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The Fair Work Act will significantly change the employment conditions that apply when an employee 'transfers' in their employment to a new employer, where they are employed within 3 months.
Author: Steve Champion
Date Published: 22/06/2009

Background

As a result of employer concerns about employment conditions (under awards and workplace agreements) of employees transferring to the new employer in outsourcing and business sale situations, Work Choices introduced a new set of rules whereby the transferring industrial instruments only applied to the new employer for a maximum of 12 months. New employees (i.e. not employed by the former owner) of the new employer were not affected by these transmission obligations and the industrial instruments that otherwise applied to the new employer, applied to the new employees. These obligations then also applied to the 'transferring' employees after the 12 month transition period.

There were also extensive notification requirements on both the new and old employers. The new employer was required to spell out the expected employment conditions that the employees would be working under.

Fair Work Introduces 'Transferring' Employment

An entirely new approach has been taken under the new Act to come into effect from 1 July 2009. Instead of a 'transmision of business' as required under Work Choices (and before Work Choices) to trigger the transmission of an employee's former employment instruments to their new employment, the broader concept of a transfer of business will be sufficient.

If there is a transfer of business, then an enterprise agreement or a 'named employer' award - but not awards generally - will also transfer to the new employer to cover the work done by the transferring employee, plus any new employee not covered by any other award or agreement (a named employer award is a modern award that is expressed to cover one or more named employers).

A transfer of business occurs if -

No More 12 Month Limit

The transferring instrument will transfer indefinitely until replaced by a new workplace agreement, for example. The old transferring instrument will also apply to new (non-transferring) employees performing the same transferring work. Orders may however be sought from Fair Work Australia to alter the industrial instruments so that it better fits the operation of the enw enterprise.

Notice Provisions

As indicated above, Work Choices introduced extensive (and complex) notification requirements on both the old and new employer (mainly on the new employer). These provisions have not come across into the new FW Act.

Other Changes

As well as entitlements under enterprise agreements, service with the previous employer will also count towards certain service-related entitlements  for a transferring employee. These include personal / carer's leave and an entitlement to parental leave. For annual leave and redundancy pay, the new employer has a choice of whether to recognise the prior service, as under Work Choices. If not, then the former employer will be responsible for paying out these entitlements.

Unfair Dismissal Protection

On a transfer of business, a transferring employee's service with the prior employer will count towards qualifying periods for taking an unfair dismissal action unless the new employer expressly informs the employee in writing of the requirement for them to serve a new minimum 'probationary' qualifying period of employment. Where the new and old employers are associated entities, then the employment will be considered to be continuous (i.e. the new employer cannot require the employee to serve a new period of 'probation'.

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