Australia

Fair Work Act


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includes a reference to a person who is usually such an employee; and

      (b) does not include a person on a vocational placement.

      Note: Subsections 30E(1) and 30P(1) extend the meaning of employee in relation to a referring State.

      (2) A reference in this Act to an employer with its ordinary meaning includes a reference to a person who is usually such an employer.

      Note: Subsections 30E(2) and 30P(2) extend the meaning of employer in relation to a referring State.

      Division 4—Other definitions

      16 Meaning of base rate of pay

      General meaning

      (1) The base rate of pay of a national system employee is the rate of pay payable to the employee for his or her ordinary hours of work, but not including any of the following:

      (a) incentive-based payments and bonuses;

      (b) loadings;

      (c) monetary allowances;

      (d) overtime or penalty rates;

      (e) any other separately identifiable amounts.

      Meaning for pieceworkers in relation to entitlements under National Employment Standards

      (2) Despite subsection (1), if one of the following paragraphs applies to a national system employee who is a pieceworker, the employee’s base rate of pay, in relation to entitlements under the National Employment Standards, is the base rate of pay referred to in that paragraph:

      (a) a modern award applies to the employee and specifies the employee’s base rate of pay for the purposes of the National Employment Standards;

      (b) an enterprise agreement applies to the employee and specifies the employee’s base rate of pay for the purposes of the National Employment Standards;

      (c) the employee is an award/agreement free employee, and the regulations prescribe, or provide for the determination of, the employee’s base rate of pay for the purposes of the National Employment Standards.

      Meaning for pieceworkers for the purpose of section 206

      (3) The regulations may prescribe, or provide for the determination of, the base rate of pay, for the purpose of section 206, of an employee who is a pieceworker. If the regulations do so, the employee’s base rate of pay, for the purpose of that section, is as prescribed by, or determined in accordance with, the regulations.

      Note: Section 206 deals with an employee’s base rate of pay under an enterprise agreement.

      17 Meaning of child of a person

      (1) A child of a person includes:

      (a) someone who is a child of the person within the meaning of the Family Law Act 1975; and

      (b) an adopted child or step-child of the person.

      It does not matter whether the child is an adult.

      (2) If, under this section, one person is a child of another person, other family relationships are also to be determined on the basis that the child is a child of that other person.

      Note: For example, for the purpose of leave entitlements in relation to immediate family under Division 7 of Part 2–2 (which deals with personal/carer’s leave and compassionate leave):

      (a) the other person is the parent of the child, and so is a member of the child’s immediate family; and

      (b) the child, and any other children, of the other person are siblings, and so are members of each other’s immediate family.

      18 Meaning of full rate of pay

      General meaning

      (1) The full rate of pay of a national system employee is the rate of pay payable to the employee, including all the following:

      (a) incentive-based payments and bonuses;

      (b) loadings;

      (c) monetary allowances;

      (d) overtime or penalty rates;

      (e) any other separately identifiable amounts.

      Meaning for pieceworkers in relation to entitlements under National Employment Standards

      (2) However, if one of the following paragraphs applies to a national system employee who is a pieceworker, the employee’s full rate of pay, in relation to entitlements under the National Employment Standards, is the full rate of pay referred to in that paragraph:

      (a) a modern award applies to the employee and specifies the employee’s full rate of pay for the purposes of the National Employment Standards;

      (b) an enterprise agreement applies to the employee and specifies the employee’s full rate of pay for the purposes of the National Employment Standards;

      (c) the employee is an award/agreement free employee, and the regulations prescribe, or provide for the determination of, the employee’s full rate of pay for the purposes of the National Employment Standards.

      19 Meaning of industrial action

      (1) Industrial action means action of any of the following kinds:

      (a) the performance of work by an employee in a manner different from that in which it is customarily performed, or the adoption of a practice in relation to work by an employee, the result of which is a restriction or limitation on, or a delay in, the performance of the work;

      (b) a ban, limitation or restriction on the performance of work by an employee or on the acceptance of or offering for work by an employee;

      (c) a failure or refusal by employees to attend for work or a failure or refusal to perform any work at all by employees who attend for work;

      (d) the lockout of employees from their employment by the employer of the employees.

      Note: In Automotive, Food, Metals, Engineering, Printing and Kindred Industries Union v The Age Company Limited, PR946290, the Full Bench of the Australian Industrial Relations Commission considered the nature of industrial action and noted that action will not be industrial in character if it stands completely outside the area of disputation and bargaining.

      (2) However, industrial action does not include the following:

      (a) action by employees that is authorised or agreed to by the employer of the employees;

      (b) action by an employer that is authorised or agreed to by, or on behalf of, employees of the employer;

      (c) action by an employee if:

      (i) the action was based on a reasonable concern of the employee about an imminent risk to his or her health or safety; and

      (ii) the employee did not unreasonably fail to comply with a direction of his or her employer to perform other available work, whether at the same or another workplace, that was safe and appropriate for the employee to perform.

      (3) An employer locks out employees from their employment if the employer prevents the employees from performing work under their contracts of employment without terminating those contracts.

      Note: In this section, employee and employer have their ordinary meanings (see section 11).

      20 Meaning of ordinary hours of work for award/agreement free employees

      Agreed ordinary hours of work

      (1) The ordinary hours of work of an award/agreement free employee are the hours agreed by the employee and his or her