Public Hospitals (Medical Superintendents) Award
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS
COMMISSION OF NEW SOUTH WALES
Application by NSW Ministry of Health.
(No. IRC 435 of 2015)
Before The Honourable Justice Walton, President
|
13 July 2015
|
AWARD
Arrangement
Clause No. Subject
Matter
PART A
1. Definitions
2. Salaries
3. Grading
Committee
4. Annual
Leave
5. Sick
Leave
6. Maternity,
Adoption and Parental Leave
7. Public
Holidays
8. Long
Service Leave
9. Higher
Grade Duty
10. Payment
and Particulars of Salaries
11. Settlement
of Disputes
12. Anti-Discrimination
13. Mobility,
Excess Fares and Travelling
14. Redundancy-Managing Excess
Employees
15. Family and
Community Services Leave and Personal/Carer’s Leave
16. Labour
Flexibility
17. Termination
of Employment
18. Salary
Packaging
19. Reasonable
Hours
20. Salary
Sacrifice to Superannuation
21. No Extra
Claims
22. Area,
Incidence and Duration
PART A
1. Definitions
"Secretary" means the Secretary of the Ministry of
Health.
"Employer" means the Secretary of the Ministry of
Health exercising employer functions on behalf of the Government of New South
Wales (and includes a delegate of the Secretary).
"Health Service" means a Local Health District
constituted under section 8 of the Health Services Act 1997, a Statutory Health
Corporation constituted under section 11 of that Act, and an Affiliated Health
Organisation constituted under section 13 of that Act.
"Higher Medical Qualification" means such
qualification obtained by a medical practitioner subsequent to graduation and
includes:
(a) post-graduate University degrees and diplomas recognised by
the Medical Board of Australia as qualifications; or
(b) membership or
fellowship of the Royal College or Royal Australian College of Physicians or
Fellowship of the Royal College or Royal Australasian College of Surgeons or
membership or fellowship of the Royal College of Obstetricians and
Gynaecologists; or Fellowship of the Australian College of Medical
Administrators;
(c) such other post-graduate qualification recognised by the
Medical Board of Australia and acceptable to the Ministry of Health.
"Hospital" means a public hospital as defined
under s.15 of the Health Services Act, 1997.
"Officer" means a person who is a registered medical
practitioner and who is employed as a Chief Executive Officer, Deputy Chief
Executive Officer, Medical Superintendent, Deputy Medical Superintendent,
Assistant Medical Superintendent or Clinical Superintendent in a position as
such by the employer.
"Service" unless the context otherwise
indicates or requires, means service before or and/or after the commencement of
this award with the employer.
"Union" means the Health Services Union NSW
and the Australian Salaried Medical Officers' Federation (New South Wales).
"Weekly rates" will be ascertained by
dividing an annual amount by 52.17857 or a weekly rate can be multiplied by
52.17857 to obtain the annual amount.
2. Salaries
Salaries for Medical Superintendents shall be as set out in
the Health Professional and Medical Salaries (State) Award.
3. Grading
Committee
A Committee consisting of up to three representatives of the
employer and up to three representatives of the Union shall be constituted to
consider and recommend to the Industrial Commission of New South Wales upon
application by the Union or the employer:
(i) The
grading of any new position or any variation of grading of a position as a
result of any substantial change in duties and/or responsibilities; and
(ii) the date of the effect of the grading recommended. Provided that -
(a) an officer shall, whilst the grading of his/her position is
under consideration, be ineligible to be a member of the Committee;
(b) the Committee shall not, without sufficient reason,
recommend the retrospective operation of any grading or remuneration; and
(c) where a retrospective date of effect is recommended such
date shall not be earlier than a date six months prior to the date on which the
matter was referred to the Committee.
4. Annual Leave
(i) Annual
leave shall accrue at the rate of five calendar weeks per annum.
(ii) Annual leave
shall not accrue beyond ten calendar weeks without the approval of the
employer.
(iii) Such annual
leave shall be taken by officers at mutually convenient times as arranged with
the employer.
(iv) The
employer shall pay each officer in advance before the commencement of any
period of annual leave his ordinary pay for the period of the leave.
(v) Where any
special or public holiday for which the officer is entitled to payment under
this award or under any Act or under his contract of employment occurs during
any period of annual leave taken by an officer, the holiday shall not be
reckoned as a deduction from the officer's annual leave entitlement.
(vi) Annual
leave for a period of accrual of less than twelve months shall accrue on a
proportionate basis at the rate of five calendar weeks per annum.
(vii) Where the
employment of an officer who has become entitled to a period of annual leave is
terminated or the officer resigns, the due period of annual leave shall be
deemed to be taken from the date of termination or resignation and the employer
shall forthwith pay to the officer, in addition to all other amounts due to
him, his ordinary pay for the period of annual leave.
NOTATION: The
conditions under when the annual leave loading shall be paid to officers are
the same as generally applied through circulars issued by the Ministry of
Health.
(viii) The provisions
of subclause 4(i) above entitle Medical Superintendents
to paid annual leave additional to that available under clause 3(1)(b) of the Annual Holidays Act 1944, which is four weeks
paid leave per annum. A Medical Superintendent entitled to such additional paid
annual leave can elect at any time to be paid an amount equivalent to the value
of accrued additional annual leave in lieu of taking the additional leave,
provided that the amount is a minimum of one weeks’ accrued additional leave
and that the salary for the period of additional leave paid out will be calculated
as if the period of leave was actually taken.
5. Sick Leave
An officer shall be entitled to ten days per year for each
year of continuous service less any sick leave on full pay already taken,
subject to the following conditions:
(a) The employer
may require the sickness to be certified to by a legally qualified medical
practitioner approved by the employer or may require other satisfactory
evidence thereof.
(b) An officer
shall not be entitled to sick leave until after three months' continuous
service.
(c) An officer
shall not be entitled to sick leave on full pay for any period in respect of
which such officer is entitled to accident pay or workers' compensation.
Provided, however, that where an officer is not in receipt
of accident pay, the employer shall pay to an officer, who has sick leave
entitlements under this clause, the difference between the amount received as
workers' compensation and full pay. The
officer's sick leave entitlements under this clause shall, for each week during
which such difference is paid, be reduced by that proportion of hours which the
difference paid bears to full pay. On
the expiration of available sick leave, weekly compensation payments only shall
be payable.
(d) For the
purpose of this clause "service" means service in any of the
positions covered by this award provided that any person who was employed by
the employer immediately prior to becoming an officer in any position covered
by this award shall be entitled to add to his or her service under this award
the service that he or she has had under any other award or agreement covering
his/her employment with the employer; provided that officers who are employed
at the date of commencement of this award shall retain to their credit until
exhausted, any accumulation of sick leave to their credit immediately prior to
such date; and provided further that such credit is not less than the
entitlement otherwise prescribed by this clause.
(e) The employer
shall not terminate the services of an employee, except on the grounds of
misconduct, during the currency of any period of paid sick leave unless an
agreed independent registered medical practitioner certifies that an employee
is fit to continue in employment and the employee refuses to resume duty.
If a dispute arises as to whether an employee is fit to
continue in employment, such dispute shall be referred to a Disputes Committee.
6. Maternity,
Adoption and Parental Leave
A. Maternity
Leave
(i) Eligibility
for Paid Maternity Leave
To be eligible for paid maternity leave a full time or
permanent part-time employee must have completed at least 40 weeks continuous
service prior to the expected date of birth.
An employee who has once met the conditions for paid
maternity leave will not be required to again work the 40 weeks continuous
service in order to qualify for a further period of paid maternity leave,
unless-
(a) there has been
a break in service where the employee has been re-employed or re-appointed
after a resignation, medical retirement, or after her services have been
otherwise dispensed with: or
(b) the employee has completed a period of leave without pay of
more than 40 weeks. In this context,
leave without pay does not include sick leave without pay, maternity leave without
pay, or leave without pay associated with an illness or injury compensable
under the Workers' Compensation Act.
(ii) Portability
of Service for Paid Maternity Leave
Portability of service for paid maternity leave
involves the recognition of service in government sector agencies for the
purpose of determining an employee's eligibility to receive paid maternity
leave. For example, where an employee
moves between a public service department and a public hospital, previous
continuous service will be counted towards the service prerequisite for paid
maternity leave.
When determining an employee's eligibility for paid
maternity leave, continuous service with an organisation that is part of the
government sector as defined in the Government Sector Employment Act 2013 will
be recognised, provided that:
(a) service was on a full-time or permanent part-time basis:
(b) cessation of service with the former employer was not by
reason of dismissal on any ground, except retrenchment or reduction of work;
(c) the employee immediately commences duty with the new
employer. There may be a break in
service of up to two months before commencing duty with the new employer. However, such a break in service will not be
counted as service for the purpose of calculating any prior service
prerequisite for paid maternity leave.
(iii) Entitlement
to Paid Maternity Leave
An eligible employee is entitled to fourteen weeks at
the ordinary rate of pay from the date maternity leave commences. This leave may commence up to fourteen weeks
prior to the expected date of birth.
It is not compulsory for an employee to take this
period off work. However, if an employee decides to work during the nine weeks
prior to the date of birth it is subject to the employee being able to satisfactorily
perform the full range of normal duties.
Paid maternity leave may be paid:
on a normal fortnightly basis;
or
in advance in a lump sum; or
at the rate of half pay over a
period of twenty-eight weeks on a regular fortnightly basis.
Annual and/or long service leave credits can be
combined with periods of maternity leave on half pay to enable an employee to
remain on full pay for that period.
(iv) Unpaid
Maternity Leave
(a) Full time and
permanent part time employees who are entitled to paid
maternity leave are entitled to a further period of unpaid maternity leave of
not more than 12 months after the actual date of birth.
(b) Full time and
permanent part time employees who are not eligible for paid maternity leave are
entitled to unpaid maternity leave of not more than 12 months.
(v) Applications
An employee who intends to proceed on maternity leave
should formally notify her employer of such intention as early as possible, so
that arrangements associated with her absence can be made.
Written notice of not less than eight weeks prior to
the commencement of the leave should accordingly be given. This notice must include a medical
certificate stating the expected date of birth and should also indicate the
period of leave desired.
(vi) Variation
after Commencement of Leave
After commencing maternity leave, an employee may vary
the period of her maternity leave once only without the consent of her employer
by giving the employer notice in writing of the extended period at least
fourteen days’ before the start of the extended period. An employer may accept
less notice if convenient.
An employee may extend the period of maternity leave at
any time with the agreement of the employer.
The conditions relating to variation of maternity leave
are derived from Section 64 of the Industrial Relations Act 1996.
(vii) Staffing
Provisions
In accordance with obligations established by the
Industrial Relations Act 1996 (Section 69) any person who occupies the position
of an employee on maternity leave must be informed that the employee has the
right to return to her former position. Additionally, since an employee has the
right to vary the period of her maternity leave, offers of temporary employment
should be in writing, stating clearly the temporary nature of the contract of
employment. The duration of employment
should be also set down clearly; to a fixed date or until the employee elects
to return to duty, whichever occurs first.
(viii) Effect of
Maternity Leave on Accrual of Leave, Increments etc.
When the employee has resumed duties, any period of
full pay leave is counted in full for the accrual of annual leave, sick leave
and long service leave and any period of maternity leave on half pay is taken
into account to the extent of one half thereof when determining the accrual of
annual leave, sick leave and long service leave.
Except in the case of employees who
have completed ten years' service the period of maternity leave without pay
does not count as service for long service leave purposes. Where the employee has completed ten years'
service the period of maternity leave without pay shall count as service
provided such leave does not exceed six months.
Maternity leave without pay does not count as service
for incremental purposes. Periods of
maternity leave at full pay and at half pay are to be regarded as service for
incremental progression on a pro-rata basis.
Where public holidays occur during the period of paid
maternity leave, payment is at the rate of maternity leave received i.e., public
holidays occurring in a period of full pay maternity leave are paid at full
rate and those occurring during a period of half pay leave are paid at half
rate.
(ix) Illness
Associated with Pregnancy
If, because of an illness associated with her pregnancy
an employee is unable to continue to work then she can elect to use any
available paid leave (sick, annual and/or long service leave) or to take sick
leave without pay.
Where an employee is entitled to paid maternity leave,
but because of illness, is on sick, annual, long service leave, or sick leave
without pay prior to the birth, such leave ceases nine weeks prior to the
expected date of birth. The employee then
commences maternity leave with the normal provisions applying.
(x) Transfer to a
More Suitable Position
Where, because of an illness or risk associated with
her pregnancy, an employee cannot carry out the duties of her position, an
employer is obliged, as far as practicable, to provide employment in some other
position that she is able to satisfactorily perform. This obligation arises from Section 70 of the
Industrial Relations Act 1996. A position to which an employee is transferred
under these circumstances must be as close as possible in status and salary to
her substantive position.
(xi) Miscarriages
In the event of a miscarriage any absence from work is
to be covered by the current sick leave provisions
(xii) Stillbirth
In the case of a stillbirth, (as classified by the
Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages) an employee may elect to take sick
leave, subject to production of a medical certificate, or maternity leave. She may resume duty at any time provided she
produces a doctor's certificate as to her fitness.
(xiii) Effect of Premature
Birth on Payment of Maternity Leave
An employee who gives birth prematurely and prior to
proceeding on maternity leave shall be treated as being on maternity leave from
the date leave is commenced to have the child.
Should an employee return to duty during the period of paid maternity
leave, such paid leave ceases from the date duties are resumed.
(xiv) Right to Return
to Previous Position
In accordance with the obligations set out in Section
66 of the Industrial Relations Act 1996, an employee returning from maternity
leave has the right to resume her former position.
Where this position no longer exists the employee is
entitled to be placed in a position nearest in status and salary to that of her
former position and to which the employee is capable or qualified.
(xv) Further
Pregnancy While on Maternity Leave
Where an employee becomes pregnant
whilst on maternity leave a further period of maternity leave shall be granted.
If an employee enters on the second period of maternity leave during the
currency of the initial period of maternity leave, then any residual maternity
leave from the initial entitlement ceases.
An employee who commences a subsequent period of
maternity leave while on unpaid maternity leave under subclause (iv)(a) of Part
A of this clause or subclause (i)(b) of Part D of
this clause is entitled to be paid at their normal rate (ie
the rate at which they were paid before proceeding on maternity leave).
An employee who commences a subsequent period of
maternity leave during the first 12 months of a return to duty on a part time
basis as provided under subclause (i)(c) of Part D of
this clause is entitled to be paid at their substantive full time rate for the
subsequent period of maternity leave.
An employee who commences a subsequent period of
maternity leave more than 12 months after returning to duty on a part time
basis under subclause (i)(c) of Part D of this
clause, will be entitled to paid maternity leave for the subsequent period of
maternity leave at their part time rate.
B. Adoption Leave
(i) Eligibility
All full time and permanent part time employees who are
adopting a child and are to be the primary care giver of the child are eligible
for unpaid adoption leave.
To be eligible for paid adoption leave a full time or
permanent part-time employee must also have completed at least 40 weeks
continuous service prior to the date of taking custody of the child.
An employee who has once met the conditions of paid adoption
leave, will not be required to again work the 40 weeks continuous service in
order to qualify for further periods of paid adoption leave, unless
(a) there has been
a break in service where the employee has been re-employed or re-appointed
after a resignation, medical retirement, or after their services have been
otherwise dispensed with; or
(b) the employee has completed a period of leave without pay of
more than 40 weeks. In this context,
leave without pay does not include sick leave without pay, maternity leave
without pay, or leave without pay associated with an illness or injury
compensable under the Worker's Compensation Act.
(ii) Portability
of Service for Paid Adoption Leave
As per maternity leave conditions.
(iii) Entitlement
(a) Paid Adoption
Leave
Eligible employees are entitled to paid adoption leave
of fourteen weeks at the ordinary rate of pay from and including the date of
taking custody of the child.
Paid adoption leave may be paid:
on a normal fortnightly basis;
or
in advance in a lump sum; or
at the rate of half pay over a
period of twenty-eight weeks on a regular fortnightly basis.
Annual and/or long service leave credits can be
combined with periods of adoption leave at half pay to enable an employee to
remain on full pay for that period.
(b) Unpaid Adoption
Leave
Eligible employees are entitled to unpaid adoption
leave as follows:
where the child is under the
age of 12 months - a period of not more than 12 months from the date of taking
custody;
where the child is over the
age of 12 months and under 18 years old - a period of up to 12 months, such
period to be agreed upon by both the employee and the employer.
(iv) Applications
Due to the fact that an employee may be given little
notice of the date of taking custody of a child, employees who believe that, in
the reasonably near future, they will take custody of a child, should formally
notify the employer as early as practicable of the intention to take adoption
leave. This will allow arrangements
associated with the adoption leave to be made.
(v) Variation
after Commencement of Leave
After commencing adoption leave, an employee may vary
the period of leave, once without the consent of the employer and otherwise with
the consent of the employer. A minimum of fourteen days’ notice must be given,
although an employer may accept less notice if convenient.
(vi) Staffing
Provisions
As per maternity leave conditions.
(vii) Effect of
Adoption Leave on Accrual of Leave, Increments, etc
As per maternity leave conditions.
(viii) Right to
Return to Previous Position
As per maternity leave conditions.
C. Parental Leave
(i) Eligibility
To be eligible for parental leave a full time or
permanent part-time employee must have completed at least 40 weeks continuous
service prior to the expected date of birth or to the date of taking custody of
the child.
An employee who has once met the conditions for paid
parental leave will not be required to again work the 40 weeks continuous
service in order to qualify for a further period of paid parental leave,
unless-
(a) there has been a break in service where the employee has
been re-employed or re-appointed after a resignation, medical retirement, or
after their services have been otherwise dispensed with: or
(b) the employee has completed a period of leave without pay of
more than 40 weeks. In this context,
leave without pay does not include sick leave without pay, maternity leave
without pay, or leave without pay associated with an illness or injury
compensable under the Workers' Compensation Act 1987.
(ii) Portability
of Service for Paid Parental Leave
As per maternity leave conditions.
(iii) Entitlements
Eligible employees whose spouse or
partner (including a same sex partner) is pregnant or is taking custody
of a child, are entitled to a period of leave not exceeding 52 weeks, which
includes one week of paid leave, and may be taken as follows:
(a) an unbroken
period of up to one week at the time of the birth of the child, taking custody
of the child or other termination of the pregnancy (short parental leave), and
(b) a further unbroken period in order to be the primary
caregiver of the child (extended parental leave).
(c) The
entitlement of one week’s paid leave may be taken at anytime
within the 52 week period and shall be paid:
at the employees ordinary rate
of pay for a period not exceeding one week on full pay, or
two weeks at half pay or the
period of parental leave taken, whichever is the lesser period.
(d) Extended
parental leave cannot be taken at the same time as the employee’s spouse or
partner is on maternity or adoption leave except as provided for in subclause (i)(a) of Part D Right to Request
of this clause.
Annual and/or long service leave credits can be
combined with periods of parental leave on half pay to enable an employee to
remain on full pay for that period.
(iv) Applications
An employee who intends to proceed on parental leave
should formally notify their employer of such intention as early as possible,
so that arrangements associated with their absence can be made.
(a) In
the case of extended parental leave, the employee should give written notice of
the intention to take the leave.
(b) The
employee must, at least four weeks before proceeding on leave, give written
notice of the dates on which they propose to start and end the period of leave,
although it is recognised in situations of taking custody of a child, little or
no notice may be provided to the employee. In such an instance, the employee
should notify the employer as early as practicable.
(c) The
employee must, before the start of leave, provide a certificate from a medical
practitioner confirming that their spouse or partner is pregnant and the expected
date of birth, or in the case of an adoption, an official form or notification
on taking custody of the child.
(d) In
the case of extended parental leave, the employee must, before the start of
leave, provide a statutory declaration by the employee stating:
(1) if applicable, the period of any maternity leave sought or
taken by his spouse, and
(2) that they are seeking the period of extended parental leave
to become the primary care giver of the child.
(v) Variation
after Commencement of Leave -
After commencing parental leave, an employee may vary
the period of her/his parental leave, once without the consent of the employer
and otherwise with the consent of the employer.
A minimum of fourteen days’ notice must be given, although an employer may
accept less notice if convenient.
(vi) Effect
of Parental Leave on Accrual of Leave, Increments etc.
As per maternity leave conditions.
(vii) Right to
Return to Previous Position
As per maternity leave conditions.
D. Right to
Request
(i) An
employee entitled to maternity, adoption or parental leave may request the
employer to allow the employee:
(a) to extend the period of simultaneous maternity, adoption or
parental leave use up to a maximum of eight weeks;
(b) to extend the
period of unpaid maternity, adoption or extended parental leave for a further
continuous period of leave not exceeding 12 months;
(c) to return from a period of maternity, adoption or parental
leave on a part time basis until the child reaches school age;
to assist the employee in
reconciling work and parental responsibilities.
(ii) The employer
shall consider the request having regard to the employee’s circumstances and,
provided the request is genuinely based on the employee’s parental
responsibilities, may only refuse the request on reasonable grounds related to
the effect on the workplace or the employer’s business. Such grounds might include cost, lack of
adequate replacement staff, loss of efficiency and the impact on customer
service.
(iii) The employee’s
request and the employer’s decision made under subclauses (i)(b) and (c) must be recorded in writing.
(iv) Where an
employee wishes to make a request under subclause (i)(c):
(a) the employee is to make an application for leave without pay
to reduce their full time weekly hours of work
(b) such application must be made as early as possible to enable
the employer to make suitable staffing arrangements. At least four weeks notice
must be given;
(c) salary and other conditions of employment are to be adjusted
on a basis proportionate to the employee’s full time hours of work ie for long service leave the period of service is to be
converted to the full time equivalent and credited accordingly.
(d) employees who return from leave under this arrangement
remain full time employees. Therefore
the payment of any part time allowance to such employees does not arise.
E. Communication During Leave
(i) Where
an employee is on maternity, adoption or parental leave and a definite decision
has been made to introduce significant change at the workplace, the employer
shall take reasonable steps to:
(a) make
information available in relation to any significant effect the change will
have on the status or responsibility level of the position the employee held before
commencing the leave; and
(b) provide an opportunity for the employee to discuss any
significant effect the change will have on the status or responsibility level
of the position the employee held before commencing the leave.
(ii) The employee
shall take reasonable steps to inform the employer about any significant matter
that will affect the employee’s decision regarding the duration of the leave to
be taken, whether the employee intends to return to work and whether the
employee intends to request to return to work on a part time basis.
(iii) The employee
shall also notify the employer of changes of address or other contact details
which might affect the employer’s capacity to comply with subclause (i).
NOTE:
(a) The entitlement
to maternity, adoption and parental leave for part-time employees who receive
an adjusted hourly rate, along with casual employees, are in accordance with
the provisions of Part 4, Parental Leave of the Industrial Relations Act 1996
and/or Determination under the Health Services Act 1997.
(b) Where a casual
employee is entitled to parental leave under the Industrial Relations Act 1996,
the following provisions shall also apply in addition to those set out in the
Act.
An employer must not fail to re-engage a casual
employee because:
the employee or employee’s
spouse is pregnant; or
the employee is or has been
immediately absent on parental leave.
The rights of the employer in relation to engagement
and re-engagement of casual employees are not affected, other than in
accordance with this clause.
(c) Part time
employees who receive an adjusted hourly rate are also entitled to the
provisions of Part D Right to Request and Part E Communication During Leave of this clause.
(d) Liability for
Superannuation Contributions
During a period of unpaid maternity, adoption or
parental leave, the employee will not be required to meet the employer's
superannuation liability.
7. Public
Holidays
No deduction shall be made from the salary of an officer for
any public or statutory holidays on which he/she is not required to work. For the purpose of this clause, the following
shall be deemed public holidays: New
Year's Day, Australia Day, Good Friday, Easter Saturday, Easter Monday, Anzac
Day, Queen's Birthday, Eight Hour Day, Christmas Day, Boxing Day, and such
other public holidays as may be proclaimed throughout the State of New South
Wales or for any district therein which an officer is employed.
8. Long Service
Leave
(i)
(a) Each employee shall
be entitled to two months long service leave on full pay after ten years of
service; thereafter additional long service shall accrue on the basis of five
months long service leave on full pay for each ten years
service.
Employees with at least seven years
service and less than 10 years service are
entitled, proportionate to his or her length of service, to proceed on a
proportionate period of long service leave on the basis of two months' long
service leave for ten years' service on full pay.
(b) Where the
services of an employee with at least five years service
and less than seven years service are terminated by
the employer for any reason other than the employee's serious and wilful
misconduct, or by the employee, on account of illness, incapacity or domestic
or other pressing necessity, he/she shall be entitled to be paid a
proportionate amount for long service leave on the basis of two months' long
service leave for ten years' service.
Where the services of an employee with at least seven
years are terminated by the employer or by the employee, he/she shall be
entitled to be paid a proportionate amount for long service leave on the basis
of two months' long service leave for ten years' service. Where the services of
an employee with at least 10 years service are
terminated by the employer or by the employee, he/she shall be entitled to be
paid on the basis of two months' long service leave for ten years' service and
thereafter on the basis of five months long service leave for each ten years service.
(ii) For the
purposes of subclause (i) of this clause:
(a) service shall mean continuous service with the
employer. For the purpose of this
paragraph, continuos service shall be determined in
accordance with the provisions of Section 17 of the NSW Health Policy Directive
PD2014_029 Leave Matters for the NSW Health Service, as amended from time to
time.
(b) Broken periods
of service in one or more hospitals shall count as service subject to the
following:
(1) where an
officer, after ceasing employment with the employer is re-employed by the
employer subsequent to the 1st July 1974, any service of that officer before
he/she was so re-employed shall not be counted for the purpose of determining
any long service leave due to that officer in respect of his/her service after
he/she was so re-employed unless he/she has completed at leave five years'
continuous service from the date of his/her being so re-employed;
(2) an officer employed in a hospital at the 1st July 1974, and
who was entitled to count broken service under the provisions of the award in
force prior thereto shall be entitled to count such broken service prior to the
1st July 1974.
(c) Service shall
not include -
(1) any period of
leave without pay except in the case of employees who have completed at least
ten years service (any period of absence without pay
being excluded there from) in which case service shall include any period of
leave without pay not exceeding six months taken after 1 July, 1974;
(2) any period of part-time service, except permanent part-time
service.
(iii) An employee
with an entitlement to long service leave may elect to access such entitlement:
(a) on full pay;
(b) on half pay; or
(c) on double pay.
(iv) When
an employee takes long service leave, the leave entitlement will be deducted on
the following basis:
(a) a period of leave on full pay - the number of days so taken;
(b) a period of leave on half pay - half the number of days so
taken; or
(c) a period of leave on double pay - twice the number of days
so taken.
(v) When taking
long service leave and an employee would otherwise have had a rostered shift
fall on a public holiday during that period, the amount of long service leave
to be deducted is to be reduced by one day for the public holiday.
(vi) Long
Service Leave shall be taken at a time mutually arranged between the employer
and the employee.
(vii)
(a) On the
termination of employment of an employee, otherwise than by his/her death, an
employer shall pay to the employee the monetary value of all long service leave
accrued and not taken at the date of such termination and such monetary value
shall be determined according to the salary payable to the employee at the date
of such termination unless the employee transfers his/her leave entitlement in
accordance with NSW Health Policy Directive PD2014_029 Leave Matters for the
NSW Health Service , as amended from time to time.
(b) Where an
employee who has acquired a right to long service leave, or after having had
five years service and less than ten years service dies, the widow or the widower of such
employee, or if there is no such widow or widower, the children of such
employee, or if there is no such widow, widower, or children, such person who,
in the opinion of the employer, was at the time of the death of such employee,
a dependent relative of such employee, shall be entitled to receive the
monetary value of the leave not taken or which would have accrued to such
employee, had his/her services terminated as referred to in paragraph (b) of
subclause (i) of this clause and such monetary value
shall be determined according to the salary payable to the employee at the time
of his/her death.
Where there is a guardian of any children entitled
under this paragraph the payment, to which such children are entitled, may be
made to such guardian for their maintenance, education and advancement.
Where there is no person entitled under this paragraph
to receive the monetary value of any leave payable under the foregoing
provisions payment in respect thereof shall be made to the legal personal
representative of such employee.
(viii) Rights to long
service leave under this clause shall be in replacement of rights to long service
leave, if any, which at the 1st July 1974, may have accrued or may be accruing
to an officer and shall apply only to persons in the employ of the employer on
or after the 1st July 1974. Where an
officer has been granted long service leave or has been paid its monetary value
prior to the 1st July 1974, the employer shall be entitled to debit such leave
against any leave to which the officer may be entitled pursuant to this clause.
9. Higher Grade
Duty
An officer who is called upon to relieve continuously in a
higher classification for five working days or more and who satisfactorily
performs the whole of the duties and assumes the whole of the responsibilities
of the higher classification shall be entitled to receive the minimum salary of
such higher classification for all such periods of relief.
10. Payment and
Particulars of Salary
(i) All
salaries and other payments shall be paid fortnightly.
(ii) Employees
shall have their salary paid into one account with a bank or other financial
institution in New South Wales as nominated by the employee. Salaries shall be
deposited by the employer in sufficient time to ensure that wages are available
for withdrawal by employees by no later than payday, provided that this
requirement shall not apply where employees nominate accounts with non-bank
financial institutions which lack the technological or other facilities to
process salary deposits within 24 hours of the employer making deposits with
such financial institutions but in such cases the employer shall take all
reasonable steps to ensure that the wages of such employees are available for
withdrawal by no later than payday.
(iii) Underpayment
and overpayment of salaries - the following process will apply once the issue
of underpayment or overpayment is substantiated.
(a) Underpayment
(1) If the amount
underpaid is equal to or greater than one day’s gross base pay the underpayment
will be rectified within three working days;
(2) If the amount
underpaid is less than one day’s gross base pay it will be rectified by no
later than the next normal pay. However,
if the employee can demonstrate that rectification in this manner would result
in undue hardship, every effort will be made by the employer to rectify the underpayment
within three working days.
(b) Overpayment
(1) In all cases
where overpayments have occurred, the employer shall as soon as possible advise
the employee concerned of both the circumstances surrounding the overpayment
and the amount involved. The employer
will also advise the employee of the pay period from which the recovery of the
overpayment is to commence.
(2) One off
overpayments will be recovered in the next normal pay, except that where the
employee can demonstrate that undue hardship would result, the recover rate shall be at 10% of an employee’s gross
fortnightly base pay.
(3) Unless the
employee agrees otherwise, the maximum rate at which cumulative overpayments
can be recovered is an amount, calculated on a per fortnight basis, equivalent
to 10% of the employee’s gross fortnightly base pay.
(4) The recovery
rate of 10% of an employee’s gross fortnightly base pay referred to in
subclause (b)(3) above may be reduced by agreement, where the employee can
demonstrate that undue hardship would result.
(5) Where an employee’s
remaining period of service does not permit the full recovery of any
overpayment to be achieved on the fortnightly basis prescribed in subclause (b)(3) above, the employer shall have the right to deduct any
balance of such overpayment from monies owing to the employee on the employee’s
date of termination, resignation or retirement, as the case may be.
11. Settlement of
Disputes
(i) Where
a dispute arises in a particular section which cannot be resolved between the
employees or their representative and the supervising staff, it shall be
referred to the Chief Executive Officer of the Health Service or establishment
or his/her nominee, who will arrange for the matter to be discussed with the
employees concerned and a local representative or representatives of the Union.
(ii) Failing
settlement of the issue at this level, the matter shall be referred to the
Secretary and the Head Office of the Union. The dispute will then be dealt with
pursuant to subclause (v) of this clause.
(iii) Whilst these
procedures are continuing, no stoppage of work or any form of ban or limitation
of work shall be applied.
(iv) The
Union reserves the right to vary this procedure where it is considered a safety
factor is involved.
(v) With a view to
an amicable and speedy settlement, all disputes that firstly cannot be settled
in accordance with subclauses (i) and (ii) of this
clause may be submitted to a committee consisting of not more than six members,
with equal representatives of the Secretary and the Union. Such committee shall have the power to
investigate all matters in dispute and to report to the Chief Executive Officer
of the Health Service and the Union respectively with such recommendation as it
may think right and, in the event of no mutual decision being arrived at by
such committee, the matter in dispute may be referred to the Public Health
Employees (State) Industrial Committee.
(vi) This
clause shall not interfere with the rights of either party to institute
proceedings for the determination of any matter in accordance with the
Industrial Relations Act, 1996.
12. Anti-Discrimination
(i) It
is intention of the parties bound by this award to seek to achieve the object
in section 3(f) of the Industrial Relations Act 1996 to prevent and eliminate
discrimination in the workplace. This includes discrimination on the grounds of
race, sex, marital status, disability, homosexuality, transgender identity, age
and responsibilities as a carer.
(ii) It follows
that in fulfilling their obligations under the dispute resolution procedure
prescribed by this award the parties have obligations to take all reasonable
steps to ensure that the operation of the provisions of this award are not
directly or indirectly discriminatory in their effects. It will be consistent with the fulfilment of
these obligations for the parties to make application to vary any provision of
the award which, by its terms or operation, has a direct or indirect
discriminatory effect.
(iii) Under the
Anti-Discrimination Act 1977, it is unlawful to victimise an employee because
the employee has made or may make or has been involved in a complaint of
unlawful discrimination or harassment.
(iv) Nothing
in this clause is to be taken to affect:
(a) any conduct or act which is specifically exempted from
anti-discrimination legislation;
(b) offering or providing junior rates of pay to persons under
21 years of age;
(c) any act or practice of a body established to propagate
religion which is exempted under section 56(d) of the Anti-Discrimination Act
1977;
(d) a party to this award from pursuing matters of unlawful
discrimination in any State or Federal jurisdiction.
(v) This clause
does not create legal rights or obligations in addition to those imposed upon
the parties by the legislation referred to in this clause.
NOTES -
(a) Employers and
employees may also be subject to Commonwealth anti-discrimination legislation.
(b) Section 56(d)
of the Anti-Discrimination Act 1977 provides:
"Nothing in this Act affects ... any other act or
practice of a body established to propagate religion that conforms to the
doctrines of that religion or is necessary to avoid injury to the religious
susceptibilities of the adherents of that religion.
13. Mobility,
Excess Fares and Travelling
For the purpose of this clause accustomed place of work
shall mean the location where an employee is regularly required to commence
duty by the employer.
(i) An
employee shall be required to proceed to the accustomed place of work and
return home once on each ordinary working day or shift in the employee's own
time and at the employee's own expense.
(ii)
(a) Where an
employee is directed to report for duty to a place of work other than the
employee's accustomed place of work the employee shall travel to and from the
alternative place of work in the employer's time for those periods in excess of
time normally taken to travel to and from the accustomed place of work.
(b) If the excess of
travelling time on a particular day or shift is greater than the prescribed
ordinary hours of duty for the particular category of staff for that day or
shift, then the excess of hours, shall be paid at the
ordinary rate of pay to the extent of the excess of travelling time.
(c) Fares incurred
by such employee in excess of the fares normally incurred in travelling to the
employee's accustomed place of work and returning home from the accustomed
place of work, shall be reimbursed.
(d) Where the
employee is required to report to an alternative place of work and has the
prior approval of the employer to travel by his/her own mode of conveyance, the
employee shall be paid a kilometre allowance for kilometres travelled in excess
of the kilometres the employee normally travels between the accustomed place of
work and home. The kilometre allowance
will be as prescribed from time to time by the Crown Employees (Public Service
Conditions of Employment) Award..
(iii)
(a) Where an
employer has determined that an employee or employees should report to a new
accustomed place of work on a permanent basis, the decision must be discussed
with the affected employee(s) and the local branch of the Union prior to notice
of changed accustomed place of work being given.
(b) The employer
shall give the employee reasonable notice of the requirement to report to a new
accustomed place of work. For the
purpose of this sub-clause "reasonable notice" shall be one calendar
month prior to the date the employee is first required to report to the new
accustomed place of work.
(c) Where the
accustomed place of work is changed on a permanent basis by the employer, the
employee shall report to the new accustomed place of work on the date specified
by the employer.
(d) If there is
disagreement about such decision after such discussion or if a significant
number of employees are involved, the matter should be referred to the Ministry
of Health which will discuss the matter with the Union and will determine the
date upon which notice will be given to employee(s).
(iv)
(a) The provision
of this clause shall not apply to an employee appointed to regularly perform
relief duties or to employees specifically employed to perform duties at more
than one place of work except as provided in (b) hereunder.
(b) If a reliever
incurs fares in excess of *$5 per day in travelling to and from the relief
site, the excess shall be reimbursed.
(c) Where a
reliever, with the prior approval of the employer, travels by his/her own mode
of conveyance and incurs travelling costs in excess of *$5 per day to and from
the relief site, such excess shall be reimbursed. The rate applicable shall be the kilometre
allowance prescribed from time to time by the Crown Employees (Public Service
Conditions of Employment) Award, less *$5.
*This $5 shall be reviewed annually by the employer.
(v) No payment
shall be made under this clause unless the employer is satisfied that the
employee has incurred additional expenditure in having to report to an
alternative place of work, at the direction of the employer.
(vi) Travel,
to an alternative place of work, either by public transport or own mode of
conveyance, shall in all instances be by the most direct route.
14. Redundancy -
Managing Excess Employees
Employees shall be entitled to the provisions of Ministry of
Health Policy Directive PD2012_021 Managing Exess
Staff of the NSW Health Service , as amended from time
to time.
15. Family and
Community Services Leave and Personal/Carers’ Leave
(i) Family
and Community Services (FACS) Leave and Personal/Carer’s Leave are separate, stand alone entitlements.
(ii) The
provisions outlined in Parts A and B of this clause are available to all
employees covered by this Award, other than casual employees as defined in
subclause (iii) below.
(iii) Casual
employees as defined in the Health Industry Status of Employment (State) Award
are entitled to the provisions outlined in Part C of this clause.
A. FACS Leave
(i) FACS
Leave - General
(a) For the purpose
of this clause relating to FACS leave:
"relative" means a
person related by blood, marriage or affinity;
"affinity" means a
relationship that one spouse because of marriage has to blood relatives of the
other; and
"household" means a
family group living in the same domestic dwelling.
(b) The employer
may grant FACS leave to an employee:
(1) to provide care and/or support for sick members of the
employee’s relatives or household; or
(2) for reasons related
to the family responsibilities of the employee (e.g. to arrange and or attend a
funeral of a relative; to accompany a relative to a medical appointment where
there is an element of emergency; parent/teacher meetings; education week
activities; to meet elder-care requirements of a relative); or
(3) for reasons
related to the performance of community service by the employee (e.g. in
matters relating to citizenship; to office holders in local government, other
than as a mayor, for attendance at meetings, conferences or other associated
duties; representing Australia or the State in major amateur sport other than
in Olympic/Commonwealth Games); or
(4) in a case of pressing necessity (e.g. where an employee is
unable to attend work because of adverse weather conditions which either
prevent attendance or threaten life or property; the illness of a relative;
where a child carer is unable to look after their charge).
(ii) FACS leave
replaces compassionate leave.
(iii) An employee
is not to be granted FACS leave for attendance at court to answer a criminal
charge, unless the employer approves the grant of leave in the particular case.
Applications for FACS leave to attend court, for
reasons other than criminal charges, will be assessed on an individual basis.
(iv) FACS Leave -
entitlement
(a) The maximum
amount of FACS leave on full pay that may be granted to an employee is:
(1) 3 working days
during the first year of service, commencing on and from 1 January 1995, and
thereafter 6 working days in any period of 2 years; or
(2) 1 working day,
on a cumulative basis effective from 1 January 1995, for each year of service
after 2 years’ continuous service, minus any period of FACS leave already taken
by the employee since 1 January 1995,
whichever method provides the
greater entitlement.
(b) For the
purposes of calculating entitlements under (vi)(a)(1) and (2) above, a working
day for employees working 38 hours per week shall be deemed to consist of 8
hours, and a working day for employees working 35 hours per week shall be
deemed to consist of 7 hours. The rate
at which FACS leave is paid out and utilised shall be on actual hours absent
from a rostered shift.
Example A: An
employee working 38 hours per week will have an entitlement, in their first year
of employment, to 24 hours of FACS leave.
If the employee take FACS leave for a full 10
hour shift, the employee would be debited 10 hours of FACS leave.
Example B: An
employee working 35 hours per week will have an entitlement, in their first year
of employment, to 21 hours of FACS leave.
If the employee takes FACS leave for a full 7 hour shift, the employee
would be debited 7 hours of FACS leave.
Example C: An
employee, employed prior to 1 January 1995, applies for FACS leave on 20
February 1997. The employee is entitled
to 6 days in any period of two years.
Therefore, to calculate the employee’s available FACS leave as at 20
February 1997, add all FACS leave taken from 21 February 1995 to 20 February
1997 and deduct that amount from the 6 days entitlement.
(c) FACS leave is
available to part-time employees on a pro rata basis, based on the average
number of hours worked per week. A
working day shall consist of one-fifth of the employee’s average weekly hours
during the preceding 12 months or during the employee’s period of employment,
whichever is the lesser period.
Example: An
employee working an average of 30 hours per week will have an entitlement, in
his/her first year of employment, of 18 hours of FACS leave. If the employee takes FACS leave for a full
rostered shift eg of 4 hours, the employee would be
debited 4 hours of FACS leave. Likewise, if the employee was rostered for 8
hours and was absent for the full 8 hours on FACS leave, he/she would be
debited 8 hours of FACS leave.
(v) Additional
FACS leave for bereavement purposes
Where FACS leave has been exhausted, additional FACS
leave of up to 2 days for bereavement may be granted on a discrete, "per
occasion" basis to an employee on the death of a relative or member of a household
as defined in subclause (i) (a) of Part A of this
clause.
(vi) Use
of other leave entitlements
The employer may grant an employee other leave
entitlements for reasons related to family responsibilities or community
service, by the employee.
An employee may elect, with the consent of the
employer, to take annual leave; long service leave; or
leave without pay.
B. Personal/Carer’s
Leave
(i) Use
of sick leave to care for the person concerned - definitions
A person who needs the employee’s care and support is
referred to as the "person concerned" and is:
(a) a spouse of the employee; or
(b) a de facto
spouse, who, in relation to a person, is a person of the opposite sex to the
first mentioned person who lives with the first mentioned person as the husband
or wife of that person on a bona fide domestic basis although not legally
married to that person; or
(c) a child or an adult child (including an adopted child, a
step child, a foster child or an ex nuptial child), parent (including a foster
parent and legal guardian), grandparent, grandchild or sibling of the employee
or spouse or de facto spouse of the employee; or
(d) a same sex
partner who lives with the employee as the de facto partner of that employee on
a bona fide domestic basis; or
(e) a relative of
the employee who is a member of the same household, where for the purpose of
this clause relating to Personal/Carer’s Leave:
"relative" means a
person related by blood, marriage or affinity;
"affinity" means a
relationship that one spouse because of marriage has to blood relatives of the
other; and
"household" means a
family group living in the same domestic dwelling.
(ii) Use of sick
leave to care for the person concerned - entitlement
(a) The entitlement
to use sick leave in accordance with this subclause is subject to:
(1) the employee being responsible for the care and support of
the person concerned; and
(2) the person concerned being as defined in subclause (i) of Part B of this clause.
(b) Other than a
casual or any other employee who receives a loading in lieu of sick leave, an
employee with responsibilities in relation to a person who needs their care and
support shall be entitled to use the untaken sick leave, from that year’s
annual sick leave entitlement, to provide care and support for such persons
when they are ill.
(c) Sick leave
accumulates from year to year. In
addition to the current year’s grant of sick leave available under (b) above,
sick leave untaken from the previous 3 years may also be accessed by an
employee with responsibilities in relation to a person who needs their care and
support.
(d) The employer
may, in special circumstances, make a grant of additional sick leave. This grant can only be taken from sick leave
untaken prior to the period referred to in subclause (c) above.
(e) The employee
shall, if required, establish either by production of a medical certificate or
statutory declaration that the illness of the person concerned is such as to
require care by another person.
(f) The employee
has the right to choose the method by which the ground for leave is
established, that is, by production of either a medical certificate or
statutory declaration.
(g) The employee is
not required to state the exact nature of the relevant illness on either a
medical certificate or statutory declaration.
(h) The employee
shall, wherever practicable, give the employer notice prior to the absence of
the intention to take leave, the name of the person requiring care and that
person’s relationship to the employee, the reasons for taking such leave and
the estimated length of absence. If it
is not practicable for the employee to give prior notice of absence, the
employee shall notify the employer by telephone of such absence at the first
opportunity on the day of absence.
(i)
In normal circumstances, the employee must not take leave under this part where
another person has taken leave to care for the same person.
(iii) Use of other
leave entitlements
An employee may elect, with the consent of the
employer, to take:
(a) annual leave,
including annual leave not exceeding 10 days in single day periods or part
thereof, in any calendar year at a time or times agreed by the parties. An employee and employer may agree to defer
payment of the annual leave loading in respect of single day absences, until at
least 5 consecutive annual leave days are taken. An employee may elect with the employer’s
agreement to take annual leave at any time within a period of 24 months from
the date at which it falls due.
(b) long service leave; or
(c) leave without pay for the purpose of providing care and
support to the person concerned as defined in subclause (i)
of Part B of this clause.
(iv) Use
of make-up time
An employee may elect, with the consent of the
employer, to work "make-up time". "Make-up time" is worked
when the employee takes time off during ordinary hours for family or community
service responsibilities, and works those hours at another time.
C. Entitlements
for Casual Employees
(i) Bereavement
entitlements for casual employees
(a) Casual
employees are entitled to not be available to attend work or to leave work upon
the death in Australia of a relative or member of a household as prescribed in
subclause (i)(a) of Part A
of this clause.
(b) The employer
and the employee shall agree on the period for which the employee will be
entitled to not be available to attend work.
In the absence of agreement, the employee is entitled to not be
available to attend work for up to 48 hours (ie two
days) per occasion. The casual employee
is not entitled to any payment for the period of non-attendance.
(c) An employer
must not fail to re-engage a casual employee because the employee accessed the
entitlements provided for in this part.
The rights of an employer to engage or not engage a casual employee are
otherwise not affected.
(ii) Personal carers entitlement for casual employees
(a) Subject to the
evidentiary and notice requirements in subclauses (ii)(e)
- (h) of Part B of this clause casual employees are entitled to not be
available to attend work, or to leave work if they need to care for a person
prescribed in subclause (i) of Part B of this clause
who are sick and require care and support, or who require care due to an
unexpected emergency, or the birth of a child.
(b) The employer
and the employee shall agree on the period for which the employee will be
entitled to not be available to attend work.
In the absence of agreement, the employee is entitled to not be
available to attend work for up to 48 hours (ie two
days) per occasion. The casual employee
is not entitled to any payment for the period of non-attendance.
(c) An employer
must not fail to re-engage a casual employee because the employee accessed the
entitlements provided for in this part.
The rights of an employer to engage or not to engage a casual employee
are otherwise not affected.
16. Labour
Flexibility
(i) The employer may direct an employee to
carry out such duties as are reasonable, and within the limits of the
employee's skill, competence and training consistent with employee's
classification, grouping and/or career stream provided that such duties are not
designed to promote deskilling.
(ii) The employer
may direct an employee to carry out such duties and use such tools and
equipment as may be required provided that the employee has been properly
trained or has otherwise acquired the necessary skills in the use of such tools
and equipment.
(iii) Any direction
issued by the employer pursuant to sub-clause (i) and
(ii) shall be consistent with the employer's responsibilities to provide a safe
and healthy work environment.
(iv) Existing
provisions with respect to the payment of higher duties allowances shall apply
in such circumstances.
17. Termination of
Employment
Employment may be terminated only by four weeks' notice
given in writing either by the employer or the officer at any time during the week
or by payment or forfeiture of four weeks' salary as the case may be, provided
that the officer and the employer may agree to a lesser period of notice. Nothing in this clause shall prevent the
summary dismissal of an officer for misconduct or neglect of duty.
18. Salary
Packaging
(i) By
agreement with their employer, employees may elect to package part or all of
their salary in accordance with this clause, to obtain a range of benefits as
set out in the NSW Health Services Salary Packaging Policy and Procedure
Manual, as amended from time to time. Such election must be made prior to the
commencement of the period of service to which the earnings relate. Where an
employee also elects to salary sacrifice to superannuation under this award,
the combined amount of salary packaging/sacrificing may be up to 100 per cent
of salary.
Any salary packaging above the fringe benefit exemption
cap will attract fringe benefits tax as described in paragraph (iv) below.
(ii) Where an
employee elects to package an amount of salary:
(a) Subject to
Australian taxation law, the packaged amount of salary will reduce the salary
subject to PAYE taxation deductions by that packaged amount.
(b) Any allowance,
penalty rate, overtime payment, payment for unused leave entitlements, weekly
workers’ compensation, or other payment other than any payment for leave taken
in service, to which an employee is entitled under this award or statute which
is expressed to be determined by reference to an employee’s salary, shall be
calculated by reference to the salary which would have applied to the employee
under this award in the absence of any salary packaging or salary sacrificing
made under this award.
(c) ‘Salary’ for
the purpose of this clause, for superannuation purposes, and for the
calculation of award entitlements, shall mean the award salary as specified in
Clause 2. Salaries, and which shall include ‘approved employment benefits’
which refer to fringe benefit savings, administration costs, and the value of
packaged benefits.
(iii) Any pre-tax
and post-tax payroll deductions must be taken into account prior to determining
the amount of available salary to be packaged. Such payroll deductions may
include but are not limited to superannuation payments, HECS payments, child
support payments, judgement debtor/ garnishee orders, union fees, and private
health fund membership fees.
(iv) The
salary packaging scheme utilises a fringe benefit taxation exemption status
conferred on public hospitals and local health districts, which provides for a
fringe benefit tax exemption cap of $17,000 per annum. The maximum amount of
fringe benefits-free tax savings that can be achieved under the scheme is where
the value of benefits when grossed-up, equal the fringe benefits exemption cap
of $17,000. Where the grossed-up value exceeds the cap, the employer is liable
to pay fringe benefits tax on the amount in excess of $17,000, but will pass
this cost on to the employee. The employer’s share of savings, the combined
administration cost, and the value of the package benefits, are deducted from
pre-tax dollars.
(v) The parties
agree that the application of the fringe benefits tax exemption status
conferred on public hospitals and local health districts is subject to
prevailing Australian taxation laws.
(vi) If
an employee wishes to withdraw from the salary packaging scheme, the employee
may only do so in accordance with the required period of notice as set out in
the Salary Packaging Policy and Procedure Manual.
(vii) Where an
employee ceases to salary package, arrangements will be made to convert the
agreed package amount to salary. Any costs associated with the conversion will
be borne by the employee, and the employer shall not be liable to make up any
salary lost as a consequence of the employee’s decision to convert to salary.
(viii) Employees
accepting the offer to salary package do so voluntarily. Employees are advised
to seek independent financial advice and counselling to apprise them of the
implications of salary packaging on their individual personal financial
situations.
(ix) The employer
and the employee shall comply with the procedures set out in the NSW Health
Services Salary Packaging Policy and Procedure Manual as amended from time to
time.
19. Reasonable
Hours
(i) Subject
to sub-clause (ii) the employer may require an employee to work reasonable
overtime at overtime rates unless or as otherwise provided for under the award.
(ii) An employee may
refuse to work overtime in circumstances where the working of such overtime
would result in the employee working hours which are unreasonable.
(iii) For the
purposes of sub-clause (ii) what is unreasonable or otherwise will be
determined having regard to:
(a) any risk to employee health and safety.
(b) The employee’s
personal circumstances including any family and carer responsibilities.
(c) The needs of
the workplace or enterprise.
(d) The notice (if
any) given by the employer of the overtime and by the employee of his or her
intention to refuse it; and
(e) Any other
relevant matter.
20. Salary
Sacrifice to Superannuation
(i) Notwithstanding
the salaries prescribed in Clause 2. Salaries as varied from time to time, an
employee may elect, subject to the agreement of the employee’s employer, to
sacrifice a part or all of the salary payable under the salaries clause to
additional employer superannuation contributions. Such election must be made
prior to the commencement of the period of service to which the earnings
relate. The amount sacrificed together with any salary packaging arrangements
under Clause 18. Salary Packaging, of this award may be made up to one hundred
(100) per cent of the salary payable under the relevant salaries clause, or up to
one hundred (100) per cent of the currently applicable superannuable
salary, whichever is the lesser.
In this clause, ‘superannuable
salary’ means the employee’s salary as notified from time to time to the New
South Wales public sector superannuation trustee corporations.
(ii) Any pre-tax
and post-tax payroll deductions must be taken into account prior to determining
the amount of available salary to be packaged. Such payroll deductions may
include but are not limited to superannuation payments, HECS payments, child
support payments, judgement debtor/garnishee orders, union fees and private
health fund membership fees.
(iii) Where the
employee has elected to sacrifice a part or all of the available payable salary
to additional employer superannuation contributions:
(a) The employee
shall be provided with a copy of the signed agreement. The salary sacrifice
agreement shall be terminated at any time at the employee’s election and shall
cease upon termination of the employee’s services with the employer.
(b) Subject to
Australian taxation law, the amount of salary sacrificed will reduce the salary
subject to appropriate PAYE taxation deductions by the amount sacrificed; and
(c) Any allowance,
penalty rate, overtime, payment for unused leave entitlements, weekly workers’
compensation, or other payment, other than any payment for leave taken in
service, to which an employee is entitled under the relevant award or any
applicable award, act, or statute which is expressed to be determined by
reference to an employee’s salary, shall be calculated by reference to the
salary which would have applied to the employee under the salaries clause of
the relevant award in the absence of any salary sacrifice to superannuation
made under this award.
(iv) The
employee may elect to have the specified amount of payable salary which is
sacrificed to additional employer superannuation contributions:
(a) paid into the superannuation scheme established under the
First State Superannuation Act 1992 as optional employer contributions; or
(b) subject to the employer’s agreement, paid into a private
sector complying superannuation scheme as employer superannuation
contributions.
(v) Where an
employee elects to salary sacrifice in terms of subclause (iv)
above, the employer will pay the sacrificed amount into the relevant
superannuation fund.
(vi) Where
the employee is a member of a superannuation scheme established under:
(a) the Police Regulation (Superannuation) Act, 1906;
(b) the Superannuation Act, 1916;
(c) the State Authorities Superannuation Act, 1987;
(d) the State Authorities Non-contributory Superannuation Act,
1987; or
(e) the First State Superannuation Act, 1992.
The employee’s employer must ensure that the amount of any
additional employer superannuation contributions specified in subclause (i) above is included in the employee’s superannuable
salary which is notified to the New South Wales public sector superannuation
trustee corporations.
(vii) Where, prior
to electing to sacrifice a part or all of their salary to superannuation, an
employee had entered into an agreement with their employer to have
superannuation contributions made to a superannuation fund other than a fund
established under legislation listed in subclause (v) above, the employer will
continue to base contributions to that fund on the salary payable under Clause
2. Salaries of the award to the same
extent as applied before the employee sacrificed that amount of salary to
superannuation. This clause applies even though the superannuation
contributions made by the employer may be in excess of the superannuation
guarantee requirements after the salary sacrifice is implemented.
21. No Extra
Claims
Other than as provided for in the Industrial Relations
Act 1996 and the Industrial Relations (Public Sector Conditions of Employment)
Regulation 2014, there shall be no further claims/demands or proceedings
instituted before the Industrial Relations Commission of New South Wales for
extra or reduced wages, salaries, rates of pay, allowances or conditions of
employment with respect to the employees covered by the Award that take effect
prior to 30 June 2016 by a party to this award.
22. Area,
Incidence and Duration
(i) This
Award takes effect from 1 July 2015 and shall remain in force for a period of
one year.
(ii) This Award
rescinds and replaces the Public Hospitals Medical Superintendents (State)
Award published 24 April 2009 (367 I.G. 1341) and all variations thereof.
(iii) This Award
shall apply to persons employed in classifications contained herein employed in
the New South Wales Health Service under section 115(1) of the Health Services
Act 1997, or their successors, assignees or transmittees.
M. J. WALTON J , President
____________________
Printed by the authority of the Industrial Registrar.