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Universities rattled as multi-employer bargaining gets go-ahead

While unions see applications in the private college sector, Australian universities worry about being forced to enter collective bargaining

Published on
December 7, 2022
Last updated
December 6, 2022
Reptile keepers hold a Scrub Python as it wraps itself around one keeper to illustrate Universities rattled as multi-employer bargaining gets go-ahead
Source: Getty

Australian universities and colleges fear they could be 鈥渞oped into鈥 generic workplace agreements, after the Labor government鈥檚 landmark industrial relations legislation passed parliament.

The 鈥淪ecure Jobs, Better Pay鈥 act allows unions to lodge applications for 鈥渟ingle interest employer鈥 authorisations that compel employers with similar characteristics to bargain collectively. Previously, only employers could request these authorisations, which were typically used to facilitate agreements with essentially identical employers such as franchised businesses.

The act also imposes more robust rights and responsibilities on parties negotiating multi-enterprise agreements and boosts the ability of the Fair Work Commission, Australia鈥檚 industrial umpire, to intervene. The National Tertiary Education Union said it was 鈥渄elighted鈥 with 鈥渢hese significant long-overdue reforms to Australia鈥檚 industrial relations system鈥.

鈥淲e鈥檙e supportive of putting more safeguards around bargaining to ensure workers aren鈥檛 accepting substandard offers,鈥 said NTEU president Alison Barnes.

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But universities fear the provision could impose common pay and conditions on institutions with vastly different staffing numbers, student cohorts and operating costs. 鈥淭here is a genuine risk that universities will be exposed to industrial action on matters that are not relevant to them,鈥 the Regional Universities Network warned in a聽聽to a Senate committee considering the legislation.

鈥淭his could fundamentally undermine the international standing of Australia鈥檚 universities.鈥

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Dr Barnes scoffed at the 鈥渟care campaign鈥 that universities would be exposed to industrial action 鈥渇or no reason鈥. She said that while the union would 鈥渃onsider鈥 whether multi-employer bargaining could benefit staff in public universities, the provision was 鈥渕ainly designed鈥 for sectors where little enterprise bargaining occurred.

鈥淭he biggest opportunity for multi-employer bargaining is in the largely unregulated private tertiary education sector, which has many workers on award and even sub-award conditions,鈥 she said.

The Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) said that with no enterprise agreements in operation, the non-university higher education sector was a natural target of multiple-employer agreements.

It accused the sector of using independent contractors to 鈥渁void award entitlements鈥, with some staff receiving less than one-third of the award rate. 鈥淏eing able to bargain collectively with multiple employers in that sector would help get wages moving again,鈥 the ACTU submission to the Senate committee says.

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Independent Higher Education Australia (IHEA) bristled at the ACTU鈥檚 鈥渟lur鈥, saying any evidence of wrongdoing by private college administrators should be reported to the Fair Work Ombudsman. But IHEA chief executive Peter Hendy expressed concern at the multi-employer bargaining provisions.

鈥淭he implications of independent providers being roped in on multi-employer agreements with the large multibillion-dollar public universities could have adverse consequences that will most likely indirectly impact on students,鈥 Dr Hendy warned.

Privately, both union and university representatives consider it unlikely that anybody will seek to impose multi-employer agreements in the public higher education sector. Universities do not want to be bound by conditions designed for reasonably similar institutions, let alone bigger and richer ones. And unionists are conscious that single-enterprise bargaining has secured university staff some of the best workplace conditions in the country.

But university representatives worry that even if unions have no intention of bargaining with groups of universities, they may change their minds now that the law allows it, or use the possibility as a bargaining chip.

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Carolyn Evans, president of the Australian Higher Education Industrial Association, said universities鈥 concerns remained. 鈥淚 think we鈥檒l have to wait and see what happens in practice,鈥 said Professor Evans, vice-chancellor of Griffith University.

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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