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The "fairness test" was a central concept of the WorkChoices industrial relations laws that operated in
Australia Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a Sovereign state, sovereign country comprising the mainland of the Australia (continent), Australian continent, the island of Tasmania, and numerous List of islands of Australia, sma ...
from 2006 to 2010. It was implemented in the ''Workplace Relations Amendment (A Stronger Safety Net) Act'' ''2007,'' which came into operation on 1 July 2007. The Act saw the renaming of the then Office of Workplace Services, which became the
Workplace Ombudsman A workplace is a location where someone works, for their employer or themselves, a place of employment. Such a place can range from a home office to a large office building or factory. For industrialized societies, the workplace is one of th ...
, and the creation of the
Workplace Authority The Workplace Authority was an Australian Government statutory agency that existed from 1 July 2007 to 1 July 2009. It replaced and expanded the role of the Office of the Employment Advocate, which had existed since 1997. It was itself replaced b ...
, combining the former Office of the Employment Advocate and parts of the then Department of Employment and Workplace Relations, now the Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations. The fairness test operated retrospectively from 7 May 2007. The test was introduced by the then Howard government as a “fine-tuning” of WorkChoices, but received criticism from both employer associations (due to the complexity and additional burden to businesses) and trade unions including the Transport Workers Union (for not providing adequate protections to employees). The fairness test applied to all Collective Agreements and Australian Workplace Agreements (AWAs) lodged with the Workplace Authority between 7 May 2007 and 10 April 2008 (signed on or before 27 March 2008), where employees earned under $75,000 base annual salary (for AWAs only) and worked in industries or occupations usually covered by awards and where the CA or AWA removed or modified protected Award conditions. Protected award conditions included penalty rates and loadings (including overtime penalties, weekend and public holiday rates, shift loadings and annual leave loading), monetary allowances, public holidays, rest breaks and incentive based payments and bonuses. Where protected award conditions had been varied or removed, agreements had to provide ‘adequate compensation’ to employees. The Workplace Authority had to take into consideration the particular circumstances of the employee/s, such as their pattern of work. Adequate compensation could include monetary benefits (such as a higher base rate of pay), or non-monetary benefits (such as child care or a parking space) of ‘significant value’ to the employee. The fairness test applied where a business was, prior to 27 March 2006, bound to a State Award, which became a Notional Agreement Preserving a State Award (NAPSA), a Federal Award, or where the work done by the employee was in an industry or occupation which would have been covered by an Award or NAPSA prior to 27 March 2006. Where the business was not bound to a particular Award or NAPSA, the Workplace Authority could designate a Federal Award for the purposes of the fairness test. If an agreement did not pass the fairness test, the Workplace Authority notified the employer and allowed them the opportunity to vary the agreement in order to pass. If the agreement was not varied or the variation did not pass the fairness test, the agreement did not apply at all, and the employee derived their minimum terms and conditions at work from the industrial instrument (agreement, Award or NAPSA) otherwise capable of applying to the employee Where an employee was previously not covered by any industrial instrument (an ‘Award-free’ employee) but had an Award designated for the purpose of the fairness test, the protected Award conditions continued to apply to the employee. The fairness test did not check agreements for prohibited content or compliance with the
Australian Fair Pay and Conditions Standard The Australian Fair Pay and Conditions Standard was a set of five minimum statutory entitlements for wages and conditions introduced as part of the Howard Government, Howard Government's WorkChoices amendments to Australian labour law in 2006 and ...
.


Abolition of fairness test

''The Workplace Relations Amendment (Transition to Forward with Fairness) Act'' 2008 (see Workchoices) (the ''Forward with Fairness Act'') came into operation on 28 March 2008.Workplace Relations Amendment (Transition to Forward with Fairness) Act 2008
/ref> It removed the fairness test for agreements made on or after 28 March 2008 (for AWAs signed on or before 27 March 2008, the 14-day lodgement period remained), and instead introduced the new "no disadvantage" test.


References

1996 in Australian law Australian labour law