have or comprise a Western Australian branch of the federal organisation if the Commission in Court Session is of the opinion that the federal organisation is a counterpart federal body in relation to a State organisation.
(4)The Commission in Court Session may form the opinion referred to in subsection (3) only if —
(a)a substantial number of members of the State organisation are —
(i)members or eligible to be members of the federal organisation; or
(ii)engaged in the same work, in aspects of the same work or in similar work as members of the federal organisation; or
(iii)employed in the same or similar work by employers engaged in the same industry as members of the federal organisation; or
(iv)engaged in work or in industries for which there is a community of interest between the federal organisation and the State organisation;
or
(b)there is an agreement in force under the FW (Registered Organisations) Act section 151 between the federal organisation and the State organisation.
(5)The Commission in Court Session may form the opinion referred to in subsection (3) despite the fact that a person who is eligible to be a member of the State organisation is, by reason of being a member of a particular class of persons, ineligible to be a member of that State organisation’s counterpart federal body.
(6)The Commission in Court Session may form the opinion referred to in subsection (3) despite the fact that a person who is eligible to be a member of the counterpart federal body is, by reason of being a member of a particular class of persons, ineligible to be a member of the State organisation.
(7)A State organisation may apply to the Commission in Court Session for a declaration that, for the purposes of subsection (2) or (3), a Western Australian branch of a federal organisation, or a federal organisation, is a counterpart federal body in relation to the State organisation.
[Section 52A inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 33.]
53.Organisations of employees, which can be registered
(1)Subject to this Act, any unregistered organisation consisting of not less than 200 employees associated for the purpose of protecting or furthering the interests of employees may be registered by authority of the Commission in Court Session.
(2)Subject to this Act, an unregistered organisation consisting of less than 200 employees may be registered by authority of the Commission in Court Session if it is satisfied that there is good reason, consistent with the objects prescribed in section 6, to permit registration.
[Section 53 inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 34; amended: No. 39 of 2018 s. 30.]
54.Organisations of employers, which can be registered
(1)Subject to this Act, an unregistered organisation consisting of 2 or more employers who —
(a)have, in the aggregate throughout the 6 months immediately preceding the date of application for registration employed on an average, taken per month, not less than 200 employees; and
(b)are associated for the purpose of protecting or furthering the interests of those employers,
may be registered by authority of the Commission in Court Session.
(2)Subject to this Act an unregistered organisation that does not comply with subsection (1)(a) may be registered by authority of the Commission in Court Session if it is satisfied that there is good reason, consistent with the objects prescribed in section 6, to permit registration.
[Section 54 inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 34; amended: No. 39 of 2018 s. 31.]
55.Applications for registration under s. 53 or 54
(1)An organisation seeking registration under section 53 or 54 must lodge in the office of the Registrar —
(a)a list of the officers of the organisation with their addresses; and
(b)a copy of the rules of the organisation; and
(c)the approved form of application.
(2)When the organisation has complied with the requirements of subsection (1) the Registrar must publish in the required manner —
(a)a notice of the application; and
(b)a copy of such rules of the organisation as relate to the qualification of persons for membership of the organisation and, without limiting the generality of this paragraph, including any rule by which the area of the State within which the organisation operates, or intends to operate, is limited; and
(c)notice that any person who objects to the registration of the organisation and who, having given notice of that objection within the time and in the manner prescribed, satisfies the Commission in Court Session that the person has a sufficient interest in the matter, may appear and be heard in objection to the application.
(3)An application under this section must not be listed for hearing before the Commission in Court Session until after the expiration of 30 days from the day on which the matters referred to in subsection (2) are first published.
(4)Notwithstanding that an organisation complies with section 53(1) or 54(1) or that the Commission in Court Session is satisfied for the purposes of section 53(2) or 54(2), the Commission in Court Session must refuse an application by the organisation under this section unless it is satisfied that —
(a)the application has been authorised in accordance with the rules of the organisation; and
(b)reasonable steps have been taken to adequately inform the members —
(i)of the intention of the organisation to apply for registration; and
(ii)of the proposed rules of the organisation; and
(iii)that the members or any of them may object to the making of the application or to those rules or any of them by forwarding a written objection to the Registrar,
and having regard to the structure of the organisation and any other relevant circumstance, the members have been afforded a reasonable opportunity to make such an objection; and
(c)in relation to the members of the organisation —
(i)less than 5% have objected to the making of the application or to those rules or any of them, as the case may be; or
(ii)a majority of the members who voted in a ballot conducted in a manner approved by the Registrar has authorised or approved the making of the application and the proposed rules;
and
(d)in relation to the alteration of the rules of the organisation, those rules provide for reasonable notice of any proposed alteration and reasons for the alteration to be given to the members of the organisation and for reasonable opportunity for the members to object to any such proposal; and
(e)rules of the organisation relating to elections for office —
(i)provide that the election must be by secret ballot; and
(ii)conform with the requirements of section 56(1),
and are such as will ensure, as far as practicable, that no irregularity can occur in connection with the election.
(5)Notwithstanding that an organisation complies with section 53(1) or 54(1), the Commission in Court Session must refuse an application by the organisation under this section if a registered organisation whose rules relating to membership enable it to enrol as a member some or all of the persons eligible, pursuant to the rules of the first‑mentioned organisation, to be members of the first‑mentioned organisation unless the Commission in Court Session is satisfied that there is good reason, consistent with the objects prescribed in section 6, to permit registration.
[Section 55 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 35 and 66; No. 79 of 1995 s. 31; No. 20 of 2002 s. 190(4) and (5); No. 39 of 2018 s. 32; No. 30 of 2021 s. 34, 73, 76(2) and 78(7).]
56.Rules of organisations to provide for secret ballots etc. at elections
(1)The rules of an organisation —
(a)must provide for the conduct of every election to an office within the organisation (including the acceptance or the rejection of nominations) by a returning officer, not being the holder of any other office in, and not being an employee of, the organisation; and
(b)must provide that, if the returning officer conducting such election finds a nomination to be defective, the officer must before rejecting the nomination, notify the person concerned of the defect, and where it is practicable to do so, give the person the opportunity of remedying the defect within such period as is applicable under the rules, which must, where practicable, be not less than 7 days after the person is notified; and
(c)must provide for the election of the holder of each office within the organisation, such election to be either by —
(i)a direct voting system; or
(ii)a collegiate electoral system being, in the case of an office the duties of which are of a full‑time nature, a one‑tier collegiate electoral system;
and
(d)must, in relation to any election for office —
(i)provide that the election must be by secret ballot; and
(ii)make provision for —
(I)absent voting; and
(II)the manner in which persons may become candidates for election; and
(III)the appointment, conduct and duties of returning officers; and
(IV)the conduct of the ballot; and
(V)the appointment, conduct, and duties of scrutineers to represent the candidates at the ballot; and
(VI)the declaration of the result of the ballot;
and
(iii)ensure, as far as practicable, that no irregularity can occur in connection with the election;
and
(e)must not permit a person to be elected to hold an office within the organisation for a period exceeding 4 years without being re‑elected; and
(f)must not permit a person to be elected to fill a casual vacancy in an office for a period exceeding the unexpired portion of the term of the person who has vacated the office.
(2)Where the rules of an organisation which was registered immediately prior to the coming into operation of this section do not, in the opinion of the Registrar, conform with the requirements of subsection (1), the Registrar may, after inviting the organisation to consult with the Registrar on the matter, allow the organisation such time as the Registrar determines within which to bring them into conformity with those requirements or determine such alterations of the rules as will in the Registrar’s opinion bring them into conformity with those requirements.
(3)The Registrar must register the alterations determined by the Registrar, or made by the organisation to the Registrar’s satisfaction, pursuant to subsection (2) and the rules are taken to be altered accordingly.
[Section 56 inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 36; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and (4), 77(5), (6), (10) and (13) and 78(3) and (7).]
56A.Casual vacancies, rules as to filling
(1)This section has effect notwithstanding any other provision of this Act.
(2)Subject to subsection (3), rules made by an organisation under this subsection may provide for the filling of a casual vacancy in such manner as is provided in those rules.
(3)Rules made under subsection (2) must include provision to the effect that a casual vacancy may be filled in a manner provided in those rules —
(a)where the original term did not exceed 12 months — for the unexpired portion of the original term; or
(b)where the original term exceeded 12 months — for so much of the unexpired portion of the original term as does not exceed three‑quarters of the original term.
(4)In subsection (3) original term, in relation to a casual vacancy in an office, means the period in respect of which the last person to have been elected to that office to fill a vacancy other than a casual vacancy was elected.
(5)Where a vacancy in an office is filled in a manner provided in rules made under subsection (2), the person so filling the vacancy is taken for the purposes of this Act (other than this section) and the provisions of the rules of the organisation (other than the first‑mentioned rules), to have been elected to that office in accordance with those provisions.
[Section 56A inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 36; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and (3).]
57.Elections by direct voting system to be by secret postal ballot
(1)Every election by a direct voting system for an office in an organisation must be by secret postal ballot.
(2)The regulations may make provision for and in relation to the conduct of an election in accordance with the requirements of this section.
(3)Where the rules of an organisation as in force at the date of the coming into operation of this section provide for an election or elections to which this section applies to be by a secret ballot other than a secret postal ballot, the Registrar may, upon application by the organisation in accordance with the regulations, by instrument in writing under the Registrar’s hand, exempt the organisation in respect of an election from the application of this section if the Registrar is satisfied that the conduct of the election in accordance with those rules —
(a)is likely to result in a fuller participation by members of the organisation in the ballot than would result from a postal ballot; and
(b)will afford members entitled to vote an adequate opportunity of voting without intimidation.
(4)This section, and the regulations made for the purposes of this section, have effect notwithstanding anything contained in the rules of an organisation.
(5)This section does not apply to an election any step in which was taken, in accordance with the rules of the organisation, before the date of the coming into operation of this section.
[Section 57 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 66; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and 77(6) and (10).]
58.Registering organisations, rules etc.
(1)Where, under this Act, the Registrar is authorised by the Commission in Court Session to register an organisation the Registrar must so register it by registering —
(a)its name; and
(b)its rules; and
(c)the address of the office where the business of the organisation is conducted,
and give to the organisation a certificate in the approved form which until cancelled is, subject to this Act, conclusive evidence of the registration of the organisation under this Act and of the organisation having complied with the prescribed conditions that entitle it to be so registered.
(2)Where the Commission in Court Session authorises the Registrar to register an organisation it may do so —
(a)unconditionally; or
(b)subject to the compliance by the organisation with any direction given to it by the Commission in Court Session in dealing with the application by the organisation for registration.
(3)On an application for the registration of an organisation the agent or representative of the applicant may request the Commission in Court Session to authorise the rules of the organisation to be registered in terms that exclude certain persons or classes of persons from the description of persons who would have been eligible for enrolment as members of the organisation under the rules as lodged under section 55(1)(b) and, if so requested, the Commission in Court Session may authorise the Registrar to register the rules in those terms.
[Section 58 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 37 and 66; No. 39 of 2018 s. 33; No. 30 of 2021 s. 73.]
59.Names of registered organisations, restrictions on
(1)The Commission in Court Session must not authorise the registration of an organisation under a name identical with that by which any other organisation has been registered or which by reason of its resemblance to the name of another organisation or body or for any other reason is, in the opinion of the Commission in Court Session, likely to deceive or mislead any person.
(2)The registered name must clearly indicate whether the organisation is an organisation of employers or an organisation of employees.
(3)This section does not prevent the Commission in Court Session from authorising an organisation to which a certificate has been issued under section 71 to change its name so as to correspond with the name of its counterpart federal body.
[Section 59 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 66; No. 39 of 2018 s. 34; No. 30 of 2021 s. 35 and 76(2).]
60.Organisation becomes incorporated on registration
(1)An organisation is, upon and during registration, for the purposes of this Act, a body corporate by the registered name, having perpetual succession and a common seal, but, subject to this Act, an organisation may at any time, with the consent of the Commission in Court Session, change its name.
(2)An organisation may sue and be sued and may purchase, take on lease, hold, sell, lease, mortgage, exchange, and otherwise own, possess, and deal with any real or personal property.
(3)The service on an organisation of any process, notice, or document of any kind may be effected by delivering it to the secretary or principal executive officer of the organisation or by leaving it at the office referred to in section 58 or by posting it to that office by certified mail addressed to the secretary of the organisation or in such other manner as may be prescribed.
[Section 60 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 66; No. 119 of 1987 s. 16; No. 39 of 2018 s. 35; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(8).]
Upon and after registration, the organisation and its members for the time being are subject to the jurisdiction of the Court and the Commission and to this Act; and, subject to this Act, all its members are bound by the rules of the organisation during the continuance of their membership.
[Section 61 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 66; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(4).]
(1)Upon and after the registration of rules in accordance with section 58(1), an alteration to those rules by the organisation concerned is not effective until the Registrar has given to the organisation a certificate that the alteration has been registered.
(2)The Registrar must not register any alteration to the rules of an organisation that relates to its name, qualifications of persons for membership, or a matter referred to in section 71(2) or (5) unless so authorised by the Commission in Court Session.
(3)Subject to section 71(8), the Registrar must not register an alteration to any rule unless, after consulting with the Chief Commissioner, the Registrar is satisfied that —
(a)the application has been authorised in accordance with the rules of the organisation; and
(b)reasonable steps have been taken to adequately inform the members —
(i)of the proposal for alteration and the reasons for the alteration; and
(ii)that the members or any of them may object to the proposed alteration by forwarding a written objection to the Registrar,
and, having regard to the structure of the organisation, and any other relevant circumstance, the members have been afforded a reasonable opportunity to object to the alteration; and
(c)less than 5% of the members of the organisation has objected to the proposed alteration or a majority of the members who voted in a ballot conducted in a manner approved by the Registrar has authorised or approved the proposed alteration.
(4)Sections 55, 56 and 58(3) apply, with such modifications as are necessary, to and in relation to an application by an organisation for alteration of a rule of a kind referred to in subsection (2).
[Section 62 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 38 and 66; No. 39 of 2018 s. 36; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and (8) and 78(7).]
63.Records, organisations’ duties as to etc.
(1)An organisation must keep the following records —
(a)a register of its members showing the name and residential address of each member and details of the status of each member in respect of the financial requirements for membership; and
(b)a list of the names, residential addresses, and occupations of the persons holding offices in the organisation; and
(c)accounting records that are in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and truly record and explain the financial transactions and financial position of the organisation; and
(d)such other records as are prescribed.
(2)An organisation must file with the Registrar once in each year, at such time as is prescribed, a copy of the records required to be kept under subsection (1)(b) and a record of the number of members in the organisation, certified by statutory declaration by the Secretary or other prescribed officer of the organisation to be a correct statement of the information contained in the records.
(3)An organisation must file with the Registrar in such manner and within such time as is prescribed notification of changes in the holding of offices.
[(4), (5)deleted]
(6)All documents filed with the Registrar pursuant to this section and section 65 must be made available for inspection at the office of the Registrar as prescribed.
(7)The register of members of an organisation must be made available by the organisation for inspection by such persons as are authorised by the Registrar, at such times as are appointed by the Registrar, at the office of the organisation.
[Section 63 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 39, 65 and 66; No. 79 of 1995 s. 5; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2), 77(13) and 78(7).]
64.Membership register, Registrar may direct rectification of etc.
(1)Where it appears to the Registrar that the register of members of an organisation is not being maintained in such a form and manner as to provide, for the purpose of the conduct of a ballot or election pursuant to this Act, a convenient form of the accurate particulars of the membership of the organisation, the Registrar may direct the organisation to make such rectifications in the register and such changes in the form or manner in which the register is being maintained, as the Registrar considers necessary for that purpose.
(2)An organisation to which a direction is given under subsection (1) must comply with the direction.
(3)A certificate from the Registrar stating that a person specified in the certificate was at a time so specified a member or officer of an organisation so specified is, in all courts and proceedings, evidence of the facts so stated.
[Section 64 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 65 and 66; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2), 77(10) and 78(7).]
64A.Resigning from an organisation
(1)A member of an organisation may end that membership by written notice of resignation addressed to the organisation.
(2)A notice of resignation must be served on the organisation by —
(a)delivering it personally to the organisation’s office at the address registered under section 58(1)(c); or
(b)sending it by certified mail to the address mentioned in paragraph (a) or to the address of the organisation as ascertained by referring to a current directory of telephone numbers.
(3)A notice of resignation takes effect on the day on which it is served on the organisation or on a later day specified in the notice.
[Section 64A inserted: No. 1 of 1995 s. 51; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
64B.Membership ends if subscription not paid
(1)Where —
(a)a period in respect of which a subscription has been paid to an organisation for a person’s membership of the organisation expires; and
(b)no subscription to continue or renew that membership has been paid to the organisation before, or within 3 months after, that expiry,
that membership ends by operation of this subsection at the end of that 3 month period.
(2)Subsection (1) does not apply if the membership has already ended under section 64A or under the rules of the organisation.
[Section 64B inserted: No. 1 of 1995 s. 51.]
64C.Effect of s. 64A and 64B in relation to organisation’s rules
(1)The ways of ending membership of an organisation set out in sections 64A and 64B are in addition to any ways of ending that membership provided for in the rules of the organisation.
(2)The ending of membership of an organisation under section 64A or 64B has effect despite anything in the rules of the organisation.
[Section 64C inserted: No. 1 of 1995 s. 51.]
64D.Purging register, organisation’s rules to provide for
The rules of an organisation must provide for the register referred to in section 63 to be purged on not less than 4 occasions in each year by striking off the names of members whose membership has ended under section 64A or 64B or under the rules.
[Section 64D inserted: No. 79 of 1995 s. 32; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
65.Accounts of organisation, audit and filing of
The secretary of each organisation must —
(a)cause the accounting records of that organisation to be properly audited by a person registered as an auditor under the Corporations Act 2001 (Commonwealth) (the auditor) within 6 calendar months after the end of each financial year of that organisation; and
(b)within one calendar month after the completion of the audit referred to in paragraph (a), deliver to the Registrar —
(i)a balance sheet of the assets and liabilities of that organisation audited by the auditor and made up to the date of the closing of the accounts of that organisation in respect of the financial year concerned; and
(ii)a statement of the receipts and expenditure of that organisation during the financial year concerned audited by the auditor; and
(iii)a cash flow statement of the organisation for the financial year concerned audited by the auditor.
[Section 65 inserted: No. 121 of 1982 s. 22; amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 65 and 66; No. 79 of 1995 s. 6; No. 10 of 2001 s. 112; No. 74 of 2003 s. 68(2); No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and 78(1) and (7).]
For the purposes of auditing the accounting records of an organisation or of performing any function conferred on the auditor under this Act, the auditor of an organisation is entitled —
(a)to have full and free access at all reasonable times to all records or documents relating to the receipt or expenditure of moneys by the organisation, or the acquisition, use or disposal of assets of the organisation, or the incurring of liabilities by the organisation; and
(b)to require any officer or employee of the organisation to provide the auditor with any information or explanation that the auditor wants.
[Section 65A inserted: No. 79 of 1995 s. 7.]
66.Power of Chief Commissioner to deal with rules of organisation
(1)The following persons may apply to the Chief Commissioner for an order or direction under this section —
(a)a person who is or has been a member of an organisation; or
(b)a person who has applied for and not been admitted to membership in an organisation; or
(c)the Registrar acting on the complaint of or on behalf of a person referred to in paragraph (a) or of the Registrar’s own motion.
(2)On an application made pursuant to this section, the Chief Commissioner may make such order or give such directions relating to the rules of the organisation, their observance or non‑observance or the manner of their observance, either generally or in the particular case, as the Chief Commissioner considers to be appropriate and without limiting the generality of this subsection may —
(a)disallow any rule which, in the opinion of the Chief Commissioner —
(i)is contrary to or inconsistent with any Act or law, or an award, industrial agreement, order or direction made, registered or given under this Act; or
(ii)is tyrannical or oppressive; or
(iii)prevents or hinders any member of the organisation from observing the law or the provisions of an award, industrial agreement, order or direction made, registered or given under this Act; or
(iv)imposes unreasonable conditions upon the membership of a member or upon an applicant for membership; or
(v)is inconsistent with the democratic control of the organisation by its members;
and
(b)instead of disallowing a rule under paragraph (a), direct the organisation to alter that rule within a specified time in such manner as the Chief Commissioner may direct; and
(c)disallow any rule which has not been altered by the organisation after a direction to do so pursuant to paragraph (b); and
(ca)where the Chief Commissioner disallows any rule under paragraph (a) or (c), give such directions as the Chief Commissioner considers necessary to remedy, rectify, reverse or alter or to validate or give effect to, anything that has been done in pursuance of the disallowed rule; and
(d)declare the true interpretation of any rule; and
(e)inquire into any election for an office in the organisation if it is alleged that there has been an irregularity in connection with that election and make such orders and give such directions as the Chief Commissioner considers necessary —
(i)to cure the irregularity including rectifying the register of members of the organisation; or
(ii)to remedy or alter any direct or indirect consequence of the irregularity;
and
(f)in connection with an inquiry under paragraph (e) —
(i)give such directions as the Chief Commissioner considers necessary to the Registrar or to any other person in relation to ballot papers, envelopes, lists, or other documents of any kind relating to the election;
(ii)order that any person named in the order must or must not, as the case may be, for such period as the Chief Commissioner considers reasonable in the circumstances and specifies in the order, act or continue to act in and be taken to hold an office to which the inquiry relates;
(iii)declare any act done in connection with the election to be void or validate any act so done.
[(3)deleted]
(4)Any person to whom an order or direction given or made under this section applies must comply with that order or direction whether or not it is contrary to or inconsistent with any rule of the organisation concerned.
[(5)deleted]
(6)A rule disallowed pursuant to subsection (2)(a) or (c) is void.
[(7), (8)deleted]
(9)The power of the Chief Commissioner under subsection (2)(d) may, on a reference made under section 27(1)(t), be exercised by the Commission in Court Session.
[Section 66 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 40 and 66; No. 119 of 1987 s. 17; No. 1 of 1995 s. 52 and 53; No. 79 of 1995 s. 33; No. 3 of 1997 s. 12; No. 39 of 2018 s. 37; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and 78(3) and (7).]
67.Industrial associations, registering
(1)A council or other body, however designated, formed by and for the purpose of representing 2 or more organisations to the extent that they have industrial interests in common may, subject to this Act, be registered as an association under this Act.
(2)An association registered pursuant to subsection (1) may act on behalf of all employees eligible for membership of any of the organisations represented by the association in respect of a calling or industry in respect of which the association was formed.
(3)Subject to this section, the provisions of this Act relating to organisations, their rules, records, officers and members extend and apply, with such modifications as are necessary, to an association, its rules, records, officers and members respectively.
[Section 67 inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 41; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(1).]
68.Declaration as to certain functions
The Commission may, on its own motion or on the application of a person of a kind referred to in section 66(1), declare all or any of the functions of an office to be those of an office in an organisation.
[Section 68 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 66; No. 39 of 2018 s. 38.]
69.Election, conduct of by Registrar or Electoral Commissioner
(1)An election for an office in an organisation may be conducted pursuant to this section where the Registrar decides that a request that the election be so conducted has been duly made.
(2)A request is duly made if it is made in writing within the time prescribed —
(a)by an officer of an organisation on behalf of the organisation; or
(b)by a person authorised to make the request by and on behalf of not less than 1/20th of the members of, or 250 of the members of the organisation, whichever is the lesser number.
(3)Where a request is made or purports to be made in accordance with this section, the Registrar must, after making such inquiries, if any, as the Registrar considers necessary, decide whether or not the request has been duly made.
(4)Where the Registrar decides that a request has been duly made, the Registrar must inform the organisation, and, where the request was made by a person referred to in subsection (2)(b), that person, accordingly, and make arrangements with the Electoral Commissioner appointed under the Electoral Act 1907 for the conduct of the election by an officer holding office under that Act or by some other person authorised in writing by the Electoral Commissioner.
(5)Notwithstanding anything contained in the rules of the organisation, the person conducting the election may take such action and give such directions as the person considers necessary in order —
(a)to ensure that no irregularities occur in or in connection with the election; or
(b)to rectify the register of members of the organisation; or
(c)to remedy procedural defects which appear to the person to exist in those rules.
(6)A person must not —
(a)refuse or fail to comply with a direction given in accordance with subsection (5); or
(b)obstruct or hinder —
(i)the person conducting an election under this section in the conduct of the election or the taking of any action in accordance with subsection (5); or
(ii)any other person in the carrying out of a direction given in accordance with subsection (5).
(7)An election conducted pursuant to this section is not invalid by reason only of an irregularity in the request in pursuance of which the election was conducted or by reason of a breach of the rules of the organisation involved in anything done or omitted, or in compliance with a direction given, in accordance with this section.
(8)The expense of any election conducted in accordance with this section must be borne by the State; and the Consolidated Account is to the necessary extent appropriated accordingly.
(9)The Secretary of the organisation must, within such time as the Registrar may require, lodge with the Registrar a copy of the register of members referred to in section 63 and that register must be open for inspection and extracts may be taken from it, at the office of the person conducting the election, by any member of the organisation or candidate at the election.
(10)In proceedings before the Commission or any court in connection with anything done or proposed to be done by reason of a request duly made in accordance with this section the copy register referred to in subsection (9) is evidence that the persons shown in the register as members of the organisation were, at the date on which that request was so made, members of the organisation.
(11)Where the Registrar decides that a request has not been duly made under this section the Registrar must inform the organisation and, where the request has been made by a person referred to in subsection (2)(b), that person, accordingly.
(12)The officer or person who made the request for the conduct of the election under this section may, within 7 days of the organisation or that person, as the case may be, being informed by the Registrar of the decision that the request has not been duly made, appeal to the Commission in Court Session in the manner prescribed against that decision.
[Section 69 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 42, 65 and 66; No. 98 of 1985 s. 3; No. 6 of 1993 s. 11; No. 1 of 1995 s. 53; No. 77 of 2006 s. 4; No. 39 of 2018 s. 39; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2), 77(2), (5) and (10) and 78(7).]
70.Offences in relation to elections
(1)A person must not, without lawful authority or excuse, in or in connection with an election for an office —
(a)personate another person to secure a ballot paper to which the personator is not entitled, or personate another person for the purpose of voting; or
(b)destroy, deface, alter, take, or otherwise interfere with a nomination paper, ballot paper, or envelope; or
(c)put or deliver a ballot paper or other paper —
(i)into a ballot box or other ballot receptacle; or
(ii)into the post; or
(iii)to a person receiving ballot papers for the purposes of the election;
or
(d)record a vote which the person is not entitled to record; or
(e)record more than one vote; or
(f)forge or utter, knowing it to be forged, a nomination paper, ballot paper, or envelope; or
(g)supply a ballot paper; or
(h)obtain, or have in the person’s possession, a ballot paper; or
(i)destroy, take, open, or otherwise interfere with a ballot box.
(2)A person must not, in or in connection with an election for an office —
(a)threaten, offer or suggest violence, injury, punishment, damage, loss, disadvantage, or any form of intimidation for or on account of, or to induce —
(i)candidature or withdrawal of candidature; or
(ii)a vote or an omission to vote; or
(iii)support or opposition to a candidate; or
(iv)a promise of a vote, or an omission to vote, or of support for, or of opposition to a candidate;
or
(b)use, cause, inflict, or procure violence, punishment, damage, loss, disadvantage, or any form of intimidation for or on account of any such candidature, withdrawal, vote, omission, support, or opposition.
(3)A contravention of subsection (1) or (2) is not an offence but those subsections are civil penalty provisions for the purposes of section 83E.
[Section 70 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 65; No. 1 of 1995 s. 53; No. 20 of 2002 s. 152(1); No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and 77(2) and (4).]
71.Rules of State and federal organisations as to membership and offices
[(1)deleted]
(2)The rules of a State organisation and a counterpart federal body described in section 52A(2) are taken to be the same if the rules of the organisation and the body —
(a)relate to the qualifications of persons for membership; and
(b)are, in the opinion of the Commission in Court Session, substantially the same.
(3)The Commission in Court Session may form the opinion that the rules referred to in subsection (2) are substantially the same notwithstanding that a person who is —
(a)eligible to be a member of the State organisation is, by reason of being a member of a particular class of persons, ineligible to be a member of that State organisation’s counterpart federal body; or
(b)eligible to be a member of the counterpart federal body is, for the reason referred to in paragraph (a), ineligible to be a member of the State organisation.
(4)The rules of a State organisation and a counterpart federal body described in section 52A(2) are taken to be the same if —
(a)the rules prescribe the offices existing in the body; and
(b)for every office in the organisation there is a corresponding office in the body.
(5)Where, after the coming into operation of this section —
(a)the rules of a State organisation are altered pursuant to section 62 to provide that each office in the State organisation may, from such time as the committee of management of the State organisation may determine, be held by the person who, in accordance with the rules of the State organisation’s counterpart federal body, holds an office described in subsection (5A) in that body; and
(b)the committee of management of the State organisation decides and, in the prescribed manner notifies the Registrar accordingly, that from a date specified in the notification all offices in the State organisation will be filled in accordance with the rule referred to in paragraph (a),
the Registrar must issue the State organisation with a certificate which declares —
(c)that the provisions of this Act relating to elections for office within a State organisation do not, from the date referred to in paragraph (b), apply in relation to offices in that State organisation; and
(d)that, from that date, the persons holding office in the State organisation in accordance with the rule referred to in paragraph (a) are, for all purposes, the officers of the State organisation,
and the certificate has effect according to its tenor.
(5A)The office referred to in subsection (5)(a) is —
(a)in the case of a counterpart federal body referred to in section 52A(2) — the corresponding office in the body;
(b)in the case of a counterpart federal body referred to in section 52A(3) — an office that is specified in the rules of the State organisation for the purposes of this subsection and in relation to which the members of the State organisation are, under the rules of the counterpart federal body, entitled to —
(i)nominate a person to be the office holder; and
(ii)vote for a person to be the office holder.
(6)A State organisation referred to in section 52A(2) or (3) to which a certificate issued under this section applies may, notwithstanding any provision in its rules to the contrary, make an agreement with the branch or organisation that is the State organisation’s counterpart federal body, relating to the management and control of the funds or property, or both, of the State organisation.
(7)Where a memorandum of an agreement referred to in subsection (6) is —
(a)sealed with the respective seals of the State organisation and the other organisation concerned; and
(b)signed on behalf of the State organisation and the other organisation by the persons authorised under their respective rules to execute such an instrument; and
(c)lodged with the Registrar,
the Commission in Court Session may, if it is satisfied that the terms of the agreement are not detrimental to the interests of persons who are eligible to be members of the State organisation and of its counterpart federal body and will not prevent or hinder the State organisation from satisfying any debt or obligation however arising, approve the agreement.
(8)Where the Commission in Court Session approves an agreement under subsection (7) the Registrar must —
(a)register the memorandum as an alteration to the rules of the State organisation; and
(b)amend, where necessary, the certificate issued to the State organisation under subsection (5) by declaring that the State organisation is, from the date of registration of the memorandum, exempted from compliance with such provisions of this Act and to such an extent as the Commission in Court Session may, having regard to the terms of the memorandum, direct; and
(c)notify the State organisation in writing of the matters referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b).
(9)After the issue to a State organisation of a certificate or an amended certificate under this section —
(a)the rule referred to in subsection (5)(a) and a memorandum registered under subsection (8)(a) must not be altered unless the alteration is approved by the Commission in Court Session; and
(b)an alteration to any rule of the State organisation other than the rule referred to in paragraph (a) may be registered by the Registrar if the Registrar is satisfied that the rule as so altered is the same as a rule of the State organisation’s counterpart federal body; and
(c)every member of the State organisation’s counterpart federal body who is eligible to be a member of the State organisation is, for all the purposes of this Act and of any award, industrial agreement or order, taken to be a member of the State organisation.
(10)Before granting approval to an alteration of the rule or memorandum referred to in subsection (9)(a), the Commission in Court Session may require compliance by the State organisation with such conditions as the Commission in Court Session considers appropriate.
[Section 71 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 66; No. 119 of 1987 s. 18; No. 1 of 1995 s. 53; No. 74 of 2003 s. 68(3); No. 53 of 2011 s. 34; No. 39 of 2018 s. 40; No. 30 of 2021 s. 36, 74, 76(2), (7) and (8), 78(6) and (7).]
71A.State organisation may adopt rules of federal organisation
[(1)deleted]
(2)Subject to this section, a State organisation may alter its rules (in this section referred to as the State rules) by including in the State rules a provision (in this section referred to as the adopting provision) stating that all of the rules of its counterpart federal body other than —
(a)a rule relating to the name of the State organisation; and
(b)a rule relating to the qualifications of persons for membership; and
(ba)a rule described in section 71(5)(a) relating to an office described in section 71(5A)(b); and
(bb)a rule described in section 71(5A)(b); and
(c)any rule specifically excluded in the adopting provision,
are by force of this section adopted as rules of the State organisation.
(3)Subject to subsection (5) where a State organisation alters its rules under subsection (2) the rules adopted by that State organisation are by force of this section, and notwithstanding anything to the contrary in section 62, taken to be rules of the State organisation.
(4)The rules adopted under subsection (2) include, unless provision to the contrary is made by the State organisation in the adopting provision —
(a)any amendments made to those rules; and
(b)any further rules made by the counterpart federal body,
after the coming into operation of the adopting provision.
(5)Where a State organisation makes an adopting provision under subsection (2) —
(a)the Registrar must register that adopting provision as an alteration to the rules of that State organisation; and
(b)that adopting provision is not effective until registered under paragraph (a).
(6)Section 62 does not apply to or in relation to the alteration of State rules under or by force of this section.
[Section 71A inserted: No. 99 of 1990 s. 9; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 37, 74, 76(2) and (8) and 78(3).]
72.Amalgamated organisations, registration of
(1)Where 2 or more organisations (in this section referred to as the amalgamating organisations) apply for the registration of a new organisation and the rules of the proposed new organisation are such that the only persons eligible for membership of the new organisation will be persons who, if the amalgamating organisations had remained in being, would have been eligible for membership of at least one of the amalgamating organisations, the new organisation may be registered by authority of the Commission in Court Session.
(2)An application under this section must be made under the respective seals of the amalgamating organisations and must be signed by the secretary and principal executive officer of each of those organisations.
(3)The provisions of this Division applying to and in relation to the registration of organisations under section 53(1) or 54(1), other than section 55(5), apply with such modifications as are necessary, to and in relation to the registration of an organisation under this section.
(4)Subsection (1) does not prevent the alteration, pursuant to this Act, at any time after an organisation has been registered under this section, of the rules referred to in that subsection.
(5)On and from the date on which an organisation is registered under this section —
(a)the registration of each of the amalgamating organisations is cancelled; and
(b)all the property, rights, duties, and obligations whatever held by, vested in, or imposed on each of those organisations are held by, vested in, or imposed on, as the case may be, the new organisation; and
(c)actions and other proceedings already commenced by or against any of those organisations may be continued by or against the new organisation and the new organisation is substituted for each of those organisations as a party; and
(d)actions and other proceedings that could have been brought by or against any of those organisations may be brought by or against the new organisation.
[Section 72 inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 43; amended: No. 1 of 1995 s. 53; No. 79 of 1995 s. 34; No. 39 of 2018 s. 41; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(1), (2) and (4).]
72A.Employee organisations, orders as to whom they represent
(1)In this section —
enterprise means —
(a)a business, or part of a business, that is carried on by a single employer; or
(b)a business, or part of a business, that is carried on by 2 or more employers as a joint venture or single enterprise; or
(c)activities carried on by a public authority, or part of those activities; or
(d)a single project, undertaking or place of work;
organisation means an organisation of employees and includes the Western Australian Branch of the Australian Medical Association Incorporated.
(2)An organisation, an employer or the Minister may apply to the Commission in Court Session for an order —
(a)that an organisation has the right, to the exclusion of another organisation or other organisations, to represent under this Act the industrial interests of a particular class or group of employees employed in an enterprise who are eligible for membership of the organisation;
(b)that an organisation that does not have the right to represent under this Act the industrial interests of a particular class or group of employees employed in an enterprise has that right;
(c)that an organisation does not have the right to represent under this Act the industrial interests of a particular class or group of employees employed in an enterprise who are eligible for membership of the organisation.
(3)The Registrar must publish notice of an application under subsection (2) in the Industrial Gazette and —
(a)in a newspaper circulating throughout the State; or
(b)on an internet website maintained by the Commission,
and the application must not be listed for hearing before the Commission in Court Session until after the expiration of 30 days from the day on which the notice is first published.
(4)On an application under subsection (2), the Commission in Court Session may make one or more of the orders applied for, and may make any such order subject to any condition or limitation.
(5)The Commission in Court Session must not make any order described in subsection (2) without giving persons who, in its opinion, have a sufficient interest in the matter an opportunity of being heard.
(6)Where an order is made under subsection (4), the Commission in Court Session must refer the matter to the Chief Commissioner unless it is satisfied that the rules of the organisations concerned do not need to be altered.
(7)On a referral under subsection (6) the Chief Commissioner must, after giving the organisations concerned an opportunity of being heard, make such alterations (if any) to the rules of the organisations as are, in the Chief Commissioner’s opinion, necessary to reflect the order made by the Commission in Court Session.
(8)An alteration must be made by instrument in writing signed by the Chief Commissioner and takes effect on a day specified in the instrument.
[Section 72A inserted: No. 15 of 1993 s. 20; amended: No. 79 of 1995 s. 35; No. 20 of 2002 s. 190(6); No. 39 of 2018 s. 42.]
72B.AMA may represent interests of medical practitioners
(1)In this section —
medical practitioner means a person registered under the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law (Western Australia) in the medical profession;
WA Branch of the AMA means the Western Australian Branch of the Australian Medical Association Incorporated.
(2)The WA Branch of the AMA may represent under this Act the industrial interests of medical practitioners as if it were an organisation of employees and for that purpose —
(a)the references to organisation in paragraphs (e), (i), (j), (k) and (l) of the definition of industrial matter in section 7(1) include the WA Branch of the AMA; and
(b)Divisions 2 and 3 of Part II, sections 80C(4) and 80F and Parts III and VIA apply to the WA Branch of the AMA as if it were an organisation of employees.
(3)The WA Branch of the AMA does not have the right, to the exclusion of an organisation or organisations, to represent under this Act the industrial interests of medical practitioners, unless an order to that effect is made under section 72A.
(4)Within 30 days of the coming into operation of section 36 of the Industrial Relations Legislation Amendment and Repeal Act 1995 the WA Branch of the AMA must lodge with the Registrar a copy of its rules as then in force.
(5)The WA Branch of the AMA must lodge with the Registrar, within 30 days of the making of the alteration, any alteration made to the rules lodged under subsection (4) as altered from time to time.
(6)The WA Branch of the AMA must file with the Registrar once in each year, at such time as is prescribed —
(a)a list of the names, residential addresses, and occupations of the persons holding offices in the Branch; and
(b)a record of the number of members of the Branch,
certified by statutory declaration by the Executive Director of the Branch to be a correct statement of the information contained in the list and the record.
[Section 72B inserted: No. 79 of 1995 s. 36; amended: No. 22 of 2008 Sch. 3 cl. 30(2); No. 35 of 2010 s. 99; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
73.Cancelling and suspending registration of organisation, procedure for
(1)Subject to this section, the Commission constituted by a commissioner may of its own motion or at the request of the Minister or any employer or organisation at any time direct the Registrar in writing to issue to an organisation a summons to appear before the Commission in Court Session on a date specified in the summons, and show cause why the registration of the organisation under this Act should not be cancelled or suspended, as the case may be, either generally or with respect to any employee or group or class of employees.
(2)The Registrar must ascertain from the Chief Commissioner the date to be specified in the summons referred to in subsection (1) and that date must not, without good cause, be less than 14 days from the date on which the summons is issued by the Registrar.
(3)In respect of a request made under subsection (1) —
(a)where the request is made by the Minister and is accompanied by a declaration made by the Minister that in the Minister’s opinion —
(i)the safety, health, or welfare of the community or a part of it is at risk; or
(ii)a number of a group or class of employees who are, or are eligible to be, members of the organisation is bound by an award made under the FW Act or continued in existence under the FW (Transitional) Act,
the Commission must give a direction under that subsection; and
(b)in any other case, the Commission may give a direction under that subsection if, by reason of the conduct of the organisation or its officers or members or any of them, either generally or in a particular case, it appears to the Commission that the continuance of the registration is not consistent with or will not serve the objects of this Act, but the Commission must not give such a direction in a case to which this paragraph applies unless it has advised the organisation of its intention to do so and has invited such officers of the organisation as the Commission considers appropriate to consult with it in respect of that conduct.
(4)A direction to the Registrar under subsection (1) must include a statement of the reasons for which the direction is given and a copy of that statement must be attached to the summons referred to in that subsection and served with the summons.
(5)The organisation concerned may apply to the Registrar for further particulars of the statement of reasons referred to in subsection (4) and the Registrar must supply such further particulars as the commissioner who constituted the Commission that gave the direction may direct.
(6)For the hearing and determination of a matter under this section the commissioner referred to in subsection (5) must not be one of the commissioners who constitute the Commission in Court Session for the purposes of this section.
(7)On the return of the summons (not being a summons to which subsection (7b) applies) if it appears to the Commission in Court Session that by reason of the conduct of the organisation or its officers or members or any of them, either generally or in any particular case, the continuance of the registration is not consistent with or will not serve the objects of this Act, the Commission in Court Session —
(a)must make one of the orders described in subsection (7a); and
(b)may make one or both of the orders described in subsection (8).
(7a)The orders referred to in subsection (7)(a) are —
(a)an order cancelling the registration of the organisation; or
(b)an order cancelling the rights of the organisation under this Act either generally or with respect to any employee or group or class of employees specified in the order; or
(c)an order suspending for a time specified in the order or without limit of time and, in either case, subject to such conditions or exceptions, or both, as the Commission in Court Session thinks fit, that registration or those rights.
(7b)On the return of a summons issued following a declaration by the Minister under subsection (3)(a)(ii), if it appears to the Commission in Court Session that a number of a group or class of employees who are, or are qualified to be, members of an organisation is bound by an award made under the FW Act or continued in existence under the FW (Transitional) Act, the Commission in Court Session —
(a)must make an order cancelling the rights of the organisation under this Act with respect to that group or class of employees; and
(b)may make an order under subsection (8)(a).
(8)For the purposes of subsection (7) and notwithstanding anything in this Act, the orders which the Commission in Court Session may make include —
(a)an order with respect to the rules of the organisations cancelling or suspending or varying in any way the rules or any part of the rules referred to in section 55(2); and
(b)an order cancelling or suspending an award, industrial agreement or order or any provision of an award, industrial agreement or order.
(9)An order made under this section comes into operation and has effect from such date on or after the making of the order as the Commission in Court Session may determine and specify, but it may be prescribed in the order that the order will not commence to operate from the date specified if, before that date, the organisation satisfies the Commission in Court Session that it has complied or is complying with conditions or requisitions made by the Commission in Court Session when making the order.
(10)An order made under this section may provide for the cancellation of the registration of an organisation after such period of suspension of rights under this Act as the Commission in Court Session considers necessary to enable any debts, liabilities, or obligations incurred by the organisation to be met and the period of suspension under this subsection may be extended by the Commission in Court Session to such extent as may appear to it to be necessary.
(11)An order made under this section has effect according to its tenor and the Registrar must, where necessary, amend the Registrar’s records accordingly.
(12)The Commission in Court Session must cancel the registration of an organisation if it is satisfied on the application of the Registrar that —
(a)the number of members of the organisation or, the number of employees of the members of the organisation would not entitle it to registration under section 53 or section 54, as the case may be; or
(b)the organisation is defunct; or
(c)the organisation has, in the manner prescribed, requested that its registration be cancelled.
(12a)The Registrar must make an application under subsection (12) in every case where it appears to the Registrar that there are sufficient grounds for doing so.
(13)Proceedings for the cancellation or suspension of the registration of an organisation, or any of its rights under this Act, must not be instituted otherwise than under this section.
(14)During any period in which —
(a)an organisation of employees is not registered; or
(b)the registration of an organisation of employees is suspended,
an employer must not deduct from the wages of any employee any amount for or in respect of membership of the organisation.
Penalty for this subsection: a fine of $2 000.
[Section 73 amended: No. 121 of 1982 s. 23; No. 94 of 1984 s. 44 and 66; No. 119 of 1987 s. 19; No. 15 of 1993 s. 21; No. 3 of 1997 s. 9 and 19; No. 20 of 2002 s. 193(2) and 194(6); No. 53 of 2011 s. 35; No. 39 of 2018 s. 43; Gazette 15 Aug 2003 p. 3686; No. 30 of 2021 s. 72(1), 75(1) and 76(2) and (8), 77(6) and (13) and 78(7).]
Division 5 — Duties of officers of organisations
[Heading inserted: No. 79 of 1995 s. 8(1); amended: No. 3 of 1997 s. 4; No. 20 of 2002 s. 192(1).]
(1)In this section and in section 77 —
finance official means an officer of an organisation who is entitled to participate directly in the financial management of the organisation.
(2)A finance official is to act honestly at all times in the performance of the functions of the finance official’s office or employment.
(3)A finance official is to exercise a reasonable degree of care and diligence at all times in the performance of the functions of the finance official’s office or employment.
(4)The degree of care and diligence required by subsection (3) is the degree of care and diligence that a reasonable person in the finance official’s position would reasonably be expected to exercise.
(5)Each finance official of an organisation is to ensure that the organisation keeps and maintains accounting records as required by section 63(1)(c).
(6)A person who is or has been a finance official of an organisation is not to make use of information acquired by virtue of the person’s position as a finance official to obtain or seek to obtain directly or indirectly, a pecuniary advantage for the person or for any other person or to cause or seek to cause detriment, loss or damage to the organisation.
(7)Subsection (6) does not apply to acts done —
(a)in and for the purposes of the performance of the functions of a finance official’s office or employment; or
(b)with the consent of the committee of management of the organisation.
(8)Details of any matter about which consent is given under subsection (7)(b) are to be disclosed by the committee of management to the members of the organisation in accordance with the rules of the organisation.
(9)A finance official of an organisation is not to make use of the finance official’s position as a finance official to obtain or seek to obtain, directly or indirectly, a pecuniary advantage for the official or for any other person or to cause or seek to cause detriment, loss or damage to the organisation.
(10)Subsection (9) does not apply to acts done in and for the purposes of the performance of the functions of a finance official’s office or employment.
(11)A finance official of an organisation is to provide the committee of management of the organisation with returns of the finance official’s pecuniary interests at such times and in such form as are prescribed by the rules of the organisation.
(12)A finance official of an organisation who has a material personal interest in a matter involving the organisation is to disclose the nature of the interest to the committee of management of the organisation as soon as is practicable after the relevant facts come to the finance official’s knowledge.
(13)Subject to section 79, this section is in addition to, and not in derogation of, any rule of law relating to the duties or liabilities of a finance official and does not prevent the institution of civil proceedings in respect of a breach of such a duty or in respect of such a liability.
[Section 74 inserted: No. 79 of 1995 s. 8(1); amended: No. 3 of 1997 s. 5; No. 20 of 2002 s. 192(2).]
75.Auditor to report on compliance with s. 74 duties
(1)In reporting on the accounting records of an organisation under section 65 the auditor is to express an opinion as to whether any person has contravened or failed to comply with section 74.
(2)If the auditor finds that the accounting records are not in a form that enables an informed opinion to be expressed as required by subsection (1), the auditor is to report that finding.
[Section 75 inserted: No. 79 of 1995 s. 8(1).]
[76.Deleted: No. 39 of 2018 s. 44.]
77.Duty under s. 74, enforcing
(1)If a person who is or has been a finance official of an organisation (the respondent) contravenes or fails to comply with section 74 —
(a)the organisation; or
(b)an officer of the organisation; or
(c)a member of the organisation; or
(d)the Registrar or a deputy registrar; or
(e)an industrial inspector,
may apply in the prescribed manner to an industrial magistrate’s court for the enforcement of section 74.
(2)On the hearing of an application under subsection (1) the industrial magistrate’s court may, if the contravention or failure to comply is proved, do any one or more of the following —
(a)by order, issue a caution to the respondent;
(b)subject to subsection (3) and section 79(5)(a), by order impose a penalty on the respondent of such amount as the industrial magistrate’s court considers just, but not exceeding $5 000;
(c)order the respondent to pay compensation to the organisation in respect of any loss or damage suffered by the organisation as a result of the contravention or failure to comply;
(d)order the restitution or forfeiture of any pecuniary advantage obtained by any person as a result of the contravention or failure to comply;
(e)order the respondent to do any specified thing or to cease any specified activity.
(3)Only one penalty can be imposed on the respondent under subsection (2)(b) in respect of contraventions or failures to comply arising out of one course of conduct.
(4)The industrial magistrate’s court may, by order, dismiss an application under subsection (1).
(5)Subject to subsection (6) an order under subsection (2) or (4) may be made with or without costs.
(6)Costs must not be given against the Registrar, a deputy registrar or an industrial inspector in relation to proceedings under this section.
(7)Where the industrial magistrate’s court orders money to be paid under this section by way of a penalty, compensation, restitution, forfeiture or costs the industrial magistrate’s court must state in the order the name of the person liable to pay the money and the name of the person to whom the money is to be paid.
[Section 77 inserted: No. 79 of 1995 s. 8(1); amended: No. 3 of 1997 s. 6; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
78.Failure to comply with s. 77(2)(e) order
A person who fails to comply with an order under section 77(2)(e) commits an offence.
Penalty:
(a)a fine of $5 000;
(b)a daily penalty of a fine of $500 for each day or part of a day during which the offence continues.
[Section 78 inserted: No. 3 of 1997 s. 7; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 71(2) and (3).]
79.Proceedings under s. 77, effect on or of other proceedings
(1)Subject to subsection (3), where an application is made to an industrial magistrate’s court under section 77, the matter to which the application relates (whether as shown in the application or as emerging in the course of the determination of the application) is not justiciable by another court in civil proceedings unless —
(a)that matter was before that other court at the time when the application was made to the industrial magistrate’s court; or
(b)the application to the industrial magistrate’s court is withdrawn or not pursued.
(2)Where a matter that an industrial magistrate’s court has jurisdiction to determine under section 77 is before another court in civil proceedings, that other court may order that the matter be transferred to and determined by the industrial magistrate’s court.
(3)Where a matter that a court has jurisdiction to determine in civil proceedings is before an industrial magistrate’s court, the industrial magistrate’s court may order that the matter be transferred to and determined by that other court.
(4)In making an order for compensation, restitution or forfeiture under section 77(2)(c) or (d) an industrial magistrate’s court is to have regard to any amount that the respondent has been ordered to pay in civil proceedings relating to the same matter in another court.
(5)If criminal proceedings are instituted under any other enactment in respect of conduct that also constitutes a contravention of or failure to comply with section 74 —
(a)an industrial magistrate’s court is not to impose a penalty under section 77(2)(b) in proceedings under section 77 in respect of the matter; but
(b)the outcome of the criminal proceedings is not to be taken into consideration in the determination of proceedings under section 77 in respect of the matter.
[Section 79 inserted: No. 3 of 1997 s. 7.]
80.Disqualification from office for breach of s. 74 duty
(1)If an order is made against an officer of an organisation under section 77(2)(b), (c), (d) or (e), the industrial magistrate’s court may, on the application of the Registrar, order —
(a)that the officer’s office becomes vacant when the order is made; and
(b)that, from the time when the order is made, the officer is disqualified from holding or acting in any office in the organisation during such period of not more than 3 years as is specified in the order.
(2)The industrial magistrate’s court may include in an order under subsection (1) any provision that it considers necessary to ensure the operation of the order and to provide for the election or appointment of a person to replace the officer whose office becomes vacant under the order.
(3)A person who performs or attempts to perform the functions of an office in the organisation while disqualified by an order under subsection (1) from holding or acting in the office commits an offence punishable by the Supreme Court as for a contempt.
[Section 80 inserted: No. 3 of 1997 s. 7.]
Part 2AA — Employers declared not to be national system employers
[Heading inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 38.]
[Heading inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 38.]
80A.Employers declared not to be national system employers
(1)This section applies to an employer who, under the FW Act section 14(2), may be declared by or under a law of the State not to be a national system employer.
(2)The regulations may —
(a)declare the employer not to be a national system employer for the purposes of the FW Act; and
(b)fix a day (the relevant day) for the purposes of that declaration.
[Section 80A inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 38.]
Division 2 — Change from federal to State system
[Heading inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 38.]
In this Division —
declared employee means a person employed by a declared employer;
declared employer means an employer declared not to be a national system employer in regulations under section 80A(2)(a);
federal award means —
(a)a modern award under the FW Act; or
(b)an award under the repealed Workplace Act continued in existence under the FW (Transitional) Act;
federal industrial authority means —
(a)the Australian Industrial Relations Commission under the repealed Workplace Act; or
(b)the FW Commission;
federal industrial instrument means a fair work instrument under the FW Act;
national fair work legislation means —
(a)the FW Act; or
(b)the FW (Transitional) Act;
new State instrument has the meaning given in section 80BB(2);
old federal instrument has the meaning given in section 80BB(1)(b);
relevant day has the meaning given in section 80A(2)(b);
repealed Workplace Act means the Workplace Relations Act 1996 (Commonwealth);
terms includes conditions, restrictions and other provisions.
[Section 80B inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 38.]
80BA.Operation of awards, industrial agreements or orders
(1)The regulations may provide that, on and from the relevant day, an award, industrial agreement or order specified in the regulations applies to the employees of a declared employer specified in the regulations.
(2)If regulations are made under subsection (1), on and from the relevant day the award, industrial agreement or order applies to each of the following —
(a)the declared employer;
(b)the declared employees of the declared employer;
(c)an organisation that is a party to the award or industrial agreement or that is bound by the order.
[Section 80BA inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 38.]
(1)This section applies —
(a)to the extent section 80BA does not provide for a declared employee of a declared employer; and
(b)if, immediately before the relevant day, a federal industrial instrument (the old federal instrument) applies to, or purports to apply to, the declared employee.
(2)On the relevant day, an industrial agreement (the new State instrument) applies to the declared employer and declared employees.
(3)The new State instrument is taken —
(a)to have been registered under this Act on the relevant day; and
(b)except as provided in this section or section 80BC, to have the same terms as the old federal instrument including those terms as added to or modified by any of the following —
(i)terms of a federal award incorporated by the old federal instrument;
(ii)orders of a federal industrial authority;
(iii)another instrument under the national fair work legislation or the repealed Workplace Act;
and
(c)to have a nominal expiry date that is the earlier of the following —
(i)a day that is 2 years after the relevant day;
(ii)the day that, immediately before the relevant day, was the nominal expiry day of the old federal instrument.
(4)This Act applies in relation to the new State instrument subject to any modifications or exclusions prescribed by regulations for this subsection.
(5)The new State instrument applies except as provided in the MCE Act.
[Section 80BB inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 38.]
80BC.Amendment of new State instruments
(1)A declared employer, a declared employee or an organisation may apply to the Commission to amend a new State instrument.
(2)On the application, the Commission may make the amendment if it is satisfied it is fair and reasonable to do so in the circumstances.
(3)The amendment may be provided to take effect —
(a)immediately; or
(b)progressively, in stages specified in the amendment.
[Section 80BC inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 38.]
80BD.Ability to carry over matters
The Commission may, in connection with the operation of this Part, or any matter arising directly or indirectly out of the operation of this Part —
(a)accept, recognise, adopt or rely on any step taken under, or for, the national fair work legislation; and
(b)accept or rely on anything (including in the nature of evidence presented for the purpose of any proceedings) that has been presented, filed or provided under, or for, the national fair work legislation; and
(c)give effect in any other way to any other thing done under, or for, the national fair work legislation.
[Section 80BD inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 38.]
80BE.References in new State instruments to federal industrial authority and General Manager
(1)In this section —
General Manager means the General Manager under the FW Act.
(2)On and from the relevant day, a term of a new State instrument expressed to confer a power or function on a federal industrial authority has effect as if it conferred the power or function on the Commission.
(3)On and from the relevant day, a term of a new State instrument expressed to confer a power or function on the General Manager has effect as if it conferred the power or function on the Registrar.
[Section 80BE inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 38.]
80BF.References in new State instruments to provisions of Commonwealth laws
(1)In this section —
corresponding provision of this Act, to a provision of the FW Act, means —
(a)if paragraph (b) does not apply — a provision of this Act that is of similar effect to the provision of the FW Act; or
(b)a provision of this Act declared by regulations to be a corresponding provision.
(2)On and from the relevant day, a term of a new State instrument expressed to refer to a provision of the FW Act is taken to refer to the corresponding provision of this Act.
[Section 80BF inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 38.]
80BG.References in new State instruments to federal organisations
(1)In this section —
federal counterpart has the meaning given in the FW (Registered Organisations) Act section 9A.
(2)On and from the relevant day, a term of a new State instrument expressed to refer to a federal organisation is taken to refer to an organisation under this Act of which the federal organisation is a federal counterpart.
(3)If the federal organisation is not a federal counterpart of an organisation under this Act, the federal organisation is taken to be an organisation under this Act representing the declared employees of the relevant declared employer in proceedings or other matters arising under this Act.
(4)Subsection (3) ceases to apply to the federal organisation when the new State instrument ceases to apply to the relevant declared employer and declared employees.
[Section 80BG inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 38.]
80BH.Named parties to new State instruments
(1)An organisation of employees, or an industrial association of employees registered under section 67, may apply to the Commission to make an order naming the organisation or association as a party to a new State instrument.
(2)On the application, the Commission must grant the order if, in the opinion of the Commission, the instrument applies to an employee who is eligible to be a member of the organisation or industrial association.
[Section 80BH inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 38.]
80BI.Employment under old federal instrument
(1)Subsection (2) applies in relation to deciding the entitlements of a declared employee under a new State instrument.
(2)Employment of the declared employee with a declared employer before the relevant day that counted under the old federal instrument also counts as employment of the declared employee with the declared employer under the new State instrument.
(3)If, before the relevant day, the declared employee has already had the benefit of an entitlement determined by reference to a period of service, the period of service cannot be counted again under subsection (2) for calculating the declared employee’s entitlements of that type under the new State instrument.
[Section 80BI inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 38.]
80BJ.Leave accrued immediately before relevant day
(1)This section applies to any paid or unpaid leave accrued under an old federal instrument, the national fair work legislation or a law of this State.
(2)Leave accrued immediately before the relevant day by a declared employee to whom a new State instrument applies is taken to have accrued under the new State instrument.
[Section 80BJ inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 38.]
80BK.Leave taken under old federal instrument
(1)A declared employee who was, immediately before the relevant day, taking a period of leave under the old federal instrument or under the FW Act is entitled to continue on that leave under the new State instrument or a law of this State for the remainder of the period.
(2)A declared employee who has, before the relevant day, taken a step under the old federal instrument or the FW Act that the employee is required to take so the employee can, on and from the relevant day, take a period of leave under the old federal instrument or the FW Act, is taken to have taken the step under the new State instrument or a law of this State.
(3)The regulations may deal with other matters relating to how a new State instrument applies to leave that, immediately before the relevant day, is being, or is to be, taken by a declared employee under the old federal instrument or the FW Act.
[Section 80BK inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 38.]
Part IIA — Constituent authorities
[Heading inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47.]
[Division 1 (s. 73A, 80A, 80B) deleted: No. 1 of 1995 s. 10.]
Division 2 — Public service arbitrator and appeal boards
[Heading inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47.]
80C.Terms used and construction and application of Division
(1)For the purposes of this Division, unless the contrary intention appears —
Arbitrator means the Commission constituted by a public service arbitrator appointed under this Division;
Association means the organisation registered as the Civil Service Association of Western Australia Incorporated;
Board means the Commission constituted as a Public Service Appeal Board established under this Division;
employer —
(a)in relation to a government officer who is a public service officer, means the employing authority of that public service officer; and
(aa)in relation to a government officer who is an employee within the meaning of the Health Services Act 2016 section 6, means the employing authority of the employee; and
(b)in relation to any other government officer, means the public authority by whom or by which that government officer is employed;
employing authority means —
(a)in relation to a government officer who is an employee within the meaning of the Health Services Act 2016 section 6, an employing authority within the meaning of section 103 of that Act;
(b)in relation to any other government officer, an employing authority within the meaning of the Public Sector Management Act 1994 section 5;
government officer means —
(a)every public service officer; and
(aa)each member of the Governor’s Establishment within the meaning of the Governor’s Establishment Act 1992; and
(ab)each member of a department of the staff of Parliament referred to in, and each electorate officer within the meaning of, the Parliamentary and Electorate Staff (Employment) Act 1992; and
(b)every other person employed on the salaried staff of a public authority; and
(c)any person not referred to in paragraph (a) or (b) who would have been a government officer within the meaning of section 96 of this Act as enacted before the coming into operation of section 58 of the Acts Amendment and Repeal (Industrial Relations) Act (No. 2) 1984,
but does not include —
(d)any teacher; or
(e)any railway officer as defined in section 80M; or
(f)any member of the academic staff of a post‑secondary education institution;
teacher includes —
(a)any person employed as a member of the teaching staff under section 235(1)(b) of the School Education Act 1999;
(b)any person who is a member of the teaching staff or another person appointed under section 236(2) and who is employed at a community kindergarten registered under Part 5 of the School Education Act 1999,
but does not include any public service officer, whether or not that public service officer holds or acts in a position in respect of which a teaching academic qualification is required.
(2)This Division must be read in conjunction with the Public Sector Management Act 1994 and the Health Services Act 2016.
(3)Sections 80E and 80F do not apply to a government officer if and when the officer occupies —
(a)an office for which the remuneration payable is determined or recommended pursuant to the Salaries and Allowances Act 1975; or
(b)an office for which the remuneration is determined by an Act to be at a fixed rate, or is determined or to be determined by the Governor pursuant to the provisions of any Act.
(4)Where any industrial matter in relation to a government officer or group of government officers is being dealt with under this Act and a question arises between 2 or more organisations as to which of them or whether or not one of them, should be named as a party to an award or order or should become a party to an industrial agreement, regard must be had, when that question is being determined, to the past coverage of such government officers by organisations under awards, orders and industrial agreements and under unregistered industrial agreements that the Commission considers to be relevant.
[Section 80C inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 40 of 1992 s. 9(1); No. 32 of 1994 s. 14; No. 103 of 1994 s. 18; No. 1 of 1995 s. 11; No. 79 of 1995 s. 36; No. 36 of 1999 s. 247; No. 11 of 2016 s. 295(3)-(5); No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and 77(13).]
80D.Public service arbitrators, appointment of etc.
(1)The Chief Commissioner —
(a)must appoint 1 commissioner as a public service arbitrator within the Commission; and
(b)may appoint 1 or more commissioners as additional public service arbitrators within the Commission.
(2)Without limiting subsection (1), the Chief Commissioner may be appointed as a public service arbitrator under that subsection.
[(3)deleted]
(4)An arbitrator holds office for such period not exceeding 2 years as is specified in the instrument of appointment and is eligible for reappointment.
(5)The office of an arbitrator becomes vacant if —
(a)the arbitrator ceases to be a commissioner; or
(b)the appointment of the commissioner as an arbitrator is terminated pursuant to subsection (6).
(6)The Chief Commissioner may at any time terminate the appointment of an arbitrator.
[Section 80D inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 39 of 2018 s. 45; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(8) and 77(3) and (13).]
80E.Jurisdiction of Arbitrator
(1)Except as provided in Part II Divisions 3, 3AA and 3B and subsections (6) and (7), an Arbitrator has exclusive jurisdiction to enquire into and deal with any industrial matter relating to a government officer, a group of government officers or government officers generally.
(2)Without limiting the generality of subsection (1) the jurisdiction conferred by that subsection includes jurisdiction to deal with —
(a)a claim in respect of the salary, range of salary or title allocated to the office occupied by a government officer and, where a range of salary was allocated to the office occupied by the officer, in respect of the particular salary within that range of salary allocated to the officer; and
(b)a claim in respect of a decision of an employer to downgrade any office that is vacant.
(3)An Arbitrator also has the jurisdiction conferred on an Arbitrator as a relevant industrial authority by —
(a)Part VID Division 5 Subdivision 3; and
(b)section 97WI; and
(c)section 97WK.
(4)The jurisdiction referred to in subsection (3) is to be exercised in accordance with the relevant provisions of Part VID, and the provisions of —
(a)subsection (6); and
(b)section 80G,
do not apply to the exercise of any such jurisdiction by an Arbitrator.
(5)Nothing in subsection (1) or (2) affects or interferes with the exercise by an employer in relation to any government officer, or office under the employer’s administration, of any power in relation to any matter within the jurisdiction of an Arbitrator, but anything done by an employer in relation to any such matter is liable to be reviewed, nullified, modified or varied by an Arbitrator in the course of the exercise of the Arbitrator’s jurisdiction in respect of that matter under this Division.
(6)Notwithstanding subsection (1), but subject to subsection (7), an Arbitrator may —
(a)with the consent of the Chief Commissioner refer to the Commission in Court Session for hearing and determination by the Commission in Court Session —
(i)an industrial matter referred to in subsection (1) or any part of that industrial matter; or
(ii)any question of interpretation of the rules of an organisation arising in a matter before the Arbitrator;
and
(b)with the consent of the Chief Commissioner refer to the Full Bench for hearing and determination by the Full Bench any question of law arising in a matter before the Arbitrator, other than a question of interpretation of the rules of an organisation,
and the Commission in Court Session or the Full Bench, as the case may be, may hear and determine the matter, or part of the matter, or question, so referred.
(7)Despite subsections (1) and (6), an Arbitrator does not have jurisdiction to enquire into or deal with, or refer to the Commission in Court Session or the Full Bench the following —
(a)any matter in respect of which a decision is, or may be, made under regulations referred to in the Public Sector Management Act 1994 section 94 or 95A;
(b)any matter in respect of which a procedure referred to in the Public Sector Management Act 1994 section 97(1)(a) is, or may be, prescribed under that Act.
[Section 80E inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 99 of 1990 s. 12; No. 1 of 1995 s. 28; No. 20 of 2002 s. 9; No. 8 of 2014 s. 5; No. 39 of 2018 s. 46; No. 30 of 2021 s. 39, 76(8), 77(13) and 78(7).]
80F.Who may refer matters to Arbitrator
(1)Subject to subsections (2) and (3) an industrial matter may be referred to an Arbitrator under section 80E by an employer, organisation or association or by the Minister.
(2)A claim mentioned in section 80E(2)(a) may be referred to an Arbitrator by the government officer concerned, or by an organisation on the officer’s behalf, or by the officer’s employer.
(3)A claim mentioned in section 80E(2)(b) may be referred to an Arbitrator by an organisation or an employer.
(4)A government officer who is an employee under an employer‑employee agreement may refer to an Arbitrator where an Arbitrator is the relevant industrial authority under Part VID —
(a)any question, dispute or difficulty that an Arbitrator has jurisdiction to determine under section 97WI; and
(b)an allegation referred to in section 97WK(2).
[Section 80F inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 20 of 2002 s. 10; No. 30 of 2021 s. 77(13).]
80G.Part II Div. 2 to 2G, application of
(1)Subject to this Division, the provisions of Part II Divisions 2 to 2G that apply to or in relation to the exercise of the jurisdiction of the Commission constituted by a commissioner apply with such modifications as are prescribed and such other modifications as may be necessary or appropriate, to the exercise by an Arbitrator of the Arbitrator’s jurisdiction under this Act.
(2)For the purposes of subsection (1), section 49 does not apply to a decision of an Arbitrator on a claim mentioned in section 80E(2).
[Section 80G inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 20 of 2002 s. 121(4); No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(1) and (8) and 77(13).]
80H.Public Service Appeal Board, members of etc.
(1)For the purpose of an appeal under section 80I there is established, within and as part of the Commission, a board to be known as a Public Service Appeal Board.
(2)A Board consists of 3 members.
[(3)deleted]
(4)The members of a Board are —
(a)a public service arbitrator, who is the chairperson; and
(b)an employer’s representative appointed by the employer of the appellant; and
(c)an employee’s representative appointed by the relevant organisation.
(5)In subsection (4) relevant organisation means the Association unless the appellant is a member of another organisation in which case it means that organisation.
(6)In this section and section 80J organisation means an organisation of employees registered under Division 4 of Part II, an association of employees registered as an organisation pursuant to the provisions of the FW (Registered Organisations) Act or, in the case of an appeal by a medical practitioner employed in a public hospital, the Western Australian Branch of the Australian Medical Association Incorporated.
(7)In subsection (4) public service arbitrator means a commissioner who is, for the time being, a public service arbitrator appointed under section 80D.
[Section 80H inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No 32 of 1994 s. 14; No. 79 of 1995 s. 67(2); No. 53 of 2011 s. 36; No. 39 of 2018 s. 47; No. 30 of 2021 s. 75(1), 76(3), (4) and (8) and 77(1).]
(1)Subject to the Public Sector Management Act 1994 section 52, the Health Services Act 2016 section 118 and subsection (3) of this section, a Board has jurisdiction to hear and determine —
(a)an appeal by any public service officer against any decision of an employing authority in relation to an interpretation of any provision of the Public Sector Management Act 1994, and any provision of the regulations made under that Act, concerning the conditions of service (other than salaries and allowances) of public service officers;
(b)an appeal by a government officer under the Public Sector Management Act 1994 section 78 against a decision or finding referred to in subsection (1)(b) of that section;
(c)an appeal by a government officer under the Health Services Act 2016 section 172 against a decision or finding referred to in subsection (1) of that section;
(d)an appeal, other than an appeal under the Public Sector Management Act 1994 section 78(1) or the Health Services Act 2016 section 172(2), by a government officer that the government officer be dismissed,
and to adjust all such matters as are referred to in paragraphs (a), (b), (c) and (d).
[(2)deleted]
(3)A Board does not have jurisdiction to hear and determine an appeal by a government officer from a decision made under regulations referred to in the Public Sector Management Act 1994 section 94 or 95A.
[Section 80I inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 32 of 1994 s. 14; No. 1 of 1995 s. 29; No. 39 of 2010 s. 109; No. 8 of 2014 s. 6; No. 11 of 2016 s. 295(6); No. 30 of 2021 s. 40.]
80J.Institution of appeals under s. 80I
An appeal under section 80I —
(a)must be instituted in the prescribed manner and within the prescribed time;
(b)may be instituted by the public service officer or other government officer concerned or by an organisation on the officer’s behalf.
[Section 80J inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 32 of 1994 s. 14; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and 77(13).]
(1)For the purposes of exercising its jurisdiction a Board may sit at any time and place appointed by the chairperson of the Board and may adjourn to any time and place appointed by the chairperson.
(2)The decision of a Board must be given in writing and must be signed and dated at the time it is made by the chairperson of the Board.
(3)The jurisdiction of a Board must be exercised by all the members sitting together and when the members are divided in opinion on a question, the question must be decided according to the decision of the majority of the members.
(4)To the extent to which it is not prescribed a Board may regulate its own procedure.
[Section 80K inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 39 of 2018 s. 48; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and 77(1) and (13).]
80L.Certain provisions of Part II Div. 2 apply
(1)Subject to this Division the provisions of sections 22B, 26(1) and (3), 27, 28, 31(1), (2), (3) and (5), 34(3) and (4) and 36 that apply to and in relation to the exercise of the jurisdiction under this Act of the Commission constituted by a commissioner apply, with such modifications as are prescribed and such other modifications as may be necessary, to the exercise by a Board of its jurisdiction under this Act.
(2)For the purposes of subsection (1) section 31(1) applies as if paragraph (c) were deleted and the following paragraph were substituted —
(c)by a legal practitioner.
[Section 80L inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 20 of 2002 s. 153; No. 39 of 2018 s. 49; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(1) and (8).]
Division 3 — Railways Classification Board
[Heading inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47.]
(1)In this Division unless the contrary intention appears —
Board means the Commission constituted by the Railways Classification Board established under this Division;
head of branch means an officer in control of one of the recognised divisions of the staff of the Public Transport Authority who receives instructions from and communicates with the Public Transport Authority directly;
member means any member of the Board and includes the chairperson;
Public Transport Authority means the Public Transport Authority of Western Australia established by the Public Transport Authority Act 2003 section 5;
railway officer means any specified award employee (as defined in the Government Railways Act 1904 section 73) —
(a)holding or acting in a salaried position; or
(b)receiving a daily rate of pay as a temporary clerk in the service of the Public Transport Authority;
salaried position means a position in the service of the Public Transport Authority to which an annual salary is assigned but does not include —
(a)the position of head of branch or sub‑head of branch; or
(b)a position held by a person engaged in a professional capacity;
sub‑head of branch means an officer in control of some recognised section of a division of the staff of the Public Transport Authority who receives instructions from and communicates with the head of the branch directly;
transport Minister means the Minister responsible for the administration of the Public Transport Authority Act 2003;
Union means the body known as the West Australian Railway Officers Union.
(2)Subject to this Division, the Union is taken to be, and has and enjoys all of the rights, privileges and duties of, an organisation registered under this Act.
(3)Immediately after the coming into operation of section 47 of the Acts Amendment and Repeal (Industrial Relations) Act (No. 2) 1984 the Union must lodge with the Registrar a true copy of its constitution and rules as then in force, certified in writing by its President and Secretary, and those rules are taken to be the registered rules of the Union and must not be altered other than in accordance with this Act.
[Section 80M inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 31 of 2003 s. 147(2) and (5); No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2)‑(4) and (8), 77(1) and (3), 78(3) and (7).]
80N.Railways Classification Board, members of etc.
(1)There is established, within and as part of the Commission, a board to be known as the Railways Classification Board.
(2)Subject to this Act, the Board consists of 3 members, of whom —
(a)one is appointed by the Chief Commissioner from amongst the other commissioners, after consultation with the transport Minister and the Union, and is chairperson of the Board; and
(b)one is a person nominated for appointment by the Public Transport Authority and appointed by the Governor; and
(c)one is a person nominated for appointment by the Union and appointed by the Governor.
(3)Whenever it is necessary for a person to be nominated for appointment to an office referred to in subsection (2)(b) or (c) the Minister must, in writing, request the Public Transport Authority, or the Union, as the case requires, to submit to the Minister, in writing, the name of a person willing to act as a member of the Board.
(4)Where a request under subsection (3) is made to the Union the Electoral Commissioner appointed under the Electoral Act 1907, or some other officer appointed by the Electoral Commissioner in writing, must conduct an election in the prescribed manner amongst the members of the Union for the purposes of determining the name of the person to be nominated by that body for appointment to the office of member, but if, for any reason, a person is not elected for nomination within the period prescribed in that behalf the Union may determine that name in accordance with its rules.
(5)Where the Public Transport Authority or the Union has been requested under subsection (3) to submit the name of a person to the Minister —
(a)if such a name is submitted to the Minister within the prescribed period of the Public Transport Authority or the Union, as the case requires, receiving the request, the person whose name appears on the submission must be appointed to the office of member; and
(b)if default is made within that time in submitting a name to the Minister, the Minister may nominate for appointment to the office of member such person as the Minister thinks fit.
(6)A person who has been dismissed from the service of the Public Transport Authority for misconduct is not eligible for appointment as a member or the deputy of a member of the Board.
[Section 80N inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 31 of 2003 s. 147(3) and (5); No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2), (3) and (8) and 77(1) and (13).]
(1)Subject to this Act —
(a)a person appointed as chairperson or as a member pursuant to section 80N(2)(b) holds office for such period, not exceeding 2 years as is specified in the instrument of appointment and is eligible for reappointment;
(b)a person appointed as a member pursuant to section 80N(2)(c) holds office for a period of 2 years and is eligible for reappointment.
(2)The office of the chairperson becomes vacant if —
(a)the chairperson ceases to be a commissioner; or
(b)the chairperson’s appointment as a member of the Board is terminated pursuant to subsection (3).
(3)The Chief Commissioner may, after consultation with the Union, at any time terminate the appointment of the chairperson as a member of the Board.
(4)The Governor may terminate the appointment of a member referred to in section 80N(2)(b) or (c) for inability, inefficiency or misbehaviour.
(5)The office of a member referred to in section 80N(2)(b) or (c) becomes vacant if —
(a)in the case of a member referred to in section 80N(2)(b), the nomination of the Public Transport Authority of the member is withdrawn; or
(b)the member resigns pursuant to subsection (6); or
(c)the member is, according to the Interpretation Act 1984 section 13D, a bankrupt or a person whose affairs are under insolvency laws; or
(d)the member’s appointment is terminated pursuant to subsection (4); or
(e)the member is dismissed from the service of the Public Transport Authority for misconduct.
(6)A member referred to in section 80N(2)(b) or (c) may resign the member’s office by written notice signed by the member and addressed to the Minister and the resignation takes effect on the day on which it is received by the Minister or on such later day as is specified in the notice.
(7)The Chief Commissioner may, after consultation with the transport Minister and the Union, appoint a commissioner to be the deputy of the chairperson and may at any time terminate that appointment.
(8)The Governor may —
(a)appoint as deputy of a member, other than the chairperson, a person who has been nominated in the manner in which the member was nominated; and
(b)terminate any appointment under paragraph (a) at any time.
(9)A person appointed pursuant to subsection (7) or (8) has all the functions, powers and duties of the member for whom the person is the deputy, in the person’s capacity as a member, in the event of —
(a)that member being unable to attend to the member’s duties under this Division, whether on account of illness or otherwise; or
(b)the office of that member being vacant.
[Section 80O inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 31 of 2003 s. 147(4) and (5); No. 18 of 2009 s. 45; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(8) and 77(1)‑(3) and (13).]
(1)Notwithstanding the expiry of the period of appointment of a person as a member or deputy of a member, the Chief Commissioner or the Governor, as the case may be, may continue the person in office for such period as the Chief Commissioner or the Governor determines in order to enable the Board to complete all matters, proceedings or inquiries that it has entered upon while the person was a member or deputy.
(2)The Chief Commissioner or the Governor, as the case may be, may from time to time extend a period determined by the Chief Commissioner or Governor under subsection (1), notwithstanding the expiry of that period, for such further period or periods as the Chief Commissioner or Governor thinks fit.
[Section 80P inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 77(2), (5) and (13).]
80Q. Validity of acts of Board
An act, proceeding, decision or determination of the Board is not invalid by reason of any defect or irregularity in the election, nomination or appointment of any member or deputy of a member.
[Section 80Q inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47.]
(1)Except as provided in Part II Divisions 3, 3AA and 3B and subsections (2a) and (3), the Board has exclusive jurisdiction to enquire into and deal with any industrial matter relating to a railway officer, a group of railway officers or railway officers generally.
(2)Without limiting the generality of subsection (1), but subject to subsection (2a), the jurisdiction conferred by that subsection includes jurisdiction —
(a)to classify all salaried positions; and
(b)to create classes and to provide the minimum and maximum salaries of all salaried positions in any class; and
(c)to prescribe the method by which railway officers advance from the minimum to the maximum of the salary assigned to their positions, or from class to class; and
(d)to hear and determine any application by any railway officer or class of railway officers in respect of the classification, reclassification, or salary of that railway officer or class of railway officers, or of the relevant position or positions; and
(e)to hear and determine any appeal by the Union in respect of the reclassification of a salaried position by the Public Transport Authority pursuant to section 80U(1); and
(f)to hear and determine any application by the Public Transport Authority in respect of the classification, reclassification or salary of any railway officer or class of railway officers or of the relevant position or positions.
(2a)Where the Westrail Enterprise Bargaining Agreement provides that an industrial matter is to be included in an umbrella enterprise award established in accordance with that Agreement, that industrial matter —
(a)is, for the purposes of enabling such an award to be made by the Commission, taken to be an industrial matter in respect of which the Board does not have jurisdiction; and
(b)ceases to be an industrial matter in respect of which the Board has jurisdiction upon the making by the Commission of such an award including that industrial matter.
(2b)In subsection (2a) Westrail Enterprise Bargaining Agreement means the Westrail Enterprise Bargaining Agreement 1992 registered by the Commission on 18 February 1993, as renewed from time to time, or any Agreement expressed to be made in substitution for that Agreement.
(2c)The Board also has the jurisdiction conferred on it as a relevant industrial authority by —
(a)Part VID Division 5 Subdivision 3; and
(b)section 97WI; and
(c)section 97WK.
(2d)The jurisdiction referred to in subsection (2c) is to be exercised in accordance with the relevant provisions of Part VID, and the provisions of —
(a)subsection (3); and
(b)section 80W,
do not apply to the exercise of any such jurisdiction by the Board.
(3)Notwithstanding subsection (1) the Board may —
(a)with the consent of the Chief Commissioner refer to the Commission in Court Session for hearing and determination by the Commission in Court Session —
(i)an industrial matter referred to in subsection (1) or any part of that industrial matter; or
(ii)any question of interpretation of the rules of an organisation arising in a matter before the Board;
and
(b)with the consent of the Chief Commissioner refer to the Full Bench for hearing and determination by the Full Bench any question of law arising in a matter before the Board, other than a question of interpretation of the rules of an organisation,
and the Commission in Court Session or the Full Bench, as the case may be, may hear and determine the matter, or part of the matter, or question, so referred.
(4)Despite subsections (1) and (3), the Board does not have jurisdiction to enquire into or deal with, or refer to the Commission in Court Session or the Full Bench the following —
(a)any matter in respect of which a decision is, or may be, made under regulations referred to in the Public Sector Management Act 1994 section 94 or 95A;
(b)any matter in respect of which a procedure referred to in the Public Sector Management Act 1994 section 97(1)(a) is, or may be, prescribed under that Act.
[Section 80R inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 99 of 1990 s. 13; No. 1 of 1995 s. 36; No. 20 of 2002 s. 11; No. 31 of 2003 s. 147(5); No. 8 of 2014 s. 7; No. 39 of 2018 s. 50; No. 30 of 2021 s. 41, 76(8), 77(13) and 78(7).]
80S.Who may refer matters to Board
(1)Subject to section 80R(2)(d), (e) and (f) an industrial matter may be referred to the Board by the Union or the Public Transport Authority.
(2)An application referred to in section 80R(2)(d) may be made by the railway officer or officers concerned or by the Union.
(3)A railway officer who is an employee under an employer‑employee agreement may refer to the Board where the Board is the relevant industrial authority under Part VID —
(a)any question, dispute or difficulty that the Board has jurisdiction to determine under section 97WI; and
(b)an allegation referred to in section 97WK(2).
[Section 80S inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 20 of 2002 s. 12; No. 31 of 2003 s. 147(5); No. 30 of 2021 s. 77(13).]
[80T.Deleted: No. 1 of 1995 s. 30.]
80U.Vacant salaried position, reclassification of
(1)Where any salaried position becomes vacant by reason of the retirement, resignation or voluntary transfer of an officer from that position, the Public Transport Authority may reclassify that position.
(2)Notwithstanding that a salaried position has been classified or reclassified by or under a decision or award of the Board, the Public Transport Authority is not regarded as having —
(a)failed to give due effect to that decision; or
(b)failed to comply with the provisions of that award,
by reason only that it has reclassified that position pursuant to subsection (1).
(3)Where the Board is notified by the Public Transport Authority that a salaried position classified under an award of the Board has been reclassified pursuant to subsection (1) then, unless the Board upholds an appeal against that reclassification under section 80R(2)(e), the Board must vary the award in accordance with that reclassification.
[Section 80U inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 31 of 2003 s. 147(5); No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and (8).]
(1)For the purposes of exercising its jurisdiction the Board may sit at any time and place appointed by the chairperson and may adjourn to any time and place appointed by the chairperson.
(2)The jurisdiction of the Board must be exercised by all the members sitting together and when the members are divided in opinion on a question, the question must be decided according to the decision of the majority of the members.
(3)The decision of the Board must be in the form of an award, order, determination or declaration and must be signed and dated at the time it is made by the chairperson.
(4)To the extent to which it is not prescribed the Board may regulate its own procedure.
[Section 80V inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 39 of 2018 s. 51; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and 77(1) and (13).]
80W.Part II Div. 2 to 2G, application of
(1)Subject to this Division, the provisions of Part II Divisions 2 to 2G that apply to and in relation to the exercise of the jurisdiction under this Act of the Commission constituted by a commissioner apply, with such modifications as are prescribed and such other modifications as may be necessary or appropriate, to the exercise by the Board of its jurisdiction under this Act.
(2)For the purposes of subsection (1), section 49 does not apply to a decision of the Board referred to in section 80R(2).
[Section 80W inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 79 of 1995 s. 14; No. 20 of 2002 s. 121(5); No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(1).]
[Division 4 (s. 80X‑80Z, 80ZA‑80ZD) deleted: No. 1 of 1995 s. 31.]
[Heading inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47.]
80ZE.Minister may refer matter to Commission for enquiry
(1)The Minister may refer to the Commission for enquiry and report under this section any matter that, in the opinion of the Minister, affects or may affect industrial relations and the Commission must enquire into that matter and report to the Minister.
(2)Subsection (1) does not apply to an industrial matter or a matter that is otherwise within the jurisdiction of the Commission under this Act.
[Section 80ZE inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 15 of 1993 s. 22; Gazette 15 Aug 2003 p. 3686; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and 78(7).]
Part IIC — Arrangements with other industrial authorities
[Heading inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47.]
In this Part —
FW Commission includes a member of the FW Commission.
[Section 80ZF inserted: No. 39 of 2018 s. 52; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 75(1).]
80ZG.Joint proceedings of Commission and FW Commission
(1)If in the opinion of the Chief Commissioner it is appropriate to do so, the Commission may, notwithstanding anything in this Act, exercise, in the presence of —
(a)the FW Commission; and
(b)the parties to an industrial dispute in relation to which the FW Commission is exercising power; and
(c)any witness summoned by the FW Commission,
any of the powers of the Commission that are exercisable by it in relation to an industrial matter.
(2)Where the Commission is exercising, as provided by subsection (1), in relation to an industrial matter, any of the powers of the Commission that are exercisable by it, it may, without limiting the generality of section 26(1)(a) and (b), have regard to any evidence given, in its presence and in the presence of the parties to the industrial matter, to the FW Commission, being evidence that is relevant to the exercise of those powers.
(3)Nothing in this section is taken to prevent the Commission from exercising powers in relation to an industrial matter in the presence of any person other than the FW Commission or a person referred to in subsection (1)(b) or (c).
[Section 80ZG inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 53 of 2011 s. 39; No. 39 of 2018 s. 53; No. 30 of 2021 s. 75(1) and 76(3).]
80ZH.Referring matters to FW Commission for determination under this Act
(1)The Chief Commissioner may, if it is appropriate to do so, request the President of the FW Commission to nominate a member of the FW Commission to deal with the whole or any part of an industrial matter which has arisen or is threatened or impending.
(2)Where, in accordance with a request under subsection (1), the President of the FW Commission nominates a member of the FW Commission, the Chief Commissioner may refer the whole or part of the industrial matter in respect of which the request was made to the member to be inquired into and to be dealt with under this Act by conciliation, by arbitration or by conciliation and, if necessary, by arbitration, and may, at any time before a decision is made by the member in relation to the industrial matter, revoke the reference.
(3)For the purposes of inquiring into and dealing with the whole or part of an industrial matter that has been referred to the member of the FW Commission under subsection (2), the member may exercise all the powers of the Commission under this Act that are exercisable by a commissioner or by a constituent authority and in the exercise of those powers is taken to be the Commission.
(4)Without limiting subsection (3), a decision made by a member of the FW Commission in relation to an industrial matter referred to the member under subsection (2) is, for the purposes of this Act, taken to be an award, order or declaration as the case may require, made by the Commission under this Act.
[Section 80ZH inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 53 of 2011 s. 39; No. 39 of 2018 s. 54; No. 30 of 2021 s. 75(1), 76(3) and (7), 77(13), 78(3) and (6).]
80ZI.Conferences with other industrial authorities
(1)Where it appears to the Chief Commissioner to be desirable, in relation to a matter falling within the jurisdiction of the Commission, that a conference be held with a corresponding authority, the Chief Commissioner may, if that authority is willing, confer with that authority, or arrange for another commissioner to confer with that authority, with a view to securing coordination between any decision made or to be made under this Act and any decision made or to be made by that authority.
(2)Where it appears to the Chief Commissioner to be desirable, the Chief Commissioner may confer with the FW Commission in relation to the exercise, or the proposed exercise, of the powers of the Commission under section 80ZG.
(3)In subsection (1) corresponding authority means the FW Commission or any board or court of conciliation or arbitration or other tribunal, body or persons having authority under the laws of another State or a Territory to exercise any power of conciliation or arbitration with reference to industrial relations, or any special board constituted under any law of another State or a Territory relating to factories, or any other board, court, tribunal or body of another State or Territory prescribed for the purposes of this section.
[Section 80ZI inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 53 of 2011 s. 39; No. 39 of 2018 s. 55; No. 30 of 2021 s. 75(1) and 78(7).]
80ZJ.Commission may exercise powers conferred by FW Act or prescribed enactments
(1)Subject to this Act the Commission may exercise the powers conferred on it by or under such of the provisions as may be prescribed of the FW Act or of any other prescribed enactment.
(2)A decision made by the Commission in exercise of the powers referred to in subsection (1) is, for the purposes of this Act, taken not to have been made by the Commission under this Act.
[Section 80ZJ inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 47; amended: No. 53 of 2011 s. 37; No. 30 of 2021 s. 75(1), 76(7) and 78(6).]
Part III — Enforcement of Act, awards, industrial agreements and orders
[Heading amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 48.]
Division 1 — Industrial magistrate’s court
[Heading inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 42.]
81.Industrial magistrate’s courts established
(1)The Governor may by proclamation establish an industrial magistrate’s court at any place within the State.
(2)An industrial magistrate’s court is a court of record and must have an official seal of which judicial notice must be taken.
(3)The Governor may by proclamation disestablish an industrial magistrate’s court.
(4)When an industrial magistrate’s court is disestablished, all proceedings pending in the industrial magistrate’s court and all records of the industrial magistrate’s court must be transferred to such other industrial magistrate’s court as the Governor in the relevant proclamation referred to in subsection (3) directs.
[Section 81 inserted: No. 44 of 1991 s. 6; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
81A.Jurisdiction under this Act of industrial magistrate’s court
An industrial magistrate’s court has the jurisdiction conferred on it by sections 77, 80(1) and (2), 83, 83A, 83B, 83D, 83E, 96J, 97V(3), 97VJ(3), 97YC, 97YG, 110, 111 and 112.
[Section 81A inserted: No. 79 of 1995 s. 19; amended: No. 3 of 1997 s. 8, 18, and 21(1); No. 20 of 2002 s. 13, 160(1), 193(3) and 195(2).]
81AA.Jurisdiction under other Acts of industrial magistrate’s court
In addition to its jurisdiction under this Act, an industrial magistrate’s court has the jurisdiction conferred on it by the following —
(a)the Construction Industry Portable Paid Long Service Leave Act 1985 section 53;
(ba)the LSL Act Part IV;
[(bb)deleted]
(bc)section 196(2) of the Children and Community Services Act 2004.
[(b)deleted]
[Section 81AA inserted: No. 15 of 1993 s. 24; amended: No. 79 of 1995 s. 20; No. 20 of 2002 s. 113(2) and 182; No. 34 of 2004 s. 251; No. 36 of 2006 s. 68; No. 53 of 2011 s. 29 and 42; No. 30 of 2021 s. 75(1).]
81B.Industrial magistrate’s courts, constitution of
(1)An industrial magistrate’s court is constituted by an industrial magistrate.
(2)The Governor may, on the recommendation of the Chief Magistrate, appoint a person holding office as a magistrate to be an industrial magistrate.
(2A)The Governor may appoint a commissioner who meets the qualifications referred to in the Magistrates Court Act 2004 Schedule 1 clause 2 (a qualified commissioner) to be an industrial magistrate.
(3)An industrial magistrate ceases to hold office as such when the industrial magistrate —
(a)ceases to be a magistrate or commissioner; or
(b)in the case of a person appointed under subsection (2), resigns from office as industrial magistrate by writing delivered to the Governor.
(4)When an industrial magistrate is, or is expected to be, for any reason unable to perform the functions of office, the Governor may appoint a person holding office as a magistrate or a qualified commissioner to act in the office of the industrial magistrate for the period, or the remainder of the period, as the case requires, during which the industrial magistrate is, or is expected to be, so unable.
(4A)Subsections (2) and (2A) apply, with the necessary modifications, to an appointment of an acting industrial magistrate.
(5)If an industrial magistrate’s court constituted by an industrial magistrate or acting industrial magistrate has not completed the hearing and determination of any application when the magistrate ceases to be an industrial magistrate or acting industrial magistrate, as the case requires, the magistrate is, despite the cessation, taken to continue to hold office as an industrial magistrate or acting industrial magistrate until that hearing and determination are completed.
(6)In this section —
Chief Magistrate means the Chief Magistrate of the Magistrates Court.
[Section 81B inserted: No. 44 of 1991 s. 6; amended: No. 59 of 2004 s. 112; No. 39 of 2018 s. 56; No. 30 of 2021 s. 43, 76(3) and (8), 77(13) and 78(7).]
81C.Sittings of industrial magistrate’s courts
(1)Notwithstanding anything in section 81(1), an industrial magistrate’s court may sit and act at any time and place.
(2)Notice of the time when an industrial magistrate’s court will sit must be posted in a public place at —
(a)the place referred to in section 81(1); and
(b)if the place referred to in section 81(1) is not the place where the industrial magistrate’s court will be sitting at the time, the place where the industrial magistrate’s court will be sitting at that time.
[Section 81C inserted: No. 44 of 1991 s. 6; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
81CA.Procedure etc. of industrial magistrate’s courts
(1)In this section —
general jurisdiction means the jurisdiction of an industrial magistrate’s court under —
(a)section 77, 80(1) and (2), 83(1) to (7), 83A, 83B(1) to (9), 83E(1) to (8), 96J, 97V(3), 97VJ(3), 97YC, 97YG, 110, 111 or 112; or
(b)the LSL Act Part IV; or
(c)the Construction Industry Portable Paid Long Service Leave Act 1985 section 53;
prosecution jurisdiction means the jurisdiction of an industrial magistrate’s court under —
(a)section 83D; or
[(b), (c)deleted]
(d)section 196(2) of the Children and Community Services Act 2004.
[(2)-(4)deleted]
(5)When exercising prosecution jurisdiction an industrial magistrate’s court constitutes a court of summary jurisdiction and the Criminal Procedure Act 2004 applies.
[(6), (7)deleted]
(7a)Sections 15, 16, 35 and 36 and Part 3 Division 2 of the Magistrates Court Act 2004 apply to and in relation to an industrial magistrate’s court and its officers in the same way as they apply to and in relation to the Magistrates Court and its officers.
(8)In the absence of evidence to the contrary, anything done by an industrial magistrate’s court is taken to have been done within its jurisdiction.
[Section 81CA inserted: No. 79 of 1995 s. 21; amended: No. 3 of 1997 s. 8, 18 and 21(2); No. 20 of 2002 s. 14, 113(3), 160(2), 182, 193(4) and 195(3) and (4); No. 34 of 2004 s. 251; No. 59 of 2004 s. 112; No. 84 of 2004 s. 78; No. 36 of 2006 s. 69; No. 5 of 2008 s. 61; No. 53 of 2011 s. 30; No. 30 of 2021 s. 44, 75(1) and 76(3).]
81CB.Industrial magistrate’s court judgments, enforcement of
(1)In this section —
general jurisdiction has the meaning given to that term by section 81CA;
judgment includes an order, direction or decision.
(2)A person to whom money is to be paid under a judgment of an industrial magistrate’s court made in the exercise of general jurisdiction may enforce it by lodging a copy of it, certified by a clerk of the court, and an affidavit stating to what extent it has not been complied with, with a court of competent jurisdiction.
(3)If, or to the extent that, a judgment of an industrial magistrate’s court made in the exercise of general jurisdiction does not require the payment of money, a person entitled to the benefit of the judgment may enforce it by lodging a copy of it, certified by a clerk of the court, and an affidavit stating to what extent it has not been complied with, with the Magistrates Court.
(4)A judgment that is lodged with a court under subsection (2) or (3) is to be taken to be a judgment of that court and may be enforced accordingly.
[Section 81CB inserted: No. 5 of 2008 s. 62.]
81D. Clerks of industrial magistrate’s courts
(1)Each industrial magistrate’s court must have a clerk, who is an officer of the Public Service.
(2)An industrial magistrate may perform any function of a clerk of the industrial magistrate’s court constituted by the industrial magistrate.
(3)For the purposes of prosecution jurisdiction, the clerk of an industrial magistrate’s court has in relation to that court like powers to those that a registrar of the Magistrates Court has for the purposes of the criminal jurisdiction of the Magistrates Court under the Criminal Procedure Act 2004.
(4)For the purposes of general jurisdiction, the clerk of an industrial magistrate’s court has like powers to those that a registrar of the Magistrates Court has for the purposes of the civil jurisdiction of the Magistrates Court under the Magistrates Court (Civil Proceedings) Act 2004.
[Section 81D inserted: No. 44 of 1991 s. 6; amended: No. 15 of 1993 s. 25; No. 79 of 1995 s. 22; No. 59 of 2004 s. 109; No. 84 of 2004 s. 78; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2) and (3).]
81E.Representation of parties in industrial magistrate’s court
In proceedings before an industrial magistrate’s court a party may —
(a)appear in person; or
(b)be represented by an agent; or
(c)be represented by a legal practitioner.
[Section 81E inserted: No. 79 of 1995 s. 15.]
81F.Industrial magistrate’s court records, access to
(1)In respect of an industrial magistrate’s court’s records of proceedings under its prosecution jurisdiction (as defined in section 81CA), section 33 of the Magistrates Court Act 2004, with any necessary changes, applies.
(2)In respect of an industrial magistrate’s court’s records of proceedings under its general jurisdiction (as defined in section 81CA), subsections (3) to (9) apply.
(3)A party to the proceedings may, on request, inspect or obtain a copy of any document that is part of the court’s record of those proceedings.
(4)A person who is not a party to the proceedings may, with the leave of the court, inspect or obtain a copy of any document that is part of the court’s record of the proceedings.
(5)Any person may, with the leave of the court, inspect or obtain a copy of any thing (other than a document) received by the court in the proceedings on which information is recorded or stored, such as a photograph, tape or disc.
(6)Any person may, with the leave of the court, listen to, view or obtain a copy of a recording of the proceedings.
(7)When giving leave under subsection (4), (5) or (6) the court may impose conditions on the person’s access to information, including a condition prohibiting or limiting the publication or use of the information.
(8)A decision by the court under subsection (4), (5), (6) or (7) is administrative and is final and not subject to any form of review.
(9)If under this section a document may be supplied to a person it may, at the request of the person, be supplied in an electronic form.
(10)The regulations may prescribe fees to be paid for inspecting, obtaining a copy of, listening to or viewing information in relation to proceedings in both the general jurisdiction and the prosecution jurisdiction of an industrial magistrate’s court.
[Section 81F inserted: No. 59 of 2004 s. 110.]
81G.Industrial inspectors may assist industrial magistrate’s court
(1)An industrial inspector may, with the leave of the industrial magistrate’s court, assist the court.
(2)The industrial magistrate’s court may grant the leave in respect of —
(a)proceedings that, in the opinion of the court, have significant implications for the administration of this Act, the LSL Act or the MCE Act; or
(b)proceedings that involve special circumstances that satisfy the court that it would be in the public interest for the industrial inspector to assist the court.
[Section 81G inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 45.]
Division 2 — Enforcement generally
[Heading inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 46.]
(1)The Full Bench has jurisdiction to hear and determine any application made to it under section 84A.
(2)An application for the enforcement of a provision of this Act or of a direction, order or declaration made or given under section 32, 44(6) or 66 must not be made otherwise than to the Full Bench.
(3)Subsection (2) does not apply to the enforcement of —
(a)a civil penalty provision; or
(b)a provision of this Act, if a contravention of or failure to comply with the provision constitutes an offence against this Act.
[Section 82 inserted: No. 44 of 1991 s. 6; amended: No. 20 of 2002 s. 154; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
82A.Time limit for certain applications
An application under section 77, 83, 83B, 83E or 84A must be made within 6 years from the time of the alleged contravention or failure to comply.
[Section 82A inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 50; amended: No. 79 of 1995 s. 23; No. 20 of 2002 s. 160(3); No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
(1A)In this section —
contravene, in relation to an entitlement provision, includes fail to comply with that provision.
(1)Subject to this Act, if a person contravenes an entitlement provision, any of the following may apply in the prescribed manner to an industrial magistrate’s court for the enforcement of the provision —
(a)the Registrar or a deputy registrar;
(b)an industrial inspector;
(c)in the case of an award or industrial agreement, any organisation or association named as a party to it;
(d)in the case of an award, industrial agreement or order, an employer bound by it;
(e)a person —
(i)who is a party to the award, agreement or order or to whom the award, agreement or order applies; or
(ii)to whom the entitlement provision applies under the LSL Act or MCE Act;
(f)if an employee under an employer‑employee agreement is a represented person, a representative acting on the employee’s behalf.
(2)A person who is involved in a contravention of an entitlement provision is taken to contravene that provision.
(2A)A person is involved in a contravention of an entitlement provision if, and only if, the person —
(a)aids, abets, counsels or procures the contravention; or
(b)induces the contravention, whether by threats or promises or otherwise; or
(c)is in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or
(d)conspires with others to effect the contravention.
(3)An application for the enforcement of an entitlement provision must not be made otherwise than under subsection (1).
(4)On the hearing of an application under subsection (1) the industrial magistrate’s court may, by order —
(a)if the contravention is proved —
(i)issue a caution; or
(ii)impose a pecuniary penalty in accordance with subsection (4A);
or
(b)dismiss the application.
(4A)The pecuniary penalty may be an amount not exceeding —
(a)in the case of a body corporate —
(i)if the contravention is a serious contravention — $650 000; or
(ii)if the contravention is not a serious contravention — $65 000;
and
(b)in the case of an individual —
(i)if the contravention is a serious contravention — $130 000; or
(ii)if the contravention is not a serious contravention — $13 000.
(5)If a contravention of an entitlement provision is proved against a person as mentioned in subsection (4) the industrial magistrate’s court may, in addition to imposing a penalty under that subsection, make an order against the person for the purpose of preventing any further contravention of the provision.
(6)An order under subsection (5) —
(a)may be made subject to any terms and conditions the court thinks appropriate; and
(b)may be revoked at any time.
(7)An interim order may be made under subsection (5) pending final determination of an application under subsection (1).
(8)A person must comply with an order made against the person under subsection (5).
Penalty for this subsection:
(a)a fine of $13 000;
(b)a daily penalty of a fine of $1 000 for each day or part of a day during which the offence continues.
(9)A contravention of an entitlement provision is not an offence and section 83E(8) applies to the contravention as if it were a contravention of a civil penalty provision.
[Section 83 inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 155(1); amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 47, 76(2) and 77(7) and (11).]
83A.Underpayment of employee, orders to remedy
(1)Where in any proceedings brought under section 83(1) against a person it appears to the industrial magistrate’s court that an employee has not been paid the amount which the employee was entitled to be paid under an entitlement provision, the industrial magistrate’s court must, subject to subsection (2), order that person to pay to that employee the amount by which the employee has been underpaid.
(2)An order may only be made under subsection (1) —
(a)in respect of any amount relating to a period not being more than 6 years prior to the commencement of the proceedings; or
(b)if the person concerned appears to the industrial magistrate’s court, or has been found under section 83E, to have contravened section 102(1)(a) or (b) by reason of having failed —
(i)to produce or exhibit a record relevant to the proceedings; or
(ii)to allow such a record to be examined; or
(iii)to answer a question relevant to the proceedings truthfully to the best of the person’s knowledge, information and belief, as the case requires,
in respect of any amount relating to a period not being more than 6 years prior to that failure.
(3)When an order is made under subsection (1), the amount stated in the order is taken to be a penalty imposed under this Act and may be recovered accordingly, but on recovery must be paid as stated in the order under section 83F.
(4)Nothing in this section limits the operation of section 83.
[Section 83A inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 155(1); amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 48 and 76(2) and (3).]
83B.Unfair dismissal, enforcing s. 23A order as to
(1)Where an employer contravenes or fails to comply with an order made under section 23A any of the following may apply in the prescribed manner to an industrial magistrate’s court for the enforcement of the order —
(a)the Registrar or a deputy registrar; and
(b)an industrial inspector; and
(c)an organisation of employees in which the employee in relation to whom the order is made is eligible to be enrolled as a member or an association that represents such an organisation; and
(d)the employee in relation to whom the order is made.
(2)No fee is payable for the filing of an application under subsection (1).
(3)On an application under subsection (1) in respect of a contravention of or failure to comply with an order under section 23A(3) or (4), the industrial magistrate’s court may —
(a)if the contravention or failure to comply is proved, make an order for whichever of the following type of remedy was requested in the application —
(i)an order that the employer do any specified thing, or cease any specified activity, for the purpose of preventing any further contravention or failure to comply with the order;
(ii)an order revoking the order, and any associated orders, made under section 23A and, subject to subsection (7), ordering the employer to pay to the employee an amount decided by the industrial magistrate’s court;
or
(b)dismiss the application.
(4)On an application under subsection (1) in respect of a contravention of or failure to comply with an order under section 23A(5), (6) or (12), the industrial magistrate’s court may —
(a)if the contravention or failure to comply is proved, order the person to do any specified thing, or to cease any specified activity, for the purpose of preventing any further contravention or failure to comply with the order; or
(b)dismiss the application.
(5)The industrial magistrate’s court may, in addition to making an order under subsection (3)(a) or (4)(a) —
(a)issue a caution or impose such penalty as the industrial magistrate’s court thinks just but not exceeding $13 000; and
(b)in the case of an order under subsection (3)(a), order the employer to pay to the employee, in addition to any remuneration or amount ordered to be paid, the remuneration lost, or likely to have been lost, by the employee because of the contravention of or failure to comply with the order under section 23A; and
(c)make any ancillary or incidental order that the court thinks necessary for giving effect to any order made under this section.
(6)An order under subsection (3)(a) or (4)(a) —
(a)must, unless it has immediate effect, specify a time within which the order must be obeyed (which time may be extended by the court); and
(b)may be made subject to any terms and conditions the court thinks appropriate.
(7)The amount ordered to be paid under subsection (3)(a)(ii) —
(a)is not to be less than 6 months’ remuneration of the employee in relation to whom the order is made; and
(b)is not to exceed 12 months’ remuneration of the employee in relation to whom the order is made.
(8)For the purposes of subsection (7) the industrial magistrate’s court may calculate the amount on the basis of an average rate received by the employee during any relevant period of employment.
(9)In deciding an amount for the purposes of making an order under subsection (3)(a)(ii), the industrial magistrate’s court is to have regard to —
(a)the efforts (if any) of the employer and employee to mitigate the loss suffered by the former employee as a result of the dismissal; and
(b)any redress the employee has obtained under another enactment where the evidence necessary to establish the claim for that redress was also the evidence necessary to establish the claim before the Commission under section 23A; and
(c)any other matter that the court considers relevant.
(10)A person must comply with an order made against that person under subsection (3)(a) or (4)(a).
Penalty for this subsection:
(a)a fine of $13 000;
(b)a daily penalty of a fine of $1 000 for each day or part of a day during which the offence continues.
[Section 83B inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 155(1); amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 49 and 76(2).]
83C.Costs of enforcement orders under s. 83, 83A and 83B
(1)Subject to subsection (2), an order under section 83, 83A or 83B may be made in any case with or without costs, but in no case can any costs be given against the Registrar, a deputy registrar, or an industrial inspector.
(2)In proceedings under section 83 or 83B costs must not be given to any party to the proceedings for the services of a legal practitioner or agent of that party unless —
(a)the industrial magistrate’s court finds that the other party has committed a serious contravention; or
(b)in the opinion of the industrial magistrate’s court, the proceedings have been frivolously or vexatiously instituted or defended, as the case requires, by the other party.
[Section 83C inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 155(1); amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 50 and 76(6).]
83D.Offences under this Act, jurisdiction as to
(1)An industrial magistrate’s court has jurisdiction to hear and determine any charge of an offence under this Act other than an offence under section 80(3).
(2)A determination of an industrial magistrate’s court made in the exercise of the jurisdiction conferred by subsection (1) cannot be appealed under the Criminal Appeals Act 2004.
(3)Without limiting section 84 or section 19(1) of the Children’s Court of Western Australia Act 1988, the jurisdiction referred to in subsection (1) cannot be exercised by any other court.
[Section 83D inserted as section 83A: No. 79 of 1995 s. 25; renumbered as section 83D: No. 20 of 2002 s. 156; amended: No. 59 of 2004 s. 112; No. 84 of 2004 s. 78 and 80; No. 5 of 2008 s. 63; No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(5).]
83E.Civil penalty provision, proceedings for contravening
(1)If a person contravenes a civil penalty provision, the industrial magistrate’s court may, on an application to the court, make an order imposing a pecuniary penalty on the person, not exceeding —
(a)in the case of a body corporate —
(i)if the contravention is a serious contravention — $650 000; or
(ii)if the contravention is not a serious contravention — $65 000;
(b)in the case of an individual —
(i)if the contravention is a serious contravention — $130 000; or
(ii)if the contravention is not a serious contravention — $13 000.
(1A)A person who is involved in a contravention of a civil penalty provision is taken to contravene that provision.
(1B)A person is involved in a contravention of a civil penalty provision if, and only if, the person —
(a)aids, abets, counsels or procures the contravention; or
(b)induces the contravention, whether by threats or promises or otherwise; or
(c)is in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or
(d)conspires with others to effect the contravention.
(2)Subject to subsection (3), if a person contravenes a civil penalty provision an industrial magistrate’s court may, instead of or in addition to making an order under subsection (1), make an order against the person for the purpose of preventing any further contravention of that provision.
(3)In the case of a contravention of section 49D(1) or (8) or section 49DA(1) or (3), or the LSL Act section 26(1) or (2), the court is not to make an order under subsection (2) instead of making an order under subsection (1) but may make an order under subsection (2) in addition to making an order under subsection (1).
(4)An order under subsection (2) —
(a)may be subject to any terms and conditions the court thinks appropriate; and
(b)may be revoked at any time.
(5)An interim order may be made under subsection (2) pending final determination of an application under this section.
(6)Except as provided in subsections (6a) and (7A), an application for an order under this section may be made by —
(a)a person directly affected by the contravention or, if that person is a represented person, the person’s representative; or
(b)an organisation or association of which a person who comes within paragraph (a) is a member; or
(c)the Registrar or a deputy registrar; or
(d)an industrial inspector.
(6a)Subsection (6)(c) does not apply in the case of a contravention of the MCE Act section 8(3) or the LSL Act section 7I(2), 26(1) or (2) or 26A(1).
(7A)In the case of a contravention of a provision under the Construction Industry Portable Paid Long Service Leave Act 1985 that is a civil penalty provision —
(a)subsection (6) does not apply; and
(b)an application for an order under this section may be made, with the written consent of the Construction Industry Long Service Leave Payments Board established under section 5 of that Act, by an officer of the Board.
(7)An application under subsection (6) or (7A)(b) must be made in accordance with regulations made by the Governor.
(8)The standard of proof to be applied in determining whether there has been a contravention of a civil penalty provision is the standard observed in civil proceedings.
(9)A person must comply with an order made against the person under subsection (2).
Penalty for this subsection:
(a)a fine of $13 000;
(b)a daily penalty of a fine of $1 000 for each day or part of a day during which the offence continues.
(10)Where, on an application under subsection (6), the industrial magistrate’s court does not make an order under subsection (1) or (2), the court may, by order, dismiss the application.
(11)An order under subsection (1), (2) or (10) may be made in any case with or without costs, but in no case can any costs be given against the Registrar, the deputy registrar, or an industrial inspector.
(12)In proceedings under this section costs must not be given to any party to the proceedings for the services of a legal practitioner or agent of that party unless —
(a)the industrial magistrate’s court finds that the other party has committed a serious contravention; or
(b)in the opinion of the industrial magistrate’s court, the proceedings have been frivolously or vexatiously instituted or defended, as the case requires, by the other party.
[Section 83E inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 157; amended: No. 36 of 2006 s. 70; No. 53 of 2011 s. 31; No. 30 of 2021 s. 51, 76(6) and 77(9) and (11).]
83EA.Serious contravention of entitlement provision or civil penalty provision
(1)In this section —
contravention means a contravention of or failure to comply with —
(a)a civil penalty provision; or
(b)an entitlement provision.
(2)A contravention by a person is a serious contravention if —
(a)the person knowingly commits the contravention; and
(b)the person’s conduct constituting the contravention is part of a systematic pattern of conduct relating to 1 or more other persons.
(3)For the purposes of subsection (2), a body corporate knowingly commits a contravention if the body corporate expressly, tacitly or impliedly authorises the contravention.
(4)In determining whether the person’s conduct constituting the contravention was part of a systematic pattern of conduct, the industrial magistrate’s court may have regard to all or any of the following —
(a)the number of contraventions (the relevant contraventions) committed by the person;
(b)the period over which the relevant contraventions were committed;
(c)the number of other persons affected by the relevant contraventions;
(d)the person’s response, or failure to respond, to any complaints made about the relevant contraventions;
(e)unless the provision contravened is a record‑related civil penalty provision — whether the person also failed to comply with a record‑related civil penalty provision relating to the conduct constituting the relevant contraventions.
(5)Subsection (4) does not limit the matters to which the industrial magistrate’s court may have regard.
(6)A person (the involved person) who is involved in a contravention by another person (the principal) commits a serious contravention only if —
(a)the principal’s contravention is a serious contravention; and
(b)the involved person knows that the principal’s contravention is a serious contravention.
(7)Subsection (8) applies in proceedings for an order in relation to a serious contravention.
(8)The industrial magistrate’s court may, instead of imposing a pecuniary penalty on a person for the serious contravention, impose a pecuniary penalty on the person for the contravention if the court —
(a)is not satisfied that the person has committed a serious contravention; but
(b)is satisfied that the person has committed a contravention.
[Section 83EA inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 52.]
83EB.Employer to have burden of disproving certain allegations by applicant under s. 83
(1)In proceedings under section 83, the employer has the burden of disproving an allegation by an applicant in relation to a matter if the employer —
(a)was required under this Act or the LSL Act to —
(i)make or keep a record in relation to the matter; or
(ii)give a pay slip in relation to the matter; or
(iii)make available for inspection a record in relation to the matter;
and
(b)failed to comply with the requirement.
(2)Subsection (1) does not apply if the employer provides a reasonable excuse for the failure to comply with the requirement.
[Section 83EB inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 52.]
83F.Costs and penalties, payment of
(1)Where the industrial magistrate’s court, by an order made under section 83, 83A, 83B or 83E, imposes a penalty or costs the industrial magistrate’s court must state in the order —
(a)the name of the person liable to pay the penalty or costs; and
(b)the name of the person to whom the penalty is, or costs are, payable.
(2)An industrial magistrate’s court imposing a penalty by order under section 83, 83A, 83B or 83E may order that the amount of the penalty, or part of that amount, be paid to —
(a)a person directly affected by the conduct to which the contravention relates; or
(b)the applicant; or
(c)the Treasurer.
(3)In making an order for payment to a person referred to in subsection (2)(a) the court must take into account any other compensation that the person has received or is likely to receive in respect of the conduct concerned.
[Section 83F inserted: No. 20 of 2002 s. 157; amended: No. 30 of 2021 s. 76(2).]
84.Appeal from industrial magistrate’s court to Full Bench
(1)In this section decision includes a penalty, order, order of dismissal, and any other determination of an industrial magistrate’s court, but does not include a decision made by such a court in the exercise of the jurisdiction conferred on it by section 96J.
(2)Subject to this section, an appeal lies to the Full Bench in the manner prescribed from any decision of an industrial magistrate’s court.
(3)An appeal under this section must be instituted within 21 days from the date of the decision against which the appeal is brought and may be instituted by any party to the proceedings in which the decision was made.
(4)On the hearing of the appeal the Full Bench —
(a)may confirm, reverse, vary, amend, rescind, set aside, or quash the decision the subject of the appeal; and
(b)may remit the matter to the industrial magistrate’s court or to another industrial magistrate’s court for further hearing and determination according to law; and
(c)subject to subsection (5), may make such order as to costs as the Full Bench considers appropriate.
(5)In proceedings under this section costs must not be given to any party to the proceedings for the services of a legal practitioner or agent of that party except —
(a)in respect of an appeal from proceedings under section 83 or 83E — to the party that was the applicant in those proceedings, if the Full Bench finds, or upholds a finding, that the other party has committed a serious contravention; or
(b)if, in the opinion of the Full Bench, the proceedings have been frivolously or vexatiously instituted or defended, as the case requires, by the other party.
(6)At any time after an appeal to the Full Bench has been instituted under this section, a party to the proceedings may apply to the Commission for an order that the operation of the decision appealed against be stayed, wholly or in part, pending the hearing and determination of the appeal.
(7)For the purposes of hearing and determining an application under subsection (6) for an order in respect of a decision, the Commission must be constituted by the presiding commissioner of the Full Bench allocated the appeal against the decision.
[Section 84 amended: No. 94 of 1984 s. 66; No. 44 of 1991 s. 8; No. 15 of 1993 s. 26; No. 20 of 2002 s. 113(4); No. 30 of 2021 s. 53, 76(2) and 78(7).]
84AA.Illegal contracts of employment may be treated as valid
(1)In this section —
contravention means a contravention of or failure to comply with —
(a)a civil penalty provision; or
(b)an entitlement provision.
(2)If in any proceedings under section 83 or 83E the industrial magistrate’s court finds that an employee was employed or engaged under an illegal contract at the time a contravention occurred, the court may nonetheless deal with the matter as if the contract was valid.
[Section 84AA inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 54.]
84A.Certain contraventions of Act, enforcement of before Full Bench
(1)Subject to this section, if a person contravenes or fails to comply with —
(a)any provision of this Act (other than section 42B(1), 44(3) or 74) or an order or direction made or given under section 66 —
(i)the Minister; or
(ii)the Registrar or a deputy registrar; or
(iii)an industrial inspector; or
(iv)any organisation, association or employer with a sufficient interest in the matter;
or
(b)section 44(3) or a direction, order or declaration given or made under section 32 or 44, the Registrar or a deputy registrar at the direction of the Commission,
may make application in the prescribed manner to the Full Bench for the enforcement of that provision, order, direction, declaration or section.
[(2)deleted]
(3)Subsection (1) does not apply to a contravention of or a failure to comply with —
(a)a civil penalty provision; or
(b)a provision of this Act if the contravention or failure constitutes an offence against this Act.
(4)In dealing with an application under subsection (1) the Full Bench —
(a)must have regard to the seriousness of the contravention or failure to comply, any undertakings that may be given as to future conduct, and any mitigating circumstances; and
(b)before proceeding to a hearing of the application, must invite the parties to the application to confer with it, unless in the opinion of the Full Bench such a conference would be unavailing, with a view to an amicable resolution of the matter to which the application relates.
(5)On the hearing of an application under subsection (1) the Full Bench may —
(a)if the contravention or failure to comply is proved —
(i)accept any undertaking given; or
(ii)by order, issue a caution or impose such penalty as it considers just but not exceeding $10 000; or
(iii)direct the Registrar or a deputy registrar to issue a summons under section 73(1);
or
(b)by order, dismiss the application,
and subject to subsection (6), in any case with or without costs, but in no case can any costs be given against the Minister, the Registrar, a deputy registrar, or an industrial inspector.
(6)In proceedings under this section costs cannot be given to any party to the proceedings for the services of any legal practitioner or agent of that party unless, in the opinion of the Full Bench, the proceedings have been frivolously or vexatiously instituted or defended, as the case requires, by the other party.
(7)Where the Full Bench, by an order made under this section, imposes a penalty or costs it must state in the order the name of the person liable to pay the penalty or costs and the name of the person to whom the penalty or costs are payable.
(8)The standard of proof to be applied by the Full Bench in proceedings under this section is the standard observed in civil proceedings.
[Section 84A inserted: No. 94 of 1984 s. 52; amended: No. 119 of 1987 s. 21; No. 79 of 1995 s. 8(2); No. 20 of 2002 s. 134 and 158; No. 36 of 2006 s. 26; No. 30 of 2021 s. 55 and 76(2), (3), (5) and (6).]
Division 3 — Civil infringement notices
[Heading inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 56.]
In this Division —
civil infringement notice has the meaning given in section 84C(2);
civil infringement notice penalty has the meaning given in section 84C(2);
nominated person means the person to whom a recipient can apply —
(a)to have a civil infringement notice withdrawn; or
(b)to be allowed more time to pay a civil infringement notice penalty;
recipient means a person to whom a civil infringement notice is given under section 84C(2).
[Section 84B inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 56.]
84C.Giving civil infringement notice
(1)This section applies if an industrial inspector reasonably believes that a person has committed 1 or more contraventions of a record‑related civil penalty provision other than section 49D(8) or 49DA(3).
(2)The industrial inspector may give to the person a notice (a civil infringement notice) relating to the alleged contravention or contraventions inviting the person, as an alternative to proceedings under section 83E, to pay to the Treasurer a penalty specified in the notice (a civil infringement notice penalty).
(3)The civil infringement notice must be given within 12 months after the day on which the contravention or contraventions are alleged to have taken place.
(4)This section does not authorise the giving of 2 or more civil infringement notices to a person in relation to contraventions of a record‑related civil penalty provision that allegedly —
(a)took place on the same day; and
(b)relate to the same action or conduct by the person.
[Section 84C inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 56.]
84D.Content of civil infringement notice
(1)A civil infringement notice must —
(a)specify the recipient’s full name; and
(b)specify the recipient’s address; and
(c)specify the name of the industrial inspector who issued it; and
(d)specify its date of issue; and
(e)set out brief details of the alleged contravention or contraventions, including the record‑related civil penalty provision that has been allegedly contravened; and
(f)specify the civil infringement notice penalty; and
(g)state how the civil infringement notice penalty can be paid; and
(h)specify the maximum penalty that the industrial magistrate’s court could impose on the recipient for the alleged contravention or contraventions; and
(i)identify the nominated person; and
(j)explain how the recipient can apply to the nominated person —
(i)to have the civil infringement notice withdrawn; or
(ii)to be allowed more time to pay the civil infringement notice penalty;
and
(k)state the effect of the recipient paying the civil infringement notice penalty within the required time, as explained in section 84I; and
(l)be signed by the industrial inspector who issued it.
(2)The civil infringement notice may contain any other information that the industrial inspector who issues it thinks necessary.
[Section 84D inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 56.]
84E.Amount of civil infringement notice penalty
A civil infringement notice penalty must not exceed one‑tenth of the statutory penalty that the industrial magistrate’s court could have ordered the recipient to pay under section 83E(1) for contravening the record‑related civil penalty provision specified in the civil infringement notice.
[Section 84E inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 56.]
84F.Time for payment of civil infringement notice penalty
(1)A civil infringement notice penalty must be paid within 28 days after the day on which the notice is served on the recipient unless subsection (2), (3) or (4) applies.
(2)If the recipient applies for a further period of time in which to pay the civil infringement notice penalty and the application is granted, the penalty must be paid within the further period allowed.
(3)If the recipient applies for a further period of time in which to pay the civil infringement notice penalty and the application is refused, the penalty must be paid within 7 days after the notice of the refusal is served on the recipient.
(4)If the recipient applies for the notice to be withdrawn and the application is refused, the civil infringement notice penalty must be paid within 28 days after the notice of the refusal is served on the recipient.
[Section 84F inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 56.]
84G.Extension of time to pay civil infringement notice penalty
(1)Before the end of 28 days after receiving a civil infringement notice, the recipient may apply, in writing, to the nominated person for a further period of up to 28 days in which to pay the civil infringement notice penalty.
(2)Within 14 days after receiving the application, the nominated person must —
(a)grant or refuse a further period not longer than the period sought (but less than 28 days); and
(b)notify the recipient in writing of the decision and, if the decision is a refusal, the reasons for the decision.
[Section 84G inserted: No. 30 of 2021 s. 56.]
84H.Withdrawal of civil infringement notice
(1)Before the end of 28 days after receiving the civil infringement notice, the recipient may apply, in writing, to the nominated person for the civil infringement notice to be withdrawn.
(2)Within 14 days after receiving the application, the nominated person must —