CHARITABLE, AGED AND DISABILITY CARE SERVICES (STATE) AWARD
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS
COMMISSION OF NEW SOUTH WALES
Application by Health and
Research Employees' Association of New South Wales, industrial organisation of
employees.
(No. IRC 7010 of 2001)
Before Commissioner
Neal
|
14 November 2001
|
AWARD
1. Arrangement
Clause No. Subject Matter
45. Accommodation
and Amenities
17. Allowances
for Special Working Conditions
19. Annual
Leave
20. Annual
Leave Loading
3. Anti-Discrimination
41. Apprentices
51. Area,
Incidence and Duration
1. Arrangement
40. Association
Representative
34. Attendance
at Meetings
12. Casual
Employees
14. Climatic
and Isolation Allowance
24. Compassionate
Leave
47. Consultative
Arrangements
2. Definitions
37. Emergency
Telephone Calls
4. Employment
Classifications
33. Grievance
and Dispute Resolution Procedures
29. Higher
Duties
7. Hours
46. Inspection
of Lockers
35. Labour
Flexibility & Mixed Functions
28. Leading
Hands
50. Leave
Reserved
25. Leave
Without Pay
16. Live-in
Housekeeper Remuneration
32. Live-in
21. Long
Service Leave
9. Meals
48. No Extra
Claims Commitment
44. Notice
Board
10. Overtime
38. Parental
Leave
26. Payment
and Particulars of Wages
15. Penalty
Rates and Shift Allowances
11. Permanent
Part-time Employee
23. Personal/Carer’s
Leave
36. Promotions
and Appointments
18. Public
Holidays
42. Redundancy
39. Repatriation
Leave
8. Roster of
Hours
6. Remuneration
Packaging
27. Service
Allowance
22. Sick Leave
31. Sleepovers
13. Temporary
Employment
43. Termination
of Employment
49. Training
30. Uniforms
and Protective Clothing
5. Wages
PART B
Table 1 - Monetary Rates
Table 2 - Other Rates and allowances
2. Definitions
"Adult Service" - means service with an employer
during which the worker received a rate of pay not less than the lowest rates
fixed by this award for an adult, in the same classification as the worker, or
the employee is on the age scale at 18 years and over.
"A.S.A." - means the Aged Services Association of
New South Wales (Industrial) a registered organisation of employers that is
party to this award.
"Association" - means the Health and Research
Employees' Association of New South Wales.
"C.C.E.R." - means the Catholic Commission for
Employment Relations that is an employer party to this award.
"Day Worker" - means an employee who works their
ordinary hours from Monday to Friday inclusive and who commences work on such
days at or after 6:00 a.m. and at or before 10:30 a.m., otherwise than as part
of a shift system.
"Engagement" - means time that an employee is
engaged in homecare services with the client/s joined by the time taken to
travel between clients, meal breaks, and rest periods, including overtime
worked continuously after the engagement.
"Homecare Residence" - means the homecare client’s
place of abode.
"Ordinary Pay" - includes base pay and overaward
payments for ordinary hours of work; Climatic and Isolation allowances; Leading
Hand allowance; and Service allowance. It does not include shift or weekend
penalties.
"Shift Worker" - means an employee who is not a
day worker as defined.
3.
Anti-Discrimination
(1) It is the
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, carer status and
responsibilities as a carer.
(2) 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.
(3) 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.
(4) 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.
(5) This clause
does not create legal rights or obligations in addition to those imposed upon
the parties by 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."
4. Employment
Classifications
The duties required to be undertaken by an employee in any
of the following classifications shall remain within that employee’s skills and
competence in accordance with Clause 35-Labour Flexibility and Mixed Functions.
Where the employer requires the employee to perform any or
all of the tasks set out below, the employee must possess relevant skill and
competence to perform such tasks. Where the employee does not possess such
skills and competence, appropriate training shall be facilitated.
(i) Care Service
Employees:
New Entrant -
An employee with less than 500 Hours work experience in
this industry who performs basic duties under direct supervision. Such employees perform routine functions
requiring understanding of clear rules and procedures. Work is performed using
established practices, procedures and instructions including compliance with
documentation requirements as determined by the employer. Problems should be
referred to a more senior staff member.
Indicative tasks an employee at this level may perform are as follows.
Typical Duties:
CARE STREAM
|
SUPPORT STREAM
|
MAINTENANCE STREAM
|
Carry out simple tasks under
|
General assistance to higher grade
|
General labouring assistance
|
supervision to assist a higher grade
|
employees in the full range of
|
to higher-grade employees in
|
Care Service Employee attending
|
Domestic duties.
|
the full range of gardening
|
to the personal needs of residents
|
|
and maintenance duties.
|
GRADE 1.
An employee who has 500 hours work experience in the
industry or who has/or can demonstrate relevant prior experience, acceptable to
the employer, which enables the employee to work effectively at this
level. A Junior Employee (less than 18
years) when classified at this grade may be paid as a new entrant. An employee
who works under limited supervision individually or in a team environment or on
sleepover. Employees at this level work
within established guidelines including compliance with documentation
requirements as determined by the employer.
In some situations detailed instructions may be necessary. Indicative tasks an employee at this level
may perform are as follows.
Typical Duties.
Care Stream
|
Support Stream
|
Maintenance
|
|
|
Stream
|
Under limited
supervision,
|
Performance under
limited supervision of
|
Performance under
|
provide assistance to
residents in
|
the full range of
Domestic duties
|
limited supervision of
|
carrying out simple
personal care
|
including but not
limited to:
|
labouring duties
|
tasks which shall
include but not
|
|
associated with
|
be limited to:
|
|
gardening and general
|
|
|
maintenance activities,
|
|
|
including but not
|
|
|
limited to:
|
Supervise daily hygiene eg
|
General cleaning of accommodation food
|
Sweeping; Hosing;
|
assisting with showers or baths,
|
service, and general areas; General
|
Garbage collection and
|
shaving,cutting nails; lay out
|
waiting, table service and clearing duties;
|
disposal; Keeping the
|
clothes and assist in dressing;
|
|
outside of buildings
|
make beds and tidy rooms; store
|
|
clean and tidy; Mowing
|
clothes and clean wardrobes;.
|
|
lawns and assisting the
|
assist with meals
|
|
Gardener in labouring.
|
Under direct supervision, provide
|
Assistance in the preparation of food,
|
|
assistance to a higher Grade Care
|
including the cooking and/or preparation
|
|
Service Employee in attending to
|
of light refreshments; All laundry duties.
|
|
the personal care needs of a
|
|
|
resident.
|
|
|
GRADE 2.
An employee with relevant experience who works
individually or in a team environment, and is responsible for the quality of
their own work, subject to general supervision, including compliance with
documentation requirements as determined by the employer. Indicative tasks an
employee at this level may perform are as follows.
Typical Duties.
CARE STREAM
|
SUPPORT STREAM
|
MAINTENANCE STREAM
|
Provide a wide range of personal care
|
Assist a higher grade
|
Undertake basic repairs to
|
services to residents, under limited
|
worker in the planning,
|
buildings, equipment,
|
supervision, in accordance with
|
cooking and preparation
|
appliances, and similar items
|
Commonwealth and State Legislative
|
of the full range of meals.
|
not calling for trades skills or
|
requirements, and in accordance with the
|
|
knowledge. Work
with and
|
resident’s Care Plan, including:
|
|
undertake limited
|
|
|
coordination of the work of
|
|
|
other maintenance workers.
|
|
|
Where no tradesperson is
|
|
|
employed, an employee at
|
|
|
this level may be called upon
|
|
|
to perform tasks falling
|
|
|
within the scope of trades
|
|
|
skills, provided the time
|
|
|
involved in performing such
|
|
|
work, is paid at the rate of
|
|
|
Care Service Employee
|
|
|
Grade 3, in accordance with
|
|
|
Clause 33-Labour Flexibility.
|
|
|
and Mixed Functions
|
Assist and Support residents with
|
Drive a Sedan or Utility.
|
Perform gardening duties.
|
medication utilising medication
|
|
Provide advice on planning
|
compliance aids; Simple wound dressing;
|
|
and plant maintenance.
|
Implementation of continence programs
|
|
Attend to indoor plants,
|
as identified in the Care Plan;
|
|
conduct recycling and re-
|
|
|
potting schedules
|
Attend to routine urinalysis, blood
|
|
Carry out physical
|
pressure, temperature and pulse checks;
|
|
inspections of property and
|
Blood sugar level checks etc and assist
|
|
premises and report.
|
and support diabetic residents in the
|
|
|
management of their insulin and diet,
|
|
|
recognising the signs of both Hyper and
|
|
|
Hypo-Glycemia.
|
|
|
Recognise, report and respond
|
|
.
|
Appropriately to changes in the condition
|
|
|
of residents, within the skills and
|
|
|
competence of the employee and the
|
|
|
policies and procedures of the
|
|
|
organisation.
|
|
|
Assist in the development and
|
|
|
implementation of resident care plans
|
|
|
Assist in the development and.
|
|
|
implementation of programs of activities
|
|
|
for residents, under the supervision of a
|
|
|
Care Service Employee Grade 3 or above,
|
|
|
or a Diversional Therapist.
|
|
|
GRADE 3.
An employee who holds either a Certificate Level III in Care
Support Services or other appropriate Qualification/Experience acceptable to
the employer and:
is designated by the employer as having the
responsibility for leading and/or supervising the work of others; or
is required to work individually with minimal
supervision and has been designated by the employer as having overall
responsibility for a particular function within the facility.
An employee who holds appropriate Trade Qualifications and
is required to act on them. Where the
work of such employee requires the holding of a licence, the licence allowance
from the applicable State trades award shall be paid.
Employees at this level may be required to plan, direct, and
train staff and comply with documentation requirements as determined by the
employer and assist in the development of budgets.
Indicative tasks an employee at this level may perform are
as follows.
Typical Duties.
CARE STREAM
|
SUPPORT STREAM
|
MAINTENANCE
|
|
|
STREAM
|
Coordinate and direct the work of
|
Responsible for the planning, ordering
|
Carry out maintenance,
|
staff.
|
and preparing of all meals.
|
repairs, gardening and
|
|
|
other tasks falling within
|
|
|
the scope of trades skills.
|
Schedule work programs on a
|
Responsible for the provision of
|
Undertake the more
|
routine and regular basis.
|
domestic services.
|
complicated repairs to
|
|
|
equipment and appliances
|
|
|
calling for trade skills.
|
Develop and implement
|
Schedule work programs on a routine
|
Coordinate and direct the
|
programs of activities for
|
and regular basis.
|
work of staff performing
|
residents.
|
|
gardening duties.
|
Develop resident care plans.
|
Coordinate and direct the work of
|
Schedule work programs
|
|
staff.
|
on a routine and regular
|
|
|
basis.
|
|
Drive a Minibus or Larger Vehicle.
|
|
GRADE 4.
An employee who holds either Trade Qualifications or other
appropriate qualifications/experience acceptable to the employer is required to
act on them and:
is designated by the employer as having the
responsibility for leading and/or supervising the work of others including
tradespeople; or
is required to work individually with minimal
supervision and has been designated by the employer as having overall
responsibility for any or all functions within the facility.
Employees at this level may be required to exercise any/all
managerial functions in relation to the operation of the Facility and comply
with documentation requirements as determined by the employer.
Indicative tasks an employee at this level may perform are
as follows.
Typical Duties.
CARE STREAM
|
SUPPORT STREAM
|
MAINTENANCE
|
|
|
STREAM
|
Overall responsibility for the
|
Coordinate and direct the work of
|
Coordinate and direct
|
provision of personal care to
|
staff involved with the preparation
|
the work of staff
|
residents.
|
and delivery of food.
|
performing gardening duties.
|
Coordinate and direct the work of
|
Schedule work programs.
|
Schedule gardening work
|
staff.
|
|
programs.
|
Schedule work programs.
|
|
Where required, let
|
|
|
routine service contracts
|
|
|
associated with gardening.
|
GRADE 5.
This grade shall only apply to employees having
responsibility for supervision of the entire facility.
|
|
An employee who may be required to have and use any
additional qualifications than would be required for
|
a grade 4 employees.
|
|
Employees at this level may be required to exercise
any/all managerial functions in relation to the
|
operation of the Facility and comply with documentation
requirements as determined by the employer.
|
"Catering Officer" -means a person who is
responsible for catering services.
"Diversional Therapist" -shall mean a person who
provides, facilitates and co-ordinates group and individual leisure and
recreational activities. This person
must be a graduate from an approved university course which includes: the
Associate Diploma and Diploma of Applied Science (Diversional Therapy) at the
University of Sydney; Bachelor of Applied Sciences (Leisure and Health) at the
University of Sydney; Bachelor of Applied Science (Diversional Therapy) at the
University of Western Sydney, Macarthur; the Diploma or Bachelor of Health
Sciences (Leisure and Health) at Charles Sturt University; the Associate
Diploma course in Diversional Therapy conducted by the Cumberland College of
Health Sciences; or who has such other qualifications deemed to be equivalent.
"Maintenance Supervisor (Tradesperson)" - means an
employee who has trade qualifications and has overall responsibility for
maintenance at the place of employment and may be required to supervise other
maintenance staff.
"Maintenance Supervisor (Otherwise)" - means an
employee who is required to perform maintenance duties as required and who may
be required to supervise other maintenance staff and has overall responsibility
for maintenance at the place of employment.
Note: -Employees classified and paid as Recreational
Activities Officers as at 10 November, 1998 be reclassified in accordance with
the new definitions of Care Services Employee.
Employees reclassified at Level 2 by virtue of the above exercise, shall
be paid at Level 3 from the effective date of this award, and continue to be so
paid whilst employed in the provision of recreational activities by their
current employer. These employees may be required to perform the duties of a
Level 3 Care Services Employee where they have the skill and competence to do
so.
(ii) Homecare
Employees.
(a) Homecare
Worker:
"Homecare Worker" -means an employee who
performs the duties associated with the provisions of Homecare Services to
Homecare Clients in the private residence, which may include cleaning, child
minding, gardening, handywork (within the employees skills and competencies),
cooking, laundry, shopping, personal errands, escorting clients and associated
driving, personal care services and general upkeeping services. A Homecare
Worker would not normally live at the client’s residence for periods in excess
of 48 hours.
An employee employed as a homecare employee may be
offered additional hours (over and above their guaranteed minimum hours) at a
facility and would be paid the rate applicable to the classification worked.
An employee employed at a facility may be offered
additional hours (over and above their guaranteed minimum hours) in homecare
duties and this employee would be paid the rate applicable to that of a
homecare employee.
GRADE 1.
Shall mean a person without previous relevant experience in
personal care delivery. This is a trainee level, which applies to new
employees. The employer shall provide training. At the end of a period of six
months or 250 hours employment, which ever is first completed, employees who
have satisfactorily completed the requirements of grade 1 shall progress to
grade 2.
Should an employee at this grade 1 level not satisfactorily
complete the requirements of grade 1, he/she shall be notified in writing by
the employer two weeks prior to the date on which he/she would have proceeded
to grade 2.
An employee may seek the assistance of the union during
these discussions and if there is a disagreement between the parties as to the
employee’s future, the matter shall be resolved as per clause 31 - Grievance
and Disputes Resolution procedure.
A grade 1 employee shall work under general supervision.
Notwithstanding the above, employees who choose only to
carry out general housekeeping duties and are not prepared to multi skill shall
be paid at this grade.
GRADE 2.
Shall mean a person who satisfies the requirements of grade
1 and has progressed to grade 2.
An employee at this level shall be competent in carrying out
simple personal care, housekeeping and tasks relevant to assisting clients to
maintain their independence in their own homes and may be required to perform
the duties of Handyperson as defined.
Optional training shall be provided to employees at the
request of the employees at this level to equip employees to apply for
positions at grade 3.
Grade 2 employees may be required to perform complex tasks
required of a grade 3 employee from time to time, within their competence, and
shall be paid at the rate for grade 3 whenever such duties are performed for
periods in excess of 5 hours per week.
Where the employer requires the employee to perform any or
all of the tasks set out below, relevant to a Grade 2 position, the employee
must possess relevant skill and competence to perform such tasks. Where the
employee does not possess such skills and competence, appropriate training
shall be provided.
Typical Duties - Grade 2
Showering/Bathing.
Excepting where client has severely limited/uncontrollable
body movements;
Assisting clients to shower/bath self or totally
showering/bathing client;
Assisting with mobility or transferring to and from
shower/bath;
Assisting or transferring client to commode chair,
Supervising children’s bath.
Bathing a baby.
Total bed bath/sponge - exception level 3.
Toileting.
Helping people to the toilet.
Assisting people to use the toilet by loosening
clothing.
Assisting client to change own incontinence and
sanitary pads.
Assisting clients with bottles.
Assisting self-catheterisation by holding mirror or
positioning legs except where there is severely limited/uncontrollable body
movements.
Changing babies, nappies, toileting children.
Menstrual Care.
Assisting with menstrual care.
Skin Care.
All skin care (e.g. application of cream, rubbing
pressure areas with lotion etc. except where dressings are involved).
Grooming.
All hair care.
Limited care of nails.
Shaving;
(i) where there
are uncontrollable body movements use electric razors only
(ii) all other
shaving - electric razors recommended.
All dressing/undressing or assistance with
dressing/undressing except where there is uncontrollable body movements.
Oral Hygiene.
Assisting clients with their own care of teeth or dentures.
Care of teeth and dentures for the client by using
tooth brush/tooth paste/oral solution only.
Oral Medication.
Assisting client with or administering liquid
medicines, pills, powders, nose and eye drops.
Transferring/Mobility.
Transferring client in and out of bed/chair/car and
assisting with mobility- exceptions see level 3.
Assisting clients to turn or sit up - exceptions level
3.
Fitting Of Aids/Appliances.
Such as splints and callipers.
Therapy.
Assisting with therapy in any of the following
circumstances;
Low level of assistance is required.
Carer/therapist is not on site and client is able to
take responsibility for the therapy or carer/therapist is on site.
Simple instructions required rather than specialised
training knowledge.
Assistance With Eating.
Assisting where there are no eating difficulties.
GRADE 3.
Shall mean a person who performs the duties of a grade 2 and
is required to directly attend to a client’s needs, as opposed to assisting the
client to do for himself/herself because of the client’s behaviour or the
clients condition and/or household environment.
Where the employer requires the employee to perform any or
all of the tasks set out below, relevant to a Grade 3 position, the employee
must possess relevant skill and competence to perform such tasks. Where the
employee does not possess such skills and competence, appropriate training
shall be provided.
Grade 3 employees will be involved in on the job training of
homecare employees where required.
Typical Duties - Grade 3
Showering/Bathing.
Showering/Bathing adults and children with severely
limited/uncontrollable body movements.
Total bed bath/sponge where there is severely
limited/uncontrollable body movements or serious comfort/health consideration.
Toileting.
Assisting in placement/removal/emptying/care/cleaning
of sheaths and leg baths.
Assisting with indwelling catheterisation by changing
collection bag and cleaning around the insertion site.
Changing or assisting with urinary diversion -
colostomy and drainage bags.
All bowel management.
Continual caring of someone with bowel incontinence
including washing the person and changing bowel incontinence pads.
Assisting the resident with the sterilising of glass
catheters.
Menstrual Care.
Changing tampons and sanitary pads.
Skin Care.
Changing simple wound dressing.
Application of treatment creams to genital area.
Nasal Care.
Cleaning noses.
Grooming.
All dressing/undressing where there are severely
limited/uncontrollable body movements.
Medication
Suppositories.
Assist and support diabetic residents in the management
of their insulin and diet and recognising the signs of both Hyper and
Hypo-Glycemia.
Transferring/Mobility.
Assisting clients to turn/sit where clients can offer
limited/no assistance with weight bearing.
Using mechanical aids to lift and transfer clients.
Assisting clients with transfers/mobility where:
(i) Clients can
offer limited/no assistance with weight bearing.
(ii) Careful
handling is required because of the client’s health/disability.
(iii) Some lifting
or physically awkward movement is involved for employees in transfer/mobility.
Therapy.
Assisting with therapy in any of the following
circumstances:
(i) High degree
of assistance is involved.
(ii) Employees
have total responsibility because client is unable to take responsibly for the
therapy and carer/therapist is not on site.
(iii) Specialised
training knowledge is required.
Assisting With Eating.
Assisting with eating where a risk of choking, vomiting
or other eating difficulty is involved.
(b) Live-In
Housekeeper.
"Live-in Housekeeper" - shall mean an
employee who would normally live at the client’s premises for a period in
excess of 48 hours.
(1)
(A) Live-in
Housekeeper - Grade 1 is an employee employed to perform general housekeeping
duties only. General Housekeeping means preparing meals, cleaning, laundry,
shopping and household duties of a like nature and handyperson work within the
skill, competence and training of the employee and excludes personal care.
(B) Live-in
Housekeeper/Carer - Grade 2 is an employee employed to perform housekeeping
duties as defined in Grade 1 and the personal care duties of a Grade 2 as
described in sub-clause 4 (ii) (a) above.
(C) Live-in
Housekeeper/Carer - Grade 3 is an employee employed to perform general
housekeeping duties as defined in Grade 1 and the personal care duties of a
Grade 2 and 3 as described in sub-clause 4 (ii) (a) above.
(2) Designated
commencement and cessation of work insofar as place, date and time are concerned
shall be calculated by the employer. Provided that time spent travelling shall
be regarded as time worked.
(3) In the event
of work appropriate to a Live-in Housekeeper not being available:
(A) A Live-in
Housekeeper can be required to undertake work performed by other Homecare
Employees. Provided that where such work is directed and carried out it shall
be paid at the rates and conditions for a live-in housekeeper; and,
(B) In the event of
work not being available the Secretary or other responsible officer of the
Health and Research Employees Association of New South Wales will be contacted.
During this period of time the Live-in Housekeeper will not suffer any
reduction in pay. Discussions will commence as soon as possible between the
employer and the said Union. From the date of contact with the said Union, the
Live-in Housekeeper will not suffer any reduction in pay, although such time
will be limited to two (2) weeks.
(iii) Clerical
& Administrative Employees.
(a) Grades: All
employees shall be graded in one of the following grades and informed
accordingly in writing within 14 days of appointment to the position held by
the employee and subsequent graded positions.
(b) An employee
shall be graded in the grade where the principal function of his/her
employment, as determined by the employer, is of a clerical nature and is
described in subclauses (c) to (g) of this clause.
(c) A Grade 1
position is described as follows:
(1) The employee
may work under direct supervision with regular checking of progress.
(2) An employee at
this grade applies knowledge and skills to a limited range of tasks. The choice of actions required is clear.
(3) Usually work
will be performed within established routines, methods and procedures that are
predictable, and which may require the exercise of limited discretion.
Indicative tasks of a Grade 1 position are:
UNIT
|
ELEMENT
|
Information Handling
|
Receive and distribute incoming mail
|
|
Receive and dispatch outgoing mail
|
|
Collate and dispatch documents for bulk mailing
|
|
File and retrieve documents
|
Communication
|
Receive and relay oral and written messages
|
|
Complete simple forms
|
Enterprise
|
Identify key functions and personnel
|
|
Apply office procedures
|
Technology
|
Operate office equipment appropriate to the tasks to be
completed
|
|
Open computer file, retrieve and copy data
|
|
Close files
|
Organisational
|
Plan and organise a personal daily work routine
|
Team
|
Complete allocated tasks
|
Business Financial
|
Record petty cash transactions
|
|
Prepare banking documents
|
|
Prepare business source documents
|
(d) A Grade 2
position is described as follows:
(1) The employee
may work under routine supervision with intermittent checking.
(2) An employee at
this grade applies knowledge and skills to a range of tasks. The choice of actions required is usually
clear, with limited complexity in the choice.
(3) Work will be
performed within established routines, methods and procedures, which involve
the exercise of some discretion and minor decision making.
Indicative tasks of a Grade 2 position are:
UNIT
|
ELEMENT
|
Information Handling
|
Update and modify existing organisational records
|
|
Remove inactive files
|
|
Copy data on to standard forms
|
Communication
|
Respond to incoming telephone calls
|
|
Make telephone calls
|
|
Draft simple correspondence
|
Enterprise
|
Provide information from own function area
|
|
Re-direct inquiries and/or take appropriate follow-up
action
|
|
Greet visitors and attend to their needs
|
Technology
|
Operate equipment
|
|
Identify and/or rectify minor faults in equipment
|
|
Edit and save information
|
|
Produce document from written text using standard format
|
|
Shutdown equipment
|
Organisational
|
Organise own work schedule
|
|
Know roles and functions of other employees
|
Team
|
Participate in identifying tasks for team
|
|
Complete own tasks
|
|
Assist others to complete tasks
|
Business Financial
|
Reconcile invoices for payment to creditors
|
|
Prepare statements for debtors
|
|
Enter payment summaries into journals
|
|
Post journals to ledger
|
(e) A Grade 3
position is described as follows:
(1) The employee
may work under limited supervision with checking related to overall progress.
(2) An employee at
this grade may be responsible for the work of others and may be required to
co-ordinate such work.
(3) An employee at
this grade applies knowledge with depth in some areas and a broad range of
skills. Usually work will be performed within routines, methods and procedures
where some discretion and judgement is required.
Indicative tasks of a Grade 3 position are:
UNIT
|
ELEMENT
|
Information Handling
|
Prepare new files
|
|
Identify and process inactive files
|
|
Record documentation movements
|
Communication
|
Respond to telephone, oral and written requests for
information
|
|
Draft routine correspondence.
|
|
Handle sensitive inquiries with tact and discretion
|
Enterprise
|
Clarify specific needs of client/other employees
|
|
Provide information and advice
|
|
Follow-up on client/employee needs
|
|
Clarify the nature of a verbal message
|
|
Identify options for resolution and act accordingly
|
Technology
|
Maintain equipment
|
|
Train others in the use of office equipment
|
|
Select appropriate media
|
|
Establish document structure
|
|
Produce documents
|
Organisational
|
Co-ordinate own work routine with others
|
|
Make and record appointments on behalf of others
|
|
Make travel and accommodation bookings in line with given
itinerary
|
Team
|
Clarify tasks to achieve group goals
|
|
Negotiate allocation of tasks
|
|
Monitor own completion of allocated tasks
|
Business Financial
|
Reconcile accounts to balance
|
|
Prepare bank reconciliations
|
|
Document and lodge takings at bank
|
|
Receive and document payment/takings
|
|
Dispatch statements to debtors
|
|
Follow up and record outstanding accounts
|
|
Dispatch payments to creditors
|
|
Maintain stock control records
|
(f) A Grade 4
position is described as follows:
(1) The employee
may be required to work without supervision, with general guidance on progress
and outcomes sought. Responsibility for
the organisation of the work of others may be involved.
(2) An employee at
this grade applies knowledge with depth in some areas and a broad range of
skills. There is a wide range of tasks, and the range and choice of actions
required will usually be complex.
(3) An employee at
this grade applies competencies usually applied within routines, methods and
procedures where discretion and judgement is required, for both self and
others.
Indicative tasks of a Grade 4 position are:
UNIT
|
ELEMENT
|
Information Handling
|
Categorise files
|
|
Ensure efficient distribution of files and records
|
|
Maintain security of filing system
|
|
Train others in the operation of the filing system
|
|
Compile report
|
|
Identify information source(s) inside and outside the
organisation
|
Communication
|
Receive and process a request for information
|
|
Identify information source(s)
|
|
Compose report/correspondence
|
Enterprise
|
Provide information on current service provision and
resource
|
|
allocation within area of responsibility
|
|
Identify trends in client requirements
|
Technology
|
Maintain storage media
|
|
Devise and maintain filing system
|
|
Set printer for document requirements when various setups
are
|
|
Available
|
|
Design document format
|
|
Assist and train network users
|
|
Shutdown network equipment
|
Organisational
|
Manage diary on behalf of others
|
|
Assist with appointment preparation and follow up for
others
|
|
Organise business itinerary
|
|
Make meeting arrangements
|
|
Record minutes of meeting
|
|
Identify credit facilities
|
|
Prepare content of documentation for meetings
|
Team
|
Plan work for the team
|
|
Allocate tasks to members of the team
|
|
Provide training for team members
|
Business Financial
|
Prepare financial reports
|
|
Draft financial forecasts/budgets
|
|
Undertake and document costing procedures
|
(g) A Grade 5
position is described as follows:
(1) The employee
may be supervised by professional staff and may be responsible for the planning
and management of the work of others.
(2) An employee at
this grade applies knowledge with substantial depth in some areas, and a range
of skills, which may be varied or highly specific. The employee may receive assistance
with specific problems.
(3) An employee at
this grade applies knowledge and skills independently and non-routinely.
Judgement and initiative are required.
Indicative tasks of a Grade 5 position are:
UNIT
|
ELEMENT
|
Information Handling
|
Implement new/improved system
|
|
Update incoming publications
|
|
Circulate publications
|
|
Identify information source(s) inside and outside the
organisation
|
Communication
|
Obtain data from external sources
|
|
Produce report
|
|
Identify need for documents and/or research
|
Enterprise
|
Assist with the development of options for future
strategies
|
|
Assist with planning to match future requirements with
resource
|
|
Allocation
|
Technology
|
Establish and maintain a small network
|
|
Identify document requirements
|
|
Determine presentation and format of document and produce
it
|
Organisational
|
Organise meetings
|
|
Plan and organise conference
|
Team
|
Draft job vacancy advertisement
|
|
Assist in the selection of staff
|
|
Plan and allocate work for the team
|
|
Monitor team performance
|
|
Organise training for team
|
Business Financial
|
Administer PAYE salary records
|
|
Process payment of wages and salaries
|
|
Prepare payroll data
|
(h) Clerks who are
paid at a grade above that of Grade 5 as at 10 November, 1998 shall have the
difference between that grade, inclusive of the 1998 State Wage Case Increase,
and the new agreed grade preserved whilst employed in a clerical position with
their current employer.
5. Wages
Employees shall be paid not less than the rates for the
appropriate classification set out in Part B, Monetary Rates of this award.
Nothing in this Award shall be deemed or construed to reduce
the wages, conditions or allowances of any employee below that level accorded
him/her prior to the date of operation of this Award.
6. Remuneration
Packaging
Where agreed between the employer and an employee, an
employer may introduce remuneration packaging.
The terms and conditions of such a package may make provision for a
salary greater than that contained in the salary band. The package overall
shall not be less favourable than the entitlements otherwise available under
this award and shall be subject to the following provisions:
(i) the employer
shall ensure that the structure of any package complies with taxation and other
relevant laws.
(ii) the employer
shall confirm in writing to the employee the classification level and the
current salary payable as applicable to the employee under this award;
(iii) the employer
shall advise the employee in writing of his/her right to choose payment of that
salary referred to in sub-clause (ii) above instead of a remuneration package;
(iv) the employer
shall advise the employee, in writing, that all award conditions, other than
the salary and those conditions as agreed in sub-clause (v) below shall continue
to apply;
(v) where
packaging arrangements apply, the employer and employee may by mutual agreement
delete the application of certain award clauses, excepting Clauses 19-Annual
Leave, 22-Sick Leave, 21- Long Service Leave, 23-Personal/Carer’s Leave,
18-Public Holidays, 33-Grievance and Disputes Resolution Procedures, and
38-Parental Leave;
(vi) when
determining the remuneration package, the non-salary fringe benefit shall be in
accordance with relevant Australian Taxation Office legislation.
(vii) a copy of the
agreement shall be made available to the employee;
(viii) the employee
shall be entitled to inspect details of the payments made under the terms of
this agreement;
(ix) the
configuration of the remuneration package shall remain in force for the period
agreed between the employee and the employer;
(x) where at the
end of the agreed period the full amount allocated to a specific benefit has
not been utilised, by agreement between the employer and the employee, an
unused amount may be carried forward to the next period, or paid as salary
which will be subject to usual taxation requirements;
(xi) Salary
packaging is only offered on the strict understanding and agreement that in the
event existing taxation law is changed regarding Fringe Benefit Tax or personal
tax arrangements, and that change may impact on this agreement, all salary
packaging arrangements may at the discretion of the employer be
terminated. Upon termination in these
circumstances the employee’s rate of pay will revert to the rate of pay that
applied immediately prior to a salary packaging agreement made pursuant to this
clause, or the appropriate award rate of pay whichever is greater.
(xii) where changes
are proposed to salary packaging arrangements other than to flow on wage
increases, or salary packaging arrangements are to be cancelled for reasons
other than legislative requirements, then the employer and/or the employee must
give three months notice of the proposed change.
(xiii) in the event
that employee ceases to be employed by the employer this agreement will cease
to apply as at the date of termination and all leave entitlements due on
termination shall be paid at the rates in accordance with sub-clause (ii)
above. Any outstanding benefit shall be
paid on or before the date of termination.
(xiv) any pay
increases granted to employees under this award shall also apply to employees
subject to remuneration packaging arrangements within this clause.
7. Hours
(i)
(a) The ordinary
hours of work for day workers, exclusive of meal times, shall not exceed 152
hours per 28 calendar days or 76 hours per fortnight to be worked Monday to
Friday and to commence on such days at or after 6:00 a.m. and at or before
10:30 a.m.
(b) The ordinary
hours of work for shift workers, exclusive of meal times, shall not exceed 152
hours per 28 calendar days or 76 hours per fortnight or an average of 38 hours
per week in each roster cycle.
(ii)
(a) The hours of
work prescribed in sub-clause (i) shall be arranged as follows:
(1) 152 hours in a
28 calendar-day cycle to be arranged so that each employee shall not work their
ordinary hours on more than 19 days in the 28 calendar-day cycle; or
(2) 190 hours per
35 calendar days to be arranged so that each employee shall not work their
ordinary hours on more than 19 days in the 35 calendar-day cycle.
(b) Following
consultation and discussion with the Association the hours of work may also be
arranged in one of the following ways:
(1) 76 hours per
fortnight to be arranged so that each employee shall not work their ordinary
hours on more than ten days in the fortnight; or
(2) 38 hours per
week to be arranged so that each employee shall not work their ordinary hours
on more than five days in the week.
(iii)
(a) Each employee
shall be entitled to not less than four full days in each fortnight free from
duty or two full days in each week free from duty (rostered days off), and
every effort shall be made for such rostered days off to be consecutive, unless
otherwise agreed.
(b) A Live-in
Housekeeper shall after each five (5) consecutive days of duty, be entitled to
two (2) consecutive days off provided that:
(1) Such days may
accumulate to a limit of six (6) and in any case must be taken at the
conclusion of such service.
(2) Where it is
mutually agreed between the employer and the employee that under such
circumstances the days of duty should continue, such days may accumulate to a
limit of eight (8) to be taken at the conclusion of such service.
(3) Provided that
the Live - in Housekeeper shall continue to receive the normal weekly wage
during such days off.
(iv) Each shift
shall consist of not more than 11 ordinary hours of work per day. Provided that shifts in excess of ten
ordinary hours of work shall not occur on more than 7 consecutive days in any
8-day period. Provided further that
shifts of ten ordinary hours of work or less shall not occur on more than 11
consecutive days in any 12-day period.
(v)
(a) Full-time
employees shall receive a minimum payment of four hours for each start in
respect of ordinary hours of work.
(b) Permanent
part-time and casual employees, other than Homecare Employees, shall receive a
minimum payment of two hours for each start.
(c) Permanent part
time homecare employees and casual homecare employees shall receive a minimum
of one hour for each engagement
(vi)
(a) An employee
whose ordinary hours of work are arranged in accordance with sub-clause (a) of
sub-clause (ii) above shall be entitled to an allocated day off in each cycle
of 28 days or 35 days as the case may be.
The ordinary hours worked on each of those days shall be arranged to
include a proportion of one hour on the basis of 0.4 of one hour for each
8-hour shift worked and 0.5 of one hour for each 10-hour shift worked which
shall accumulate towards the employee's allocated day off duty on pay.
(b) A full-time
employee's allocated day off duty (ADO) shall be determined by mutual agreement
between the employee and the employer having regard to the needs of the place
of employment or sections thereof. Such
allocated day off duty shall, where practicable, be consecutive with the
rostered days off prescribed in subclause (iii) of this clause. Provided that allocated days off shall not
be rostered on public holidays.
(c) Where the
employer and the employee agree, up to five (5) allocated days off may be
accumulated and taken in conjunction with the employee's annual leave or at
another agreed time.
(d) In a hostel
which has a bed capacity of 40 or less, the employer shall have the option of
granting an employee a nineteen-day four-week cycle or accumulating 12
allocated days off per annum which may be taken in conjunction with the
employee's annual leave or at another agreed time.
(e) No time
towards an allocated day off shall accumulate during periods of workers'
compensation, unpaid parental leave, long service leave, any period of unpaid
leave or the statutory four weeks annual leave.
(f) Credit
towards an allocated day off shall continue to accumulate whilst an employee is
on paid sick leave. Where an allocated
day off duty falls during a period of sick leave, the employee's available sick
leave shall not be debited for that day.
(vii) The ordinary
hours of work for a permanent part-time employee will be a specified number of
hours, which are less than those prescribed for a full-time employee. The specified number of hours may be
balanced over a week or fortnight, provided that the average weekly hours
worked shall be deemed to be the specified number of hours for the purposes of
accrual of leave provided for by this award. Provided further that there shall
be no interruption to the continuity of employment merely by reason of an
employee working on a "week-on", "week-off" basis in
accordance with this subclause.
(viii) Two separate
ten-minute tea breaks (in addition to meal breaks) shall be allowed each
employee on duty during each ordinary shift of 7.6 hours or more; where less
than 7.6 ordinary hours are worked employees shall be allowed one 10-minute tea
break in each four-hour period. Subject to agreement between the employer and
the employee, the two ten-minute tea breaks may alternatively be taken as one
20-minute tea break, or by one ten-minute tea break with the employee allowed
to proceed off duty ten minutes before the completion of the normal shift
finishing time. Such tea break(s) shall count as working time.
(ix) Employees must
receive a minimum break of eight (8) hours between ordinary rostered shifts,
which are not broken shifts.
(x) Except for
meal breaks, all time from the commencement to the cessation of duty each shift
shall count as working time, except for shifts being worked as broken shifts.
(xi) With respect
to broken shifts:
(a) A "broken
shift" for the purposes of this sub clause means a single shift worked by
an employee that includes one or more breaks in excess of that provided for
meal breaks, where the time between the commencement and termination of the
broken shift shall not exceed 12 hours.
(b) An employee
must receive a minimum break of 10 hours between broken shifts rostered on
successive days.
(c) Where broken
shifts are worked, employees shall receive an allowance of the amount set out
in Item 1 of Table 2 of Part B, Monetary Rates per shift.
(d) Payment for a
broken shift shall be at ordinary pay with penalty rates and shift allowances
in accordance with Clause 15, with shift allowances being determined by the
commencing time of the broken shift.
(e) All work
performed beyond the maximum span of 12 hours for a broken shift will be paid
at double ordinary pay.
(f) Broken shifts
may be introduced for up to four weeks without the permission of the
Association.
(g) Where the
employer seeks the approval of the Association to work broken shifts in excess
of four weeks, it must be in writing, which the Association will accept or
decline within fourteen days. The Association will not decline such an
application without good cause.
(h) Where an
employee works a broken shift and at least part of that shift involves the work
of a Homecare Employee, the employer is not required to seek the exemption from
the Association as prescribed by Clause 7(xi)(g) above.
8. Roster of Hours
(i)
(a) The ordinary
hours of work for each employee shall be displayed on a roster in a place
conveniently accessible to employees. Such roster shall be displayed two weeks
prior to the commencing date of the first working period in any roster subject
to sub-clause (b) below.
(b) In the case of
Homecare Employees, alternative means of communicating changes of rosters such
as telephone communication, direct contact, mail or facsimile will be accepted.
(ii) Sub-clause
(i) shall not make it obligatory for the employer to display any roster of
ordinary hours of work of members of the casual or relieving staff.
(iii) Provided that
a roster may be altered at any time to enable the service of the organisation
to be carried on where another employee is absent from duty on account of
illness or in an emergency. Where such
alteration involves an employee working on a day which would have been his/her
rostered day off, such employee may elect to be paid at overtime rates or have
a day off in lieu which shall be mutually arranged.
Provided also that this provision shall not apply where
the only change to the roster of a part-time employee is the mutually agreed
addition of extra hours to be worked such that the part-time employee still has
two rostered days off in that week or four rostered days off in that fortnight,
as the case may be.
Provided further that any alteration to the roster of
hours of a day worker must be consistent with the definition of a day worker
contained in clause 2-Definitions.
(iv)
(a) Where a home
care client cancels for reasons other than those outlined in (iv)(b), permanent
employees shall be entitled to receive payment for their minimum specified
hours in that pay period. The employer may direct the employee to make-up time
equivalent to the cancelled time, in that or the subsequent fortnightly period.
This time may be made up working with other home care clients or in a facility.
(b) Where the
employer is unable to meet the minimum specified hours of a permanent employee
for reasons associated with death, hospitalisation or other like extenuating
circumstances, the following procedures shall be followed in the sequence
provided:
1. work shall be
re-allocated from casual employees to the permanent employee; or
2. hours shall be
reallocated from another employee who is working hours additional to their
minimum specified hours; or
3. where the
employee agrees, the employee may have access to annual or long service leave;
or
4. the employee
and employer may agree to a period of unpaid leave; or
5. failing
agreement in (4) above, refer to the dispute procedure.
6. Notwithstanding
the provisions in sub-clauses (1) to (5) inclusive, if after six weeks - or
earlier if by mutual agreement - the employer is unable to provide the minimum
specified hours, the employee shall be entitled to the provisions set out in
Clause 42-Redundancy.
(v) Where an
employee is entitled to an allocated day off duty in accordance with clause
7-Hours of this award, that allocated day off duty is to be shown on the roster
of hours for that employee.
(vi) Each sleepover
shall appear on the roster.
9. Meals
(i)
(a) Employees
shall not be required to work more than six (6) hours without a meal
break. Such meal break shall be of
between 30 and 60 minutes duration and shall not count as time worked.
(b) However,
employees engaged in homecare duties may be rostered to have a paid 20-minute
break in the place of the meal break where they are required to remain with the
client during such break.
(c) In the event
that all or some of the meals of breakfast, lunch and dinner are not provided
for a live-in housekeeper, the employer shall reimburse such reasonable amounts
for same, upon proof of expenditure.
(ii) Notwithstanding
the provisions of sub-clause (i), an employee required to work shifts in excess
of 10 hours shall be entitled to a 60-minute meal break. Such time shall be taken as either two
thirty-minute meal breaks or one 60-minute meal break, subject to agreement
between employer and employee.
(iii) An employee
who is required to work overtime for more than two hours and such overtime goes
beyond 7:00 a.m., 1:00 p.m., and 6:00 p.m. shall, at the option of the
employer, be supplied with a meal or shall be paid:
(a) an amount set
out in Item 2 of Table 2 of Part B, Monetary Rates for breakfast;
(b) an amount set
out in Item 3 of Table 2 of Part B, Monetary Rates for luncheon;
(c) an amount set
out in Item 4 of Table 2 of Part B, Monetary Rates for the evening meal.
10. Overtime
(i) All time
worked by employees outside the ordinary hours in accordance with clause
7-Hours and clause 8-Roster of Hours of this award, shall be paid time and one
half ordinary pay up to two (2) hours each day and thereafter double ordinary
pay; provided however, that all overtime worked on Sunday shall be paid at
double ordinary pay and all overtime worked on public holidays shall be paid
for at double time and one-half ordinary pay
(ii) An employee
must receive an eight or ten hour break between rostered shifts, in accordance
with clause 7-Hours. Where the next
shift is due to commence before the employee has had their appropriate eight or
ten hours break, one of the following will apply:
(a) The employee
will be released prior to, or after the completion of their shift to permit
them to have their appropriate break under clause 7-Hours without loss of pay
for the working time occurring during such absence.
(b) If at the
request of the employer an employee works without their appropriate break, they
shall be paid until they are released from duty at overtime rates. Once
released from duty such employees shall be entitled to be absent from work
until they have had their appropriate break in accordance with clause 7-Hours
without loss of pay for working time occurring during such an absence.
(iii) Employees who
are recalled to work overtime after leaving the employer's place of work shall
be paid a minimum of four hours at the applicable overtime rate for each time
so recalled. Provided that, except in
unforeseen circumstances, an employee shall not be required to work the full
four hours if the tasks they were recalled to perform are completed within a shorter
period.
(a) An employee
recalled to work overtime pursuant to sub-clause (ii) shall be reimbursed
reasonable travel expenses incurred in respect of the recall to work.
(b) Provided that
where an employee elects to use their own vehicle they shall be paid an
allowance of the amount set out in Item 5 of Table 2 of Part B, Monetary Rates.
(c) An employee
who agrees to be on call, requiring to make themselves ready and available to
return to work whilst off duty, shall be paid an allowance of the amount set
out in Item 6 of Table 2 of Part B, Monetary Rates.
(d) Employees will
not be required to be on call in excess of ten days in any twenty-eight day
period.
(iv) For the
purposes of assessing overtime, each day shall stand alone, provided that where
any one period of overtime is continuous and extends beyond midnight, all
overtime hours in this period shall be regarded as if they had occurred within
the one-day.
(v)
(a) All time
worked by permanent part-time employees in excess of the rostered daily
ordinary hours of work prescribed for the majority of full-time employees
employed on that shift in the ward or section concerned, or, where there is no
such majority of full-time employees employed on that shift in the ward or
section concerned, all time in excess of 11 hours per day, shall be paid for at
overtime rates.
Provided that, time worked up to the rostered daily
ordinary hours of work prescribed for a majority of the full-time employees
employed on that shift in the ward or section concerned shall not be regarded
as overtime but an extension of the contract hours for that day and shall be
paid at ordinary pay.
(b) All time
worked by permanent part-time employees in excess of the hours prescribed for a
full-time employee in clause 7-Hours of this award shall be paid for at
overtime rates.
(vi) In lieu of
receiving payment for overtime in accordance with this clause, employees may be
compensated by way of time off in lieu of overtime on the following basis:
(a) Time off in
lieu of overtime is taken on the basis of hour for hour at ordinary pay, that
is for example, one hour off for each hour of overtime worked. However, any
applicable shift and weekend penalties shall still be paid as if the time was
worked when taking such time in lieu. It must be taken within four months of it
being accrued at a mutually agreed time.
(b) Where it is
not possible for an employee to take the time off in lieu of overtime within
the four month period, it is to be paid out at the appropriate overtime rate
based on the rates of pay applying at the time payment is made.
(c) Employees
cannot be compelled to take time off in lieu of overtime.
(d) The employer
must maintain records of all time in lieu of overtime owing and taken by
employees.
(e) Where no
election is made the employee shall be paid overtime rates in accordance with
the award.
11. Permanent
Part-Time Employee
(i) A permanent
part-time employee is one who is permanently appointed by a facility to work
for a specified number of hours, which are less than those prescribed for a
full-time employee.
(ii) The hours
worked by the employee will be reviewed annually and if the employee is
regularly working more than the specified number of hours then a new number of
specified hours may be agreed to.
This review will be unnecessary where an increase in
hours is as a direct result of a staff member being absent on leave; eg.
Workers Compensation, Sick Leave, Annual Leave, etc.
(iii) Permanent
part-time employees shall be paid an hourly rate calculated on the basis of one
thirty-eighth (1/38th) of the appropriate rate prescribed by Part B, Monetary
Rates of this award.
(iv) Permanent
Part-Time Employees shall be entitled to All Other Benefits of This Award Not
Otherwise Expressly Provided for Herein in the Same Proportion as Their
Ordinary Hours of Work Bear to Full-Time Hours.
(v) Permanent part
time employees engaged in the provision of home care services shall:
(a) Have a minimum
specified number of hours of ten per week or twenty per fortnight.
(b) Have a minimum
payment per engagement of one hour.
(c) Notwithstanding
the provisions in sub-clause (a) of this clause, where there is a genuine
agreement in writing between the employer and employee the minimum contract
hours may be reduced.
(d) Have hours of
engagement maintained as per clause 8-Roster of Hours.
12. Casual Employees
(i)
(a) A casual
employee is one engaged on an hourly basis otherwise than as a full-time
employee or permanent part-time employee.
(b) A casual
employee may only be engaged in the following circumstances: for short term
periods where there is a need to supplement the workforce arising from
fluctuations in the needs of the facility; or in the place of another employee
who is absent; or in an emergency.
(ii) A casual
employee shall be paid an hourly rate calculated on the basis of one
thirty-eighth (1/38th) of the appropriate rate prescribed by Part B, Monetary
Rates of this award, plus ten (10) per centum thereof, with a minimum payment
of two hours for each start, (where the casual is employed in the place of a
homecare employee who is absent then the minimum payment per engagement may be
one (1) hour) and one thirty-eighth of the uniform and laundry allowances where
a uniform is not supplied in accordance with clause 30-Uniforms and Protective
Clothing.
(iii) For weekend
and public holiday work, casual employees shall, in lieu of all other penalty
rates and the 10% casual loading, receive the rates prescribed in clause
15-Penalty Rates and Shift Allowances and clause 18-Public Holidays.
(iv) Overtime rates
shall be payable on the hourly rate (1/38th) in lieu of the 10% casual loading
only when a casual works in excess of 38 hours per week or 76 hours per
fortnight depending on the pay period.
(v) For the
entitlement to annual leave, a casual shall receive an additional amount
equivalent to one-twelfth of the sum of their ordinary pay plus payments
received in accordance with clause 15-Penalty Rates and Shift Allowances. No
other allowances or payments are to be included for the calculation of this
annual leave entitlement. Further, this amount will be itemised separately on
the employee’s pay records.
(vi) For the
entitlement to long service leave, see Long
Service Leave Act, 1955.
(vii) With respect
to a casual employee, the provisions of the following clauses shall not apply:
Clause 8-Roster of Hours; clause 19-Annual Leave;
clause 20-Annual Leave Loading; clause 21-Long Service Leave; clause 22-Sick
Leave; clause 24-Compassionate Leave; clause 25-Leave Without Pay, clause
27-Service Allowance: clause 28-Leading Hands; clause 29-Higher Duties; clause
32-Live-In; clause 36-Promotions and Appointments; clause 37-Emergency
Telephone Calls; clause 39-Repatriation Leave; clause 41-Apprentices.
13. Temporary Employment
(i) Fixed term or
task contracts of employment may be offered and such temporary employees
engaged where necessary to meet the genuine occupational requirements of the
employer, which may include but not be limited to parental leave, limited term
funding arrangements, long term relief, or forthcoming service reductions.
(ii) The provision
of clause 42-Redundancy will not apply to such employees.
14. Climatic and
Isolation Allowance
(i) Subject to
sub-clause (ii) of this clause persons employed in organisations in places
situated upon or to the west of a line drawn as herein specified shall be paid
an allowance of the amount set out in Item 7 of Table 2 of Part B, Monetary
Rates per week in addition to the salary to which they are otherwise entitled.
The line shall be drawn as follows: viz., commencing at
Tocumwal and thence to the following towns in the order stated, namely: Lockhart; Narrandera; Leeton; Peak Hill;
Gilgandra; Dunedoo; Coolah; Boggabri; Inverell; and Bonshaw.
(ii) Persons
employed in organisations in places situated upon or to the west of a line
drawn as herein specified shall be paid an allowance of the amount set out in
Item 8 of Table 2 of Part B, Monetary Rates per week in addition to the salary
to which they are otherwise entitled.
The line shall be drawn as follows: viz., commencing at
a point on the right bank of the Murray River opposite Swan Hill (Victoria) and
thence to the following towns in the order stated, namely: Hay;
Hillston; Nyngan; Walgett;
Collarenebri; and Mungindi.
(iii) The
allowances prescribed by this clause are not cumulative.
(iv) Except for the
computation of overtime the allowances prescribed by this clause shall be
regarded as part of salary for the purposes of this award.
(v) An employee
who works less than thirty-eight hours per week shall be entitled to the
allowances prescribed by this clause in the same proportion as the average
hours worked each week bears to thirty-eight ordinary hours.
15. Penalty Rates and
Shift Allowances
(i) Employees
Shall be Paid the Following Percentages in Addition to Their Ordinary Pay, and
Where Applicable, the 10% Casual Loading, for Shifts Rostered as Follows:
(a) 10% for
afternoon shift commencing after 10:30 a.m. and before 1:00 p.m.
(b) 12.5% for
afternoon shift commencing at or after 1:00 p.m. and before 4:00 p.m.
(c) 15% for night
shift commencing at or after 4:00 p.m. and before 4:00 a.m.
(d) 10% for night
shift commencing at or after 4:00 a.m. and before 6:00 a.m.
Provided that laundry staff working afternoon or night
shift as at 30 September 1993 shall be paid 20% in addition to the ordinary pay
for such shift. Laundry staff employed
after 30 September 1993, and who work afternoon or night shift shall receive
the penalty rates prescribed in sub-clauses (a) to (d) above.
(ii) Notwithstanding
sub-clause (i), employees working less than the hours prescribed for a
full-time employee within clause 7-Hours of this award shall only be entitled
to the additional rates where their shifts commence prior to 6:00a.m. or finish
subsequent to 7:00 p.m.
(iii) Employees
shall be paid the following penalties for ordinary hours of work occurring on a
Saturday or a Sunday:
(a) for work
between midnight on Friday and midnight on Saturday - time and one half.
(b) for work
between midnight on Saturday and midnight on Sunday - time and three-quarters.
These extra rates shall be in substitution for and not
cumulative upon the shift allowances prescribed in the preceding sub-clauses
(i) and (ii) of this clause.
16. Live-in
Housekeeper - Remuneration
(i) Live - in
Housekeeper.
The terms and conditions contained herein shall be in
substitution for and not cumulative upon the following clauses: Clause 7-Hours;
Clause 10-Overtime; Clause 15-Penalty Rates and Shift Allowances; Clause
18-Public Holidays
(a) Live - in
Housekeeper - Grade 1
The total weekly remuneration for a Live - in
Housekeeper Grade 1 shall be calculated as follows:
Total Weekly Rate = Weekly Rates for a Homecare
Employee Grade 1 + All incidents Loading
The All Incidents Loading for a Live - in Housekeeper
Grade 1 is calculated by obtaining 30% of the relevant weekly rate.
The All Incidents Loading of 30% takes into account all
incidents of employment inherent in the work and conditions of employment of
Live - in Housekeepers, including but not limited to, the requirement to reside
at the client’s premises. Such tasks that are required to be performed by the
employee will be performed at times of day, which are mutually agreed between
the employer and the employee.
(b) Live - in
Housekeeper/Carer - Grade 2
The total remuneration for a Live - in Housekeeper/
Carer Grade 2 shall be calculated as follows:
Total Weekly Rates = Weekly Rates for a Homecare
Employee Grade 2 + All Incidents Loading
The All Incidents loading for a Live - in
Housekeeper/Carer Grade 2 is calculated by obtaining 40% of the relevant weekly
rate. The All Incidents Loading of 40% takes into account all incidents of
employment inherent in the work and conditions of employment of Live - in
Housekeepers, including but not limited to, the requirement to reside at the
client’s premises. The employee will normally perform duties at times of the
day, which are mutually agreed between the employer and employee.
(c) Live - in
Housekeeper/Carer - Grade 3
The total remuneration for a Live - in Housekeeper/
Carer Grade 3 shall be calculated as follows:
Total Weekly Rate = Weekly Rates for a Homecare
Employee Grade 3 + All Incidents Loading
The Special Loading is calculated by obtaining 3.5% of
the relevant weekly rate. The special loading is in recognition of all factors,
including but not limited to, the special pressures, responsibilities and
climate inherent in the work of a Live - in Housekeeper Grade 3.
The All Incidents loading is calculated by obtaining
50% of the sum of the relevant weekly rate plus the Special Loading. The All
Incidents Loading of 50% takes into account all incidents of employment
inherent in the work and conditions of employment of Live - in Housekeepers,
including but not limited to, the requirement to reside at the client’s
premises and to perform work, and be available for the performance of work at
all such times of the day as the job and client’s needs may require.
(ii) Wages - Daily
Rates
(a) Permanent Part
time Employees - The daily rate for a
Live - in Housekeeper/Carer (any grade) shall be calculated as follows:
Daily Rate = Appropriate
Weekly rate for Live-in Housekeeper
5
Provided that by mutual agreement up to three employees
may be engaged as Live - in Housekeeper (any grade) per client.
For the purpose of this sub clause a day shall be
defined as a period of 24 consecutive hours.
The minimum payment for work done under this sub-clause
shall be two days at the daily rate. Thereafter the minimum payment will be at
the daily rate.
(b) Casual
Employees - The casual rate for a Live - in Housekeeper/Carer (any grade) shall
be calculated as follows:
Daily Rate = Appropriate
Weekly rate for Live-in Housekeeper + 15%
5
For the purpose of this sub clause a day shall be
defined as a period of 24 consecutive hours.
The minimum payment for work done under this sub-clause
shall be one day at the daily rate.
Work performed under this sub-clause shall be for relief, emergency and
temporary purposes only.
17. Allowances for
Special Working Conditions
(i)
(a) Employees
engaged in work of a dirty or offensive nature and/or cleaning or scraping work
in confined spaces (such as inside ventilator shafts, air conditioning ducts or
the like) shall, whilst so employed, be paid an allowance of the amount set out
in Item 9 of Table 2 of Part B, Monetary Rates per hour extra.
(b) Provided
however that employees engaged in cleaning or scraping work inside the gas or
water space of any boiler, flue or economiser shall, whilst so employed, be
paid an allowance of the amount set out in Item 10 of Table 2 of Part B,
Monetary Rates per hour extra.
(ii) Employees who
are required to assist tradespersons on work of a dirty or offensive nature
shall be paid disability allowances under the same terms and conditions as the
disability allowances that may be payable to the tradespersons they are
assisting.
(iii) Employees
shall be paid an allowance of the amount set out in Item 11 of Table 2 of Part
B, Monetary Rates per hour or part thereof for all time during which they are
engaged in handling linen of a nauseous nature other than linen sealed in bags.
(iv) An employee,
other than a Homecare Employee, sent for duty to a place other than his/her
regular place of duty shall be paid for all excess travelling time at the
appropriate rate of pay and reimbursed excess travelling expenses.
(v) Vehicle
Allowance: Where an employee is called upon and agrees to use his/her private
vehicle for official business, payment of an allowance shall be made by
utilising the rate in item 12 of Table 2 of Part B Monetary Rates per kilometre
excluding travel to and from the employee’s home to the first place of work and
return to home at the end of his/her duties. This rate shall remain in force for
the duration of this award. This sub-clause shall apply to all employees.
(vi) Where an
employee is required to use public transport for travel on official business
such employee is to be reimbursed actual expenses incurred for such travel,
excluding travel from the employee’s home to the first place of work and return
to home at the cessation of his/her duties.
(vii) No payment
shall be made under sub-clause (v) & (vi) unless the employer is satisfied
that the employee has incurred expenditure for such travel.
(viii) Where homecare
employees are rostered to work with consecutive clients they shall be paid for
the time taken to travel between locations at the rate of 3% of the ordinary
pay per hour per kilometre travelled, excluding travel from the employee’s home
to the first place of work and return to home at the cessation of his/her
duties; provided that this payment shall not be made if the employee is being
paid at the hourly rate of pay for the time between consecutive clients.
(ix) An employee in
possession of, and required to act on, a Laundry and Dry Cleaning Certificate,
shall be paid an allowance in the nature of a salary as set out in item 13, of
Table 2, Other Rates and Allowances.
(x) An employee
who works less than thirty-eight hours per week shall be entitled to this
allowance identified in sub clause (ix) above in the same proportion as the
average hours worked each week bears to thirty-eight ordinary hours.
18. Public Holidays
(i) Public
holidays shall be allowed to employees without loss of ordinary pay.
(ii) For the
purposes of this award, the following shall be deemed to be public
holidays: New Year's Day; Australia
Day; Good Friday; Easter Saturday; Easter Monday; Anzac Day; Queen's Birthday;
Labour Day; Christmas Day; Boxing Day; and any other day duly proclaimed and
observed as a public holiday within the area in which the facility is situated.
(iii)
(a) In addition to
those public holidays specified in sub-clause (ii) employees shall be entitled
to an extra public holiday each year.
Such public holiday shall occur on one of the following days as
determined by the employer:
1. On the day on
which the August Bank Holiday is observed; or
2. On a day
between Christmas and New Year within the days Monday to Friday inclusive and
not coinciding with a date that is already a gazetted public holiday for that
calendar year; or
3. On a gazetted
and proclaimed local public holiday. In areas where only one half-day is
proclaimed and observed, the whole day will be regarded as a public holiday for
the purposes of this award. In these circumstances if a further one half day
local public holiday occurs in that calendar year, it will not be observed for
the purposes of this clause.
4. The employer
shall nominate before July 1 of each calendar year, the date on which this
extra public holiday is to be observed.
Once such an election is made, such date then becomes the date on which
the extra public holiday is to be observed for all workers in that
establishment covered by this award, provided however that if no such election
is duly made, the extra public holiday will be observed on the August Bank
Holiday.
(iv) An employee
who is required to and does work on any public holiday prescribed in this
clause shall be paid in lieu of all other shift allowances (except broken shift
allowances), weekend penalties, casual loading and part-time loading, as
follows:
(a) Full-time
Employees -
(1) Time and one
half for all ordinary time worked in addition to the weekly rate.
Alternatively, if the employee elects:
(2) Half-time
extra for all time worked in addition to the weekly rate and have one ordinary
working day added to be taken in conjunction with the period of annual leave.
(b) Permanent
Part-time Employees -
(1) Double and a
half for all time worked on the public holiday, although where the time worked
by agreement is less than the rostered shift, the balance of the rostered shift
will be paid at ordinary pay.
Alternatively, if the employee elects:
(2) Half-time
extra for all time worked in addition to the weekly rate and have the
equivalent number of hours worked added to be taken in conjunction with the
period of annual leave.
(c) Casual
Employees:
Double time and one-half for all time worked.
(v) Full-time
shift-workers rostered off duty on a public holiday shall:
(a) be paid one
day's pay in addition to the weekly rate;
or
(b) if the
employee so elects have one day added to be taken in conjunction with their
period of annual leave.
(vi) The election
referred to in sub-clauses (iv) and (v) is to be made in writing by the
employee at the commencement of each year of employment and is irrevocable
during that period of employment.
19. Annual Leave
(i) All employees
shall be entitled to the provisions of the Annual
Holidays Act 1944.
(ii)
(a) Full-time
employees and permanent part-time employees who are rostered to work their
ordinary hours on Sundays and/or public holidays shall be entitled to receive
additional annual leave if, during a qualifying period of employment for annual
leave purposes they have worked:
|
Full-time Employees
|
Permanent part-time
Employees
|
3 shifts or less
|
Nil
|
Nil
|
4 - 10 shifts
|
one day
|
0.2 weeks
|
11 - 17 shifts
|
two days
|
0.4 weeks
|
18 - 24 shifts
|
three days
|
0.6 weeks
|
25 - 31 shifts
|
four days
|
0.8 weeks
|
32 or more shifts
|
five days
|
1 week.
|
Provided that an employee, entitled to additional annual
leave by virtue of this sub-clause, may elect to be paid an amount equivalent
to the value of his/her additional leave entitlements in lieu of taking the
additional leave. Such election is to
be made in writing by the employee at the commencement of each year of
employment and is irrevocable during the currency of that year of employment.
(b) Live-in
Housekeepers employed and paid as such shall accrue an additional weeks leave
for every twelve (12) months of continuous service on a pro-rata basis.
(iii) Provided that
on termination of employment, employees shall be entitled to payment for any
untaken annual leave due under sub-clause (ii) together with payment for any
leave in respect of an uncompleted year of employment calculated in accordance
with sub-clause (i).
(iv) Employees
entitled to allocated days off duty in accordance with sub-clause (vi) of
clause 7-Hours of this award, shall accrue credits towards an allocated day off
duty in respect of each day those employees are absent on additional annual
leave in accordance with sub-clause (ii) of this clause and sub-clauses (iv)
and (v) of clause 18-Public Holidays.
20. Annual Leave
Loading
(i) Employees
shall be entitled to annual leave loading of 17.5% on four weeks of the
appropriate weekly rate of pay, or shift allowances and weekend penalties as
set out in sub-clause (ii) of this clause, whichever is the greater.
(ii) A shift
worker, as defined in clause 2-Definitions of this award, shall be paid whilst
on annual leave his/her ordinary pay plus shift allowances and weekend
penalties relating to ordinary time the shift worker would have worked if
he/she had not been on annual leave.
Provided that shift allowances and weekend penalties shall not be
payable for public holidays which occur during a period of annual leave, for
days which have been added to annual leave in accordance with the provisions of
clause 18-Public Holidays or clause 19(ii)(a)-Annual Leave of this award.
(iii) No loading is
payable where the annual leave is taken wholly or partly in advance, provided
however, that if the employment of such an employee continues until their next
anniversary date, the loading then becomes payable.
(iv) Where the
employment of an employee is terminated for a cause other than misconduct and
at the time of the termination the employee has not been given and has not
taken the whole of the annual leave accrued as at their last anniversary date,
they shall be paid the leave loading for such leave on termination. No leave
loading is payable on pro rate leave on termination.
21. Long Service
Leave
(i)
(a) Each employee
shall be entitled to two months long service leave on ordinary pay after ten
years' service; thereafter additional long service leave shall accrue on the
basis of five months long service leave for each ten years' service. This
additional leave may be taken on a pro-rata basis each five years after
completing the initial 10 year period of service.
(b) Where the
services of an employee with at least five 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, or by reason of the death of the employee, he/she
shall be entitled to be paid a proportionate amount on the basis of two months
for ten years service.
(ii) For the
purpose of sub-clause (i) of this clause:
(a) service shall
mean continuous service with any one employer/organisation;
(b) 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 therefrom)
in which case service shall include any period without pay not exceeding six
months taken after 1 June, 1980;
(2) any period of
service as a part-time worker except as provided for in sub-clause (vi) of this
clause.
(iii)
(a) The employer
shall give to each worker at least one month's notice of the date from which it
is proposed that the worker's long service leave shall be given and taken. Long service leave shall be taken as soon as
practicable having regard to the needs of the facility, or where the employer
and the employee agree, such leave may be postponed to an agreed date.
(b) Where the
employer and the employee agree in writing that the taking of a period of leave
be postponed at the request of an employee to an agreed future date, the period
of leave at the time of this agreement being made will, when taken, be paid at
the rate applicable at the time of the agreement.
(iv)
(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.
(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 an
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 sub-clause (b) of
sub-clause (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 sub-clause 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 sub-clause
to receive the monetary value of leave payable under the foregoing provisions
payment in respect thereof shall be made to the legal personal representative
of such employee.
(v) Full-time and
permanent part-time employees shall be entitled to have previous part-time
service as a part-time worker which is the equivalent of at least two full
days' duty per week taken into account for long service leave purposes in
conjunction with full-time and/or permanent part-time service on the basis of
the proportion that the actual number of hours worked each week bears to forty
hours up until 30 April, 1985 and bears to thirty-eight hours on and from 1
May, 1985, provided the part-time service as a part-time worker merges without
break with the subsequent full-time service or permanent part-time employment.
(vi) Where an
employee has been granted a period of long service leave prior to the coming
into force of this award, the amount of such leave shall be debited against the
amount of leave due under this award.
(vii) Employees of
the employer previously covered by alternative awards will have their long
service leave accrued entitlement carried over but the accrual and access to
long service leave entitlements from the date of transfer will be in accordance
with this award.
e.g. an employee with 15 years continuous service under
an alternative award at the time of transfer may have an accrued entitlement of
3 months long service leave. From this time onwards employees would accrue
their entitlements in accordance with this award, at the rate of 2.5 months for
each five years service as the continuity of service is not affected by the
change of award coverage. Thus, after 20 years continuous service the employee
would be entitled to 5.5 months leave, made up of 3 months under the previous
award and a further 2.5 months under this award.
22. Sick Leave
(i)
(a) An employee
during his/her first year of employment with an employer shall be entitled to
sick leave at the rate of 7.6 hours or pro rata thereof on the anniversary date
of each of the first three (3) months of continuous service.
(b) Upon
completion of four (4) months continuous service the employee shall be entitled
to a further 53.2 hours or pro rata thereof sick leave
(ii) A full-time
employee shall be entitled to sick leave on ordinary pay by allowing 76
rostered ordinary hours of work for each year of continuous service.
(iii) Part-time
employees shall be entitled to sick leave in the same proportion of seventy six
hours as the average weekly hours worked over the preceding 12 months or from
the time of the commencement of employment, whichever is the lesser, bears to
38 ordinary hours of one week for each year of continuous service. Such
entitlements shall be subject to all the conditions applying to full-time
employees.
(iv)
(a) An employee,
other than a homecare employee, shall notify his/her employer of an absence
from work due to illness or injury prior to the commencement of his/her
rostered shift or as soon as practicable thereafter, and shall inform the
employer of the expected duration of the absence.
(b) A Homecare
Employee shall notify his/her employer of an absence from work due to illness
or injury at least 3 hours prior to the commencement of his/her rostered shift
but in any case no later than 1 hour before the first client where the employee
is not prevented from doing so and shall inform the employer of the expected
duration of the absence.
(c) An employee
who is working in two (2) different classifications shall be paid the relevant
pay for the classification he/she would have been working on the day of their
sick leave.
(v) Periods of
sickness shall not be required to be certified to by a legally registered
medical practitioner, excepting where the absence exceeds two (2) consecutive
days or where in the employer's opinion the circumstances are such as to
warrant such requirements.
(vi) The employer
shall not change the rostered hours of work of an employee fixed by the roster
or rosters applicable to the seven days immediately following the commencement
of sick leave merely by reason of the fact that the employee is on sick leave.
(vii) An employee
shall not be entitled to sick leave on ordinary pay for any period in respect
of which such employee is entitled to workers' compensation payments at full
ordinary rate; provided however, that where an employee is not in receipt of
such full ordinary compensation rate, an employer shall pay to an employee who
has sick leave entitlements under this clause, the difference between the amount
received as workers' compensation and full pay.
The employee's sick leave entitlement under this clause
shall, for each week during which such difference is paid, be reduced by the
proportion of hours which the difference bears to full pay. On the expiration of available sick leave,
weekly compensation payments only shall be payable.
Provided that this sub-clause shall not apply where an
employee unreasonably refuses to undergo a rehabilitation program.
(viii) For the
purpose of determining a full-time employee's sick leave credit as at 1 May,
1985, sick leave entitlement shall be proportioned on the basis of 76:80.
(ix) For the
purposes of this clause, service shall mean continuous service with any one
employer/organisation.
(x) Any unused
sick leave shall remain to the employee's credit.
23. Personal/Carer’s
Leave
(i) Use of Sick
Leave:
(a) An employee,
other than a casual employee, with responsibilities in relation to a class of
person set out in sub-clause (ii) of sub-clause (c), who needs the employee’s
care and support, shall be entitled to use, in accordance with this sub-clause
any current or accrued sick leave entitlement, provided for in clause 22, Sick
Leave, for absences to provide care and support, for such persons when they are
ill. Such leave may be taken for part
of a single day.
(b) The employee
shall, if required, establish either by production of a medical certificate or
statutory declaration, the illness of the person concerned or that the illness
is such as to require care by another person.
In normal circumstances, an employee must not take carer’s leave under
this sub-clause where another person has taken leave to care for the same
person.
(c) The
entitlement to use sick leave in accordance with this sub-clause is subject to:
(1) the employee
being responsible for the care of the person concerned; and
(2) the person
concerned being:
(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 purposes of
this sub-clause:
1. "relative"
means a person related by blood, marriage or affinity;
2. "affinity"
means a relationship that one spouse because of marriage has to blood relatives
of the other; and
3. "household"
means a family group living in the same domestic dwelling.
(d) An 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.
(e) An employee,
in addition to the circumstances and manner stated in subclauses (a)-(d), shall
also be entitled to access accrued sick leave for the purposes of
personal/carer’s leave in the following situation:
1. one permanent
employee only per facility each calendar year shall be entitled to access one
(1) day of such leave to attend training facilitated by the Association to
increase awareness and knowledge of workplace issues and/or consultative
mechanisms and/or statutory entitlements and obligations, which will contribute
to a more productive, aware and harmonious workplace environment;
2. such an
employee will give a minimum of four weeks notice to the employer of attendance
at such training, unless a lesser notification period is agreed to by the
employer, and the employer shall be entitled to request written confirmation
from the Association as to the time and nature of the training;
3. access to this
one (1) day per year in this subclause is not cumulative; and
4. such an
employee may, with the consent of the employer, access additional or
alternative leave, as prescribed in subclauses (ii)-(vi) of this clause, for the
purposes of attending such training as stated in subclause (e)(1) above.
(ii) Unpaid Leave
for carers leave Purpose:
An employee may elect, with the consent of the
employer, to take unpaid leave for the purpose of providing care and support to
a member of a class of person set out in sub-clause (i) (c) (2) above, who is
ill.
(iii) Annual Leave:
(a) An employee
may elect with the consent of the employer, subject to the Annual Holidays Act 1944, to take annual leave not exceeding five
days in single day periods or part thereof, in any calendar year at a time or
times agreed by the parties.
(b) Access to
annual leave, as prescribed in sub-clause (a) of this sub-clause, shall be
exclusive of any shutdown period provided for elsewhere under the Annual Holidays Act 1944.
(iv) Time Off in
Lieu of Payment for Overtime:
(a) An employee
may elect, with the consent of the employer, to take time off in lieu of
payment for overtime at a time or times agreed with the employer within 12
months of the said election.
(b) Overtime taken
as time off during ordinary time hours shall be taken as set out in clause
10(vi)-Overtime.
(c) If, having
elected to take time as leave in accordance with sub-clause (a) of this
sub-clause, the leave is not taken for whatever reason payment for time accrued
at overtime rates shall be made at the expiry of the 12 month period or on
termination.
(d) Where no
election is made in accordance with the said sub-clause (a), the employee shall
be paid overtime rates in accordance with the award.
(v) Make-up Time:
(a) An employee
may elect, with the consent of the employer, to work "make-up time",
under which the employee takes time off ordinary hours payable at the ordinary
rate of pay, and works those hours at a later time, during the spread of
ordinary hours provided in the award, at the ordinary rate of pay.
(b) An employee on
shift work may elect, with the consent of the employer, to work "make-up
time" (under which the employee takes time off ordinary hours and works
those hours at a later time), at the shift work rate, which would have been
applicable to the hours taken off.
(vi) Allocated Days
Off:
(a) An employee
may elect with the consent of the employer, to take an allocated day off at any
time.
(b) An employee
may elect, with the consent of the employer, to take allocated days off in part
day amounts.
(c) An employee
may elect, with the consent of the employer, to accrue some or all allocated
days off for the purpose of creating a bank to be drawn upon at a time mutually
agreed between the employer and employee or subject to reasonable notice by the
employee or the employer.
(d) This
sub-clause is subject to the employer informing each union which is both party
to the award and which has members employed at the particular enterprise of its
intention to introduce an enterprise system of ADO flexibility, and providing a
reasonable opportunity for the union(s) to participate in negotiations.
24. Compassionate
Leave
(i) Compassionate
leave with pay shall be granted only in extraordinary or emergent circumstances
where an employee is forced to be absent from duty because of an urgent
pressing necessity, and such leave as is granted should be limited to the time
necessary to cover the immediate emergency.
An absence occasioned by personal exigencies which
might fairly be regarded as an obligation on the employee, rather than the
employer, may be covered by the grant of leave without pay, or if the employee
so desires, charged against available annual leave credits.
(ii) Compassionate
leave shall be granted on the following principles:
(a) Bereavement
Leave -
(1) An employee,
other than a casual employee, shall be entitled to up to two days bereavement
leave without deduction of pay, on each occasion of the death of a person as prescribed
in subparagraph (3) of this paragraph, provided that where the employee is
involved in making funeral arrangements, travelling, etc., leave may be allowed
for up to three days. Leave with pay would not ordinarily be granted for the
death or attendance at a funeral for relatives not outlined in the said
subparagraph (3) unless special circumstances exist, e.g., the employee resided
with the deceased.
(2) The employee
must notify the employer as soon as practicable of the intention to take
bereavement leave and will provide to the satisfaction of the employer proof of
death.
(3) Bereavement
leave shall be available to the employee in respect to the death of a person
prescribed for the purposes of personal/carer's leave as set out in
subparagraph (2) of paragraph (c) of subclause (i) of clause 23,
Personal/Carer’s Leave, provided that, for the purpose of bereavement leave,
the employee need not have been responsible for the care of the person
concerned.
(4) An employee
shall not be entitled to bereavement leave under this clause during any period
in respect of which the employee has been granted other leave.
(5) Bereavement
leave may be taken in conjunction with other leave available under subclauses
(ii), (iii), (iv), (v) and (vi) of the said clause 23. In determining such a
request, the employer will give consideration to the circumstances of the
employee and the reasonable operational requirements of the business.
(b) Where an
illness in the family causes an immediate emergency, sufficient leave should be
granted to meet the immediate emergencies and to allow the employee to make any
other arrangements considered necessary.
Except in very special cases, such leave with pay should be limited to
one day and where no one but the employee was available to care for the sick
family member.
(c) Compassionate
leave may also be granted in cases of unforeseen emergencies, which clearly
prevent attendance for duty, e.g., flood, bush fires etc.
(iii) Only under
the most exceptional circumstances shall compassionate leave be granted for a
period exceeding three working days within any one year. This is provided that
additional leave may be granted by the employer in exceptional circumstances.
25. Leave Without Pay
(a) By agreement
between an employer and a permanent employee, an employee may be granted a
period of leave without pay.
(b) The period of
leave without pay will not break the continuity of service but will not count
for the purpose of:
(i) accruing
annual leave, incremental progression, sick leave and public holidays;
(ii) accruing long
service leave except in the case of employees who have completed at least ten
years service (any period of absence without pay being excluded therefrom) in
which case service shall include any period without pay not exceeding six
months taken after 1 June, 1980;
(iii) qualifying
period for paid and unpaid paternity leave; and
(iv) the
calculation of notice and severance pay in accordance with clause 42,
Redundancy and clause 43, Termination of Employment.
26. Payment and
Particulars of Wages
(i) Wages shall
be paid weekly or fortnightly, provided that, for the purpose of adjustments of
wages related to alterations in the basic wage, from time to time effective,
the pay period shall be deemed to be weekly.
(ii) On each pay
day the pay shall be made up to a day not more than five days prior to the day
of payment.
(iii) Employees
shall have their wages paid by direct deposit or electronic transfer into one
account with a bank or other financial institution in New South Wales as
nominated by the employee except where agreement as to payment by cash or
cheque has been reached between the Association and the employer due to the
isolation of the place of employment and/or the limited number of employees.
(iv) Wages shall be
deposited by the employer in sufficient time to ensure that wages are available
for withdrawal by employees by the close of business on pay day. Where the wages are not available to the
employee by such time due to circumstances beyond the employer’s control, the
employer shall not be held accountable for such delay.
(v) Where the
services of an employee are terminated with due notice, all moneys owing shall
be paid upon cessation of employment, but in the case of termination without
due notice, within three working days.
(vi) On payday each
employee shall be provided with a pay slip, which specifies the following
particulars:
(a) name and date
of payment;
(b) the period for
which the payment is made;
(c) the gross
amount of wages, including overtime and other earnings and annual leave
payments for casuals;
(d) the ordinary
pay per hour;
(e) the amount
paid as overtime or such information as will enable the amount paid as overtime
to be calculated by the employee;
(f) the amount of
other earnings and the purpose for which they are paid;
(g) the amount
deducted for taxation purposes;
(h) the
particulars of all other deductions; and
(i) the net
amount paid.
(vii) Where an
employer has overpaid an employee, the employer shall notify the employee of
such overpayment and how such overpayment is made up, in writing, and may
recover such amounts, with the agreement of the employee as to the amount of
the overpayment and method of such recovery.
This sub-clause authorises the use of deductions from wages for the
purpose of such recovery. All such deduction from wages must be authorised in
writing by the employee.
27. Service Allowance
(i) All full-time
employees appointed prior to 1 June, 1980, shall after 10 years' continuous
service with the same organisation, be paid by the said organisation in
addition to the rates prescribed in Part B, Monetary Rates of this award, a
service allowance in the following manner:
For 10 years of service but
less than 15 years
|
5%
|
For 15 years of service but less
than 20 years
|
7½%
|
For 20 years of service and
over
|
10%.
|
(ii) Payments due
under this clause will be made on the usual pay day when other payments under
the award are made.
(iii) Continuous
service in the same organisation, prior to the commencement of this award shall
be taken into account when computing service for the purposes of this clause.
(iv) Continuous
service shall be deemed not to have been broken by absence from the
organisation due to membership of the defence forces of the Commonwealth in
time of war or during any period of special leave for members of the Military
Reserve Forces.
28. Leading Hands
(i) A leading
hand is an employee who is placed in charge of not less than two (2) other
employees of a substantially similar classification, but does not include any
employee whose classification denotes supervisory responsibility.
(ii) A leading
hand shall be paid a weekly allowance of the amount specified by the item
number in accordance with the following scale:
|
Item Number of
Table 2, of
|
|
Part B, Monetary
Rates
|
in charge of two to five other employees
|
Item 14
|
in charge of six to ten other employees
|
Item 15
|
in charge of eleven to fifteen other employees
|
Item 16
|
in charge of sixteen to nineteen other employees
|
Item 17
|
(iii) This
allowance shall be part of salary for all purposes of this award.
(iv) An employee
who works less than thirty-eight hours per week shall be entitled to the
allowances prescribed by this clause in the same proportion as the average
hours worked each week bears to thirty-eight ordinary hours.
29. Higher Duties
(i) An employee
when called upon by the employer to undertake duties carrying a higher rate of
pay than their ordinary classification shall be paid the higher rate for the
time so spent performing the higher duties.
(ii) This clause
shall not apply when an employee in a higher grade is absent from duty by
reason of their allocated day off duty.
30. Uniforms and
Protective Clothing
(i)
(a) Subject to
sub-clause (c) of this sub-clause, sufficient suitable and serviceable uniforms
or overalls shall be supplied free of cost, to each employee required to wear
them. An employee to whom a new uniform
or part of a uniform has been supplied by the organisation, who fails to return
the corresponding article last supplied, shall not be entitled to have such
article replaced without payment for it at a reasonable price, in the absence
of a satisfactory reason for the loss of such article or failure to produce
such uniform or part thereof.
(b) Upon termination,
an employee shall return any uniform or part thereof supplied by the
organisation, which is still in use by the employee, immediately prior to
leaving.
(c) In lieu of
supplying a uniform to an employee, an employer shall pay the said employee the
sum set out in Item 18 of Table 2 - of Part B, Monetary Rates per week;
(d) In lieu of
supplying special-type shoes where required to an employee, an employer shall
pay the said employee the sum set out in Item 19 of Table 2 - of Part B,
Monetary Rates per week;
(e) In lieu of
supplying a cardigan or jacket where required to an employee an employer shall
pay the said employee the sum per week set out in Item 20 of Table 2 - of Part
B, Monetary Rates per week;
(f) If the
uniform of the employee is not laundered at the expense of the organisation, an
allowance of the amount set out in Item 21 of Table 2 of Part B, Monetary Rates
per week shall be paid to the employee.
(g) An employee
who works less than thirty-eight hours per week shall be entitled to the allowances
prescribed by this clause in the same proportion as the average hours worked
each week bears to thirty-eight ordinary hours.
(ii) Each employee
whose duties require them to work out of doors shall be supplied with
overboots. Sufficient raincoats shall
also be made available for use by these employees.
(iii) Each employee
whose duties require them to work in a hazardous situation with or near
machinery shall be supplied with appropriate protective clothing and equipment.
(iv) For employees
engaged in homecare services the following shall apply;
(a) On request,
the employer shall supply free of charge two sets of full body aprons or other
attire as agreed by the parties;
(b) The attire
supplied in (a) above, shall be replaced by the employer on the basis of fair
wear and tear;
(c) The attire
supplied in (a) above, shall remain the property of the employer at all times
and any employee applying for a new issue supplied by the employer who fails to
return their last issue shall not be entitled to a new issue without payment
thereof;
(d) All new
employees at time of engagement and all existing employees at the time of the
next issue of uniforms may be required to sign an authorisation permitting the
employer to deduct the value of uniforms and/or employer property from
termination monies if the uniform and/or employer’s property is not returned.
Employer property is property personally given to an employee and where such
property can reasonably be expected to remain in the employee’s personal control;
(e) Where the
client supplies equipment, materials and tools, the employer shall ensure that
they are of reasonable quality and comply with safety standards;
(f) Where an
employee is required to work outdoors the employer shall provide a suitable
broad-brimmed hat.
31. Sleepovers
(i) Employees
may, in addition to normal rostered shifts, be required to sleepover. A sleepover means sleeping in at night in
order to be on call for emergencies.
(ii) The following
conditions shall apply to each night of sleepover:
(a) The span for a
sleepover shall be not less than 8 hours nor more than 10 hours on any one
night.
(b) Employees
shall be provided with free board and lodging for each night on which they are
required to sleep over.
(c) Employees
shall be provided with a separate room with a bed and use of staff facilities
or client facilities where applicable.
(d) In addition to
the provision of free board and lodging for such nights, the employee shall be
entitled to a sleepover allowance of the amount set out in Item 22 of Table 2
of Part B, Monetary Rates for each night on which they sleepover.
(e) No work other
than that of an emergency nature shall be required to be performed during any
sleepover. For the purposes of this
clause an emergency is any unplanned occurrence or event requiring prompt
action.
(f) An employee
directed to perform work other than that of an emergency nature during any
sleepover shall be paid the appropriate hourly rate from the start of the
sleepover to the end of the non-emergency work, or from the start of the
non-emergency work to the end of the sleepover, whichever is the lesser, in
addition to the sleepover allowance in sub-clause (d).
(g) All time
worked during any sleepover shall count as time worked and be paid for in accordance
with the following provisions:
(1) All time
worked by full-time employees during any sleepover shall be paid for at
overtime rates.
(2) All time
worked by permanent part-time employees during any sleepover shall be paid for
at ordinary pay plus applicable shift and weekend penalties; provided that, if
the total number of hours worked on that day exceeds the number of hours worked
by full-time employees, or eleven hours where there are no such full-time
employees, then the excess hours worked on that day shall be paid for at
overtime rates; and provided further that if the total number of hours worked
in the week exceeds 38 hours, or exceeds 76 hours in the fortnight as the case
may be, then the excess hours worked in that week or fortnight, as the case may
be, shall be paid for at overtime rates.
(3) All time
worked by casual employees during any sleepover shall be paid for at ordinary
pay plus applicable shift and weekend penalties; provided that if the total
number of hours worked in the week exceeds 38 hours, or exceeds 76 hours in the
fortnight as the case may be, then the excess hours worked in that week or
fortnight, as the case may be, shall be paid for at overtime rates.
(4) And provided
further that where the employee does not have eight consecutive hours off duty
between ordinary rostered duty on successive days, then the provisions of
sub-clause (j) of this sub-clause will apply.
(h) A sleepover
may be rostered to commence immediately at the conclusion of the employee's
shift and continuous with that shift; and/or immediately prior to the
employee's shift and continuous with that shift, and not otherwise.
(i) No employee
shall be required to sleepover during any part of their rostered days off
and/or allocated days off provided for in sub-clauses (iii) and (vi) of clause
7-Hours.
(j) An employee
(whether a full-time employee, permanent part-time employee or casual employee)
who performs so much work during sleepover periods between the termination of
their ordinary work on any day or shift and the commencement of their ordinary
work on the next day or shift that they have not had at least eight consecutive
hours off duty between these times shall, subject to this sub-clause, be
released after completion of such work until they have had eight consecutive
hours off duty without loss of pay for ordinary working time occurring during
such absence. If on the instruction of
the employer such an employee resumes or continues to work without having such eight
consecutive hours off duty they shall be paid at double time of the appropriate
rate applicable on such day until they are released from duty for such period
and they then shall be entitled to be absent until they have had ten
consecutive hours off duty without loss of pay for ordinary working time
occurring during such absence.
(k) Casual
employees may only be used for sleepovers when full-time employees or permanent
part-time employees are not available for that duty and in no case shall casual
employees be used exclusively or almost exclusively for sleepovers.
(iii) Nothing in
this clause shall preclude the employer from rostering an employee to work
shift work in lieu of undertaking sleepovers.
32. Live-in
Hostel Supervisors and Live-in Housekeepers required to live
in shall be provided with full board and lodging free of charge. Where, in
these circumstances, supervisors are rostered off duty, other appropriate staff
shall be available.
33. Grievance and
Dispute Resolution Procedures
(i) The following
procedures shall be followed in relation to grievances of individual employees:
(a) The employee
is required to notify the employer, preferably in writing, as to the substance
of the grievance, request a meeting with the employer for bilateral discussions
and state the remedy sought.
(b) A grievance
must initially be dealt with as close to the source as possible, with graduated
steps for further discussion and resolution at higher levels of authority.
(c) Reasonable
time limits must be allowed for discussion at each level of authority.
(d) At the
conclusion of the discussion, the employer must provide a response to the
employee's grievance, if the matter has not been resolved, including reasons
for not implementing any proposed remedy.
(ii) The following
procedure shall be followed in relation to disputes, etc., between employers
and their employees:
(a) A question,
dispute or difficulty must initially be dealt with as close to its source as
possible, with graduated steps for further discussion and resolution at higher
levels of authority.
(b) Reasonable
time limits must be allowed for discussion at each level of authority.
(iii) In the case
of employers who employ not more than 20 employees, or where the management
structure is such that all employees are subject to the direct supervision and
control of the employer, graduated steps for further discussion and resolution
at higher levels do not apply.
(iv) While the
above procedure is being followed, work will continue as normal where it is
agreed there is an existing practice, but in other cases work will continue on
the employer’s instructions. No party
will be prejudiced as to the final settlement by continuation of work.
(v) For any of the
above procedures, the employer may be represented by an industrial organisation
of employers and the employee(s) may be represented by an industrial
organisation of employees.
(vi) The industrial
organisation representing employees reserves the right to vary this procedure
where it is considered a safety factor is involved.
34. Attendance at
Meetings
Any employee required to attend Occupational Health and
Safety Committee and/or Board of Management meetings in the capacity of
employee representative shall, if such meetings are held outside the ordinary
hours of work, be entitled to receive ordinary pay per hour for the actual time
spent in attendance at such meetings.
In lieu of receiving payment, employees may, with the agreement of the
employer, be permitted to be free from duty for a period of time equivalent to
the period spent in attendance at such meetings. Such time spent shall not be viewed as overtime for the purposes
of this award.
35. Labour
Flexibility and Mixed Functions
(i) An employer
may direct an employee to carry out such duties as are within the limits of the
employee's skill, competence and training
(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/or (ii) shall be
consistent with the employer's responsibility to provide a safe and healthy
working environment for employees and the employer's duty of care to residents.
36. Promotions and
Appointments
Promotion and/or appointment shall be by merit, provided
however that no employee with a claim to seniority shall be passed over without
having his/her claim considered.
37. Emergency Telephone
Calls
An employee required to answer emergency telephone calls
outside of ordinary working hours, but not recalled to duty, shall be
reimbursed rental charges on such telephone calls on production of receipted
accounts. Provided that, where an employee
is required to answer out of hours telephone calls on a relief basis, he/she
shall be paid one-twelfth (1/12th) of his/her yearly telephone rental for each
month or part thereof he/she is so employed.
38. Parental Leave
(i) All employees
are entitled to parental leave in accordance with the provisions of the Industrial Relations Act 1996.
(ii)
(a) Full-time
employees and permanent part-time employees are eligible for paid parental
leave in accordance with the following provisions:
(1) Permanent employees
are eligible for paid parental leave when they have completed at least 40
weeks' of continuous service prior to the expected date of birth or prior to
the date of taking custody of the child.
(b) Employees who
are eligible for paid parental leave are entitled to such leave as follows:
(1) Paid Leave:
(A) Paid Maternity
Leave - an eligible employee is entitled to nine weeks paid maternity leave at
ordinary pay from the date the maternity leave commences.
Maternity leave may commence up to nine 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 this period, it is subject to the employee being able to satisfactorily
perform the full range of normal duties.
(B) Paid Paternity
Leave - an eligible employee is entitled to one week paid paternity leave in
any one year at ordinary pay, which must commence within four weeks of the
birth of the child. (Eligible employees will be as defined in the Industrial Relations Act 1996.)
(C) Paid Adoption
Leave - an eligible employee is entitled to paid adoption leave of three weeks
from and including the date of taking custody of the child.
(D) Such leave may
be paid:
(i) on a normal
fortnightly basis;
(ii) in advance in
a lump sum;
(iii) at the rate
of half pay over a period of 18 weeks on a regular fortnightly basis for
maternity leave and at the rate of half pay over a period of six weeks on a
regular fortnightly basis for adoption leave.
Annual and/or long service leave credits can be
combined with periods of maternity leave or adoption leave on half pay to
enable an employee to remain on full pay for that period.
(2) Unpaid Leave:
(A) Unpaid
Maternity Leave - An employee is entitled to a further period of unpaid
maternity leave of not more than twelve months after the actual date of birth
of the child.
(B) Unpaid
Paternity Leave - An employee is entitled to a further period of unpaid
paternity leave of not more than three weeks, to be taken in conjunction with a
period of paid paternity leave, unless otherwise agreed by the employer and
employee.
(C) Unpaid Adoption
Leave - An employee is entitled to unpaid adoption leave as follows:
(i) where the
child is under the age of 12 months - a period of not more than 12 months from
the date of taking custody;
(ii) where the
child is over the age of 12 months - a period of up to 12 months, such period
to be agreed upon by both the employee and the employer.
(c) An employee
who has once met the conditions for paid maternity leave and paid adoption
leave will not be required to again work the 40 weeks' continuous service in
order to qualify for a further period of maternity leave or adoption leave,
unless:
(1) 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
(2) 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.
(d) An employee
who intends to proceed on maternity or paternity leave should formally notify
the employer of such intention as early as possible, so that arrangements
associated with the 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.
(e) In the case of
notification of intention to take adoption leave, 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 their employer as early as
practicable of the intention to take adoption leave. This will allow arrangements associated with the adoption leave
to be made.
(f) After
commencing maternity leave or adoption leave, an employee may vary the period
of her maternity leave or adoption leave, once, without the consent of the
employer and otherwise, with the consent of the employer. A minimum of four weeks' notice must be
given, although an employer may accept less notice if convenient.
(g) Any person who
occupies the position of an employee on parental leave must be informed that
the employee has the right to return to her former position. Additionally, since an employee also has the
right to vary the period of her maternity leave or adoption leave, offers of
temporary employment should be in writing, stating clearly the temporary nature
of the contract of employment. The
duration of employment should also be set down clearly, to a fixed date or
until the employee elects to return to duty, whichever occurs first.
(h) When an
employee has resumed duties, any period of full pay leave is counted in full
for the accrual of annual and long service leave and any period of maternity
leave or adoption leave on half pay is taken into account to the extent of
one-half thereof when determining the accrual of annual and long service leave.
(i) Except in the
case of employees who have completed ten years service the period of parental
leave without pay does not count as service for long service leave
purposes. Where the employee has
completed ten years service the period of parental leave without pay shall
count as service for long service leave purposes provided such leave does not
exceed six months.
(j) Parental
leave without pay does not count as service for incremental purposes. Periods of parental leave on full pay and at
half pay are to be regarded as service for incremental progression on a
pro-rata basis.
(k) Where public
holidays occur during a period of paid parental leave, payment is at the rate
of parental leave received, that is the public holidays occurring in a period
of full pay parental leave are paid at the full rate and those occurring during
a period of half pay leave are paid at the half rate.
(l) 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.
(m) Where an
employee is entitled to paid maternity leave, but because of illness, is on
sick, recreation, long service leave, or sick leave without pay prior to the
birth, such leave ceases nine weeks prior to the expected date of the
birth. The employee then commences
maternity leave with the normal provisions applying.
(n) 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. 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.
(o) In the event
of a miscarriage any absence from work is to be covered by the current sick
leave provisions.
(p) In the case of
stillbirth, an employee may elect to take sick leave, subject to the 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.
(q) 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.
(r) An employee
returning from parental leave has the right to resume their 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 for which the employee is capable
or qualified.
(s) Employees may
make application to their employer to return to duty for less than the
full-time hours they previously worked by taking weekly leave without pay. Such return to work is to be according to
the following principles:
(1) the period is
to be limited to twelve months after which the full-time duties must be
resumed;
(2) the employee
is to make an application for leave without pay to reduce her full-time weekly
hours of work. This application should
be made as early as possible to enable the employer to make suitable staffing
arrangements. At least four weeks'
notice must be given;
(3) the quantum of
leave without pay to be granted to individual employees is to be at the
absolute discretion and convenience of the employer;
(4) salary and
conditions of employment are to be adjusted on a basis proportionate to the
employee's full-time hours of work, that is for long service leave the period
of service is to be converted to the full-time equivalent and credited
accordingly.
(5) Full-time
employees who return to work under this arrangement remain full-time employees.
(t) Where an
employee becomes pregnant whilst on maternity leave, a further period of
maternity leave may be granted. Should
this second period of maternity leave commence during the currency of the
existing period of maternity leave, then any residual maternity leave from the
existing entitlement lapses.
39. Repatriation
Leave
(i) Employees who
are ex-servicemen or ex-service women may be granted special leave in one or
more periods up to a maximum of 6½ working days in any period of twelve months
without deduction from annual or sick leave credits for the following purposes
in connection with an accepted war-caused disability or in connection with an
application to the Repatriation Department for a disability to be so accepted:
(a) to attend a
hospital or clinic or visit a medical officer in that regard;
(b) to attend a
hospital, clinic or medical officer or to report for periodical examination or
attention;
(c) to attend limb
factories for the supply, renewal and repair of artificial replacements and
surgical appliances.
(ii) Employees are
to provide the employer with documentary evidence as to the attendance prior to
the payment of special leave being granted.
40. Association
Representative
An employee appointed Association representative shall, upon
notification thereof in writing to the organisation, within 14 days of such
appointment, or as soon as practicable thereafter, be recognised as the
accredited representative of the Association and shall be allowed the necessary
time, during working hours, to interview the employer on matters affecting
employees.
41. Apprentices
(i) Indentured
apprentice means an employee who is serving a period of training under an
indenture for the purpose of rendering them fit to be a qualified worker in an
industry. Apprentices may be indentured
to an organisation as cooks or gardeners.
(ii) Apprenticeship
means an apprenticeship established under Division 2 of Part 3 of the Industrial and Commercial Training Act,
1989.
(iii) The minimum
rates of wages for apprentice cooks shall be the following percentages of the
rate applicable to the classification of Care Service Employee Grade 3 as
varied from time to time:
First year
|
60%
|
Second year
|
82.5%
|
Third year
|
92.5%.
|
(iv) The minimum
rates of wages for apprentice gardeners shall be the following percentages of
the rate applicable for the classification of a Care Service Employee Grade 3
as varied from time to time:
First year
|
50%
|
Second year
|
60%
|
Third year
|
80%
|
Fourth year
|
90%.
|
(v) Apprentices
attending college for training shall be entitled to fares to and from home to
college.
(vi) An apprentice
who obtains and hands to his/her employer a certificate or statement of having
passed his/her first year technical college examination and in respect of whom
a satisfactory report as to conduct, punctuality and progress is furnished
shall be paid an allowance of the amount in Item 23 of Table 2 of Part B,
Monetary Rates per week in addition to the rates prescribed in the ensuing
twelve months, plus an additional allowance of the amount in Item 23 of Table
2, Part B, Monetary Rates per week if he/she passes each subsequent year.
(vii) The ordinary
hours of work for apprentices shall be as prescribed in clause 7-Hours. No apprentice shall be permitted or required
to perform work, which would prevent the apprentice from attending classes at
TAFE.
42. Redundancy
(i) For the
purposes of this Clause, "Continuous service" shall be interpreted in
the same manner as "service of a worker" is interpreted in the Long Service Leave Act 1955 as at 22
July 1996. Periods of leave without
pay, including parental leave without pay, do not break the continuity of
service of an employee but are not to be taken into account in calculating
length of service for the purposes of this award.
(ii) Introduction
of Change
(a) Employer's
duty to notify -
(1) Where the
employer has made a definite decision to introduce major changes in production,
program, organisation, structure or technology that are likely to have
significant effects on employees, the employer shall notify the employees who
may be affected by the proposed changes and the Association.
(2) "Significant
effects" include termination of employment, major changes in the
composition, operation or size of the employer's workforce or in the skills
required, the elimination or diminution of job opportunities, promotion
opportunities or job tenure, the alteration of hours of work, the need for
retraining or transfer of employees to other work or locations and the
restructuring of jobs.
(b) Employer's
duty to discuss change -
(1) The employer
shall discuss with the employees affected and the union to which they belong,
inter alia, the introduction of the changes referred to in sub-clause (a) of
this clause, the effects the changes are likely to have on employees and
measures to avert or mitigate the adverse effects of such changes on employees,
and shall give prompt consideration to matters raised by the employees and/or
the union in relation to the changes.
(2) The discussion
shall commence as early as practicable after a definite decision has been made
by the employer to make the changes referred to in sub-clause (a) of this
clause.
(3) For the
purpose of such discussions, the employer shall provide to the employees
concerned and the union to which they belong all relevant information about the
changes, including the nature of the changes proposed, the expected effects of
the changes on employees and any other matters likely to affect employees,
provided that any employer shall not be required to disclose confidential
information the disclosure of which would adversely affect the employer. Provided that the making of any positions
redundant shall not be deemed to be confidential information for the purposes
of this award.
(iii) Redundancy
Discussions before terminations -
(a) Where an
employer has made a definite decision that the employer no longer wishes the
job the employee has been doing done by anyone and that decision may lead to
termination of the employee's employment, the employer shall hold discussions
with the employees directly affected and with the union to which they belong.
(b) The
discussions shall take place as soon as is practicable after the employer has
made a definite decision which will invoke the provisions of sub-clause (a) of
this clause and, in any case, prior to the beginning of the period of notice
required by sub-clause (iv), Termination of Employment of this clause. These discussions shall cover, inter alia,
any reasons for the proposed terminations, and measures to avoid or minimise
the terminations, and measures to mitigate any adverse effects of any
terminations on the employees concerned.
(c) For the purposes
of the discussion the employer shall, as soon as practicable and, in any case,
prior to the beginning of the period of notice required by sub-clause (iv),
Termination of Employment of this clause, provide to the employees concerned
and to the union to which they belong, all relevant information about the
proposed terminations, including the reasons for the proposed terminations, the
number and categories of employees likely to be affected, and the number of
workers normally employed and the period over which the terminations are likely
to be carried out. Provided that any
employer shall not be required to disclose confidential information the
disclosure of which would adversely affect the employer. Provided that the making of any positions
redundant shall not be deemed to be confidential information for the purposes
of this award.
(iv) Termination of
Employment
(a) Notice for
changes in production, program, organisation or structure - This sub-clause
sets out the notice provisions to be applied to terminations or proposed
terminations of the employment of an employee by the employer in circumstances
where the employer no longer wishes the job which the employee has been doing
to be done by anyone, for any reason (other than technological change), and for
reasons arising from production, program, organisation or structure in
accordance with sub-clause (ii)(a)(1), shall be at least the minimum periods of
notice as provided in Clause 43-Termination of Employment.
(b) Notice for
technological change - This subclause sets out the notice provisions to be
applied to terminations or proposed terminations by the employer for reasons
arising from technology in accordance with sub-clause (ii) (a) (1) Introduction
of Change.
(1) An employer
shall not terminate the employment of an employee unless the employer has given
to the employee at least three months' notice of termination.
(2) Payment in
lieu of the period of notice specified in sub-clause (iv) (b) (1) Termination
of Employment shall be made if the said period of notice is not given. Provided that employment may be terminated
by part of the period of notice specified and part payment in lieu of the
period of notice specified.
(3) The period of
notice required by this sub-clause to be given shall be deemed to be service
with the employer for the purposes of the Long
Service Leave Act 1955, the Annual
Holidays Act 1944, or any act amending or replacing either of these Acts.
(c) Time off
during the notice period -
(1) During the
period of notice of termination given by the employer, each affected employee
shall be allowed up to one day's time off without loss of pay for each week of
notice, up to a maximum of five days off, for the purposes of seeking other
employment.
(2) If an employee
has been allowed paid leave for more than one day during the notice period for
the purpose of seeking other employment, if the employer so requests, the
employee shall be required to produce proof of attendance at an interview. If the employee is so required to produce
such proof of attendance and fails to do so, the employee shall not be entitled
to receive payment for such time.
(d) Employee
leaving during the notice period - If the employment of an employee is
terminated (other than for misconduct) before the notice period expires, the
employee shall be entitled to the same benefits and payments to which the
employee shall be entitled had the employee remained with the employer until
the expiry of such notice.
(e) Statement of
employment - The employer shall provide to each employee whose employment has
been terminated, a written statement specifying the period of the employee's
employment and the classification of or the type of work performed by the
employee.
(f) Notice to
Centrelink - Where a decision has been made to terminate the employment of 15
or more employees, the employer shall notify Centrelink of this, as soon as
possible, giving relevant information, including the number and categories of
the employees likely to be affected and the period over which the terminations
are intended to be carried out.
(g) Centrelink
Employment Separation Certificate - The employer shall provide to an employee
whose employment has been terminated an Employment Separation Certificate in
the form required by Centrelink.
(h) Transfer to
Lower Paid Duties - Where an employee
is genuinely transferred to a lower paid classification for reasons set out in
subclause (ii) (a) Introduction of Change, the employee shall be entitled to
the same period of notice of transfer as the employee would have been entitled
to if the employee’s employment has been terminated. The employer will however
in addition continue to pay the employee their former ordinary pay for a period
equivalent to one week for each year of service completed with the employer to
a maximum of six weeks.
(v) Retrenchment
Pay
Unless the Industrial Relations Commission of New South
Wales subsequently orders otherwise pursuant to sub-clause (vi), Incapacity to
Pay, where the employment of an employee is to be terminated, for reasons set
out in sub-clause (ii) Introduction of Change, the employer shall pay, in
addition to other payments due to that employee, the following retrenchment pay
in respect of the following continuous periods of service:
(a) Where the
employee is under 45 years of age, the employer shall pay the employee in
accordance with the following scale:
Minimum Years of
Service
|
Retrenchment Pay
|
Less than 1 year
|
Nil
|
1 year and less than 2 years
|
4 weeks pay
|
2 years and less than 3 years
|
7 weeks pay
|
3 years and less than 4 years
|
10 weeks pay
|
4 years and less than 5 years
|
12 weeks pay
|
5 years and less than 6 years
|
14 weeks pay
|
6 years and over
|
16 weeks pay.
|
(b) Where the
employee is 45 years of age or over, the employer shall pay the employee in
accordance with the following scale:
Minimum Years of
Service
|
Retrenchment Pay
|
Less than 1 year
|
Nil
|
1 year and less than 2 years
|
5 weeks pay
|
2 years and less than 3 years
|
8.75 weeks pay
|
3 years and less than 4 years
|
12.5 weeks pay
|
4 years and less than 5 years
|
15 weeks pay
|
5 years and less than 6 years
|
17.5 weeks pay
|
6 years and over
|
20 weeks pay
|
(c) "Week's
pay" means the rate of pay for the employee concerned at the date of
termination, and shall include in addition to the ordinary pay any overaward
payments:
(1) shift
allowances as prescribed in sub-clauses (i) and (ii) of clause 15-Penalty Rates
and Shift Allowances;
(2) weekend
penalties as prescribed in sub-clause (iii) of clause 15- Penalty Rates and
Shift Allowances;
(3) service
allowances as prescribed in subclause (i) of clause 27-Service Allowance;
(4) broken shift
allowances as prescribed in clause 7-Hours;
(5) sleepover
allowances as prescribed in clause 31- Sleepovers;
(6) apprentices’
TAFE examination allowances as prescribed in clause 41-Apprentices;
(7) climatic and
isolation allowances as prescribed in clause 14-Climatic and Isolation
Allowances;
(8) leading hand
allowances as prescribed in clause 28- Leading Hands;
(9) Laundry and
Dry Cleaning Certificate allowance as prescribed in Table 2 of Part B Monetary
Rates of this Award.
(vi) Incapacity to
Pay
Subject to an application by the employer and further
order of the Industrial Relations Commission an employer may pay a lesser
amount (or no amount) of retrenchment pay than that contained in sub-clause (v)
Retrenchment Pay.
The Industrial Relations Commission shall have regard
to such financial and other resources of the employer concerned as the
Industrial Relations Commission thinks relevant, and the probable effect paying
the amount of retrenchment pay in the said sub-clause (v) will have on the
employer.
(vii) Alternative
Employment
Subject to an application by the employer and further
order of the Industrial Relations Commission, an employer may pay a lesser
amount (or no amount) of severance pay than that contained in sub-clause (v)
Retrenchment Pay, above if the employer obtains acceptable alternative
employment for an employee.
43. Termination of
Employment
(i) Employment,
other than of a casual, will be terminated only by appropriate notice on either
side or by the payment by the employer or forfeiture by the employee of wages
in lieu of notice. Provided that employment may be terminated by part of the
period of notice specified, and part payment or forfeiture, in lieu of the
period of notice specified.
(ii) Notice of
termination by employer -
(a)
(1)
Period of
Continuous Service
|
Minimum Period of
Notice
|
1 year or less
|
1 week
|
More than 1 year but not more than 3 years
|
2 weeks
|
More than 3 years but not more than 5 years
|
3 weeks
|
More than 5 years
|
4 weeks
|
(2) A Care Service
Employee Grade 4 who has responsibility for the overall management of a
facility and a Care Service Employee Grade 5 shall be entitled to four weeks
notice.
(b) Employees aged
45 years or older will be entitled to an additional one week’s notice in the
following circumstances:
(1) On completion
of at least five years continuous service, for Care Service Employees Grade 4
who have responsibility for the overall management of a facility, and Care
Service Employees Grade 5; and
(2) On completion
of at least two years continuous service for all other employees other than
casuals.
(c) Casuals are to
be given notice to the end of the current shift worked.
(iii) Notice by
Employee -
(a) Subject to
sub-clauses (iii) (b) and (c) of this clause, employees shall give the employer
one weeks notice of termination in writing.
(b) A Care Service
Employee Grade 4 who has responsibility for the overall management of a
facility and a Care Service Employee Grade 5 shall give four (4) weeks notice
of termination in writing.
(c) Casuals shall
only be required to give notice to the end of the current shift worked.
(iv) The employer
may, without notice, summarily dismiss an employee at any time for misconduct or
wilful disobedience. Payment is up to
the time of dismissal only. Serious
misconduct is where it would be unreasonable to require the employer to
continue the employment during a notice period.
(v) The employer
will give the employee a statement signed by the employer stating the period of
employment and when the employment was terminated if the employee requests.
(vi) Abandonment of
Employment -
(a) Where an
employee is absent from work for a continuous period of two working days
without the consent of the employer, and without notification to the employer,
the employer shall be entitled to inform the employee by written correspondence
that unless the employee provides a satisfactory explanation for her/his
absence within two days of the receipt of such a request, the employee will be
considered to have abandoned employment.
44. Notice Board
(i) The employer
shall permit a notice board of reasonable dimensions to be erected in a
prominent position upon which the Association representatives shall be
permitted to post Association notices.
(ii) The employer
shall keep exhibited a copy of this award in accordance with Section 361 of the
Industrial Relations Act 1996.
45. Accommodation and
Amenities
(i) The minimum
standards as set out in all relevant occupational health and safety legislation
shall be met in the provision of amenities to employees.
(ii) Such
amenities must include:
(a) change rooms
and lockers;
(b) meal room;
(c) facilities for
boiling water, warming and refrigerating food and for washing and storing,
dining utensils;
(d) rest room;
(e) washing and
bathing facilities; and
(f) sanitary
conveniences.
(iii) sub-clauses
(i) & (ii) above shall not apply to homecare employees.
46. Inspection of
Lockers
Lockers may only be opened for inspection in the presence of
the employee but in cases where the employee neglects or refuses to be present
or in any circumstances where notice to the employee is impracticable, such
inspection may be carried out in the absence of the employee by an officer of
the employer and a union representative where practicable, otherwise by any two
officers of the facility appointed by the employer for that purpose.
47. Consultative
Arrangements
The parties support the development of consultative arrangements
in the aged care industry and to that end recommend that facilities establish
consultative teams and that those teams meet regularly. The number of management representatives
should not exceed the number of staff representatives. The meetings are a forum to allow the
exchange of ideas and information on policies, procedures, etc. Members should encourage the development of
skills by attendance at recognised training forums and greater participation of
all employees in the consultative process.
48. No Extra Claims
Commitment
It is a term of this award (arising from the decisions of
the Commission in the 1998 State Wage Case) that the union undertakes, for the
duration of the principles determined by those decisions, not to pursue any
extra claims, award or overaward, except when consistent with these principles.
49. Training
(i) Employees
will be given on-going training as necessary, relevant to their roles and
responsibilities.
(ii) Each employee
shall provide to his/her employer details of their attendance at training and
the employer shall keep a record of this attendance.
(iii) Upon
termination of the employee’s employment the employer shall provide to the
employee a written statement of the hours of training attended by the employee.
(iv) Where
practicable, such training shall be provided to employees during their normal
rostered hours of work. Where this is not practicable:
(a) Employees
shall attend training outside their normal rostered working hours when required
to do so by the employer;
(b) An employer
shall provide employees with two (2) weeks notice of the requirement to attend
training outside of their normal rostered working hours;
(c) Notwithstanding
clause 10-Overtime, attendance at such training shall be paid ordinary pay for
the period of training.
(d) An employer
requiring an employee to attend training shall also pay to the employee
ordinary pay for time travelling to and from a period of training referred to
in sub clause (c) that is in excess of the time normally taken for that
employee to attend work.
(e) When receiving
travelling time as set out in subclause (d) above in this clause, any employee
using their own vehicle for attendance at such training shall be reimbursed as
set out in Item 5 of Table 2, Part B of this Award.
(f) Training
provided outside the normal rostered hours of work shall be arranged so as to
allow full-time employees to have at least eight or ten hours off-duty before
or after training and the end or beginning of their shift, whichever is applicable
as set out in Clause 7-Hours. Where practicable, similar arrangements should
also be made available to all other employees.
(g) Any training
undertaken by an employee that occurs at a workplace is not intended to replace
or supplement staffing levels and the normal levels of service delivery at such
a workplace.
(h) Not
withstanding sub-clause (ix) of Clause 7-Hours, sub-clause (ii) of Clause
10-Overtime will not apply where attendance at such training is outside the
normal rostered working time of other than full-time employees and where it
interrupts the applicable eight or ten hour break between shifts.
50. Leave Reserved
The parties agree that an analysis will be undertaken within
six months to investigate and determine current classification structures
within the Award with the view of ensuring their currency and appropriateness.
51. Area, Incidence
and Duration
(i) This award
shall apply to all employees employed by employers that are members of the
A.S.A. and/or C.C.E.R., excluding those in the County of Yancowinna, who are:
(a) within the
jurisdiction of the Voluntary Care Association Employees' (State) Conciliation
Committee who come within the Constitution Rule of the Health and Research
Employees' Association of New South Wales; and/or
(b) employed by or
in connection with voluntary, religious, charitable and non-profit making
private retirement villages, nursing homes and hostels for the aged in the
private health, health-related and aged care industries, and nursing homes for
the disabled in the private disability services industry, and who come within
the Constitution Rule of Health and Research Employees' Association of New
South Wales; and/or
(c) employed by or
in connection with other accommodation support services and/or community
residential units for disabled persons owned, managed or conducted by
voluntary, religious, charitable and other non-profit making organisations in
the private disability services industry and who come within the Constitution
Rule of the Health and Research Employees' Association of New South Wales.
(ii) Provided that
this award shall not apply to persons substantially engaged in counselling,
social welfare advice and referral, assessment of disability, design of
disability services programs, or community development work in connection with
services for the disabled or social workers or social educators properly
so-called; provided this exclusion does not apply to persons eligible to become
members of the Health and Research Employees' Association who are employed as
Residential Care Workers or Residential Services Assistants, and persons
primarily engaged in supervising the work performed by disabled persons, or in
domestic duties in Sheltered Workshops for the disabled.
(iii) Provided that
with respect to the Grand United Centenary Nursing Homes, employees employed
prior to 15 July, 1996 shall continue to be entitled to receive any benefit or
benefits obtained in the Aged Care General Services (State) Award as varied
which are greater than the benefit or benefits that are contained in this
award.
(iv) This award
shall not apply to:
(a) Novices,
aspirants or persons who have taken the vows of religious orders.
(b) Persons who
are employed in providing home care services to clients in private residences
which are not operated as an adjunct to a retirement village, nursing home,
hostel, accommodation support service or community residential unit or where
the provisions of the Miscellaneous Workers Home Care Industry (State) Award,
as varied, apply.
(v) This award
rescinds and replaces the Charitable, Aged and Disability Care Services (State)
Award published on 25 January 2002 (330 I.G 1023) and all variations thereof.
This award shall take effect on 26 October 2001 but by administrative action
will commence from the beginning of the first pay period on or after 1 July
2001, and shall remain in force until 30 June 2003.
PART B
The rates contained herein shall be deemed to apply from the
first full pay period to commence on or from the dates shown in each column.
Table 1 - Monetary Rates
Classification
|
Rate as at
|
Rate as at
|
|
1 July 2001
|
1 July 2002
|
|
$
|
$
|
Care Service Employee
|
|
|
New Entrant Grade 1 Junior
|
402.20
|
418.29
|
Grade 1
|
470.81
|
489.64
|
Grade 2
|
483.69
|
503.04
|
Grade 3
|
514.10
|
534.66
|
Grade 4
|
541.06
|
562.70
|
Grade 5 - from
|
576.80
|
599.87
|
- To
|
952.24
|
990.33
|
Note:- Employees classified and paid as Recreational
Activities Officers as at 10 November, 1998 be reclassified in accordance with
the new definitions of Care Service Employee.
Employees reclassified at Grade 2 by virtue of the above exercise, shall
be paid at Grade 3 from the effective date of this award, and continue to be so
paid whilst employed in the provision of recreational activities by their
current employer. These employees may be required to perform the duties of a
Level 3 Care Services Employee where they have the skill and competence to do
so.
Note:- Salary Band-Grade 5 - Employers and employees may
negotiate a rate within the salary band as shown. For the purposes of this award, the rate so negotiated shall be
deemed to be the employee's award rate of pay.
Salaries in excess of the salary band may also be negotiated between the
parties.
Maintenance Supervisors
Maintenance Supervisor - (otherwise)
|
560.11
|
582.51
|
Maintenance Supervisor - (otherwise)
|
572.99
|
595.91
|
- in charge of staff
|
|
|
Maintenance Supervisor (Tradesperson)
|
610.28
|
634.69
|
Catering Officer
Trainee Catering Officer
|
1st year
|
491.62
|
511.28
|
2nd year
|
501.20
|
521.24
|
3rd year
|
512.10
|
532.58
|
Assistant Catering Officer
|
80-120 beds
|
517.27
|
537.96
|
120-300 beds
|
553.32
|
575.45
|
300-500 beds
|
596.06
|
619.90
|
500-1000 beds
|
612.95
|
637.47
|
Catering Officer
|
80-120 beds
|
579.27
|
602.44
|
120-200 beds
|
596.06
|
619.90
|
200-300 beds
|
612.95
|
637.47
|
300-500 beds
|
645.19
|
671.00
|
500-1000 beds
|
699.16
|
727.13
|
Diversional Therapist
1st year of experience
|
494.50
|
514.28
|
2nd year of experience
|
520.77
|
541.60
|
3rd year of experience
|
546.72
|
568.59
|
4th year of experience
|
572.68
|
595.59
|
5th year of experience and therafter
|
597.61
|
621.51
|
Apprentices
Apprentice Cook
|
1st year
|
308.46
|
320.80
|
2nd year
|
424.13
|
441.09
|
3rd year
|
475.54
|
494.56
|
Apprentice Gardener
|
1st year
|
257.05
|
267.33
|
2nd year
|
308.46
|
320.80
|
3rd year
|
411.28
|
427.73
|
4th year
|
462.69
|
481.19
|
Homecare Employees
Home care Employee
|
Grade 1
|
473.90
|
492.86
|
Grade 2
|
498.83
|
518.78
|
Grade 3
|
535.70
|
557.13
|
Live-in Housekeeper
|
Grade 1
|
616.15
|
640.80
|
Grade 2
|
698.44
|
726.38
|
Grade 3
|
831.62
|
864.88
|
Clerical And Administrative Employees
Juniors
|
At 16 years of age and under
|
256.70
|
266.97
|
At 17 years of age
|
291.10
|
302.74
|
At 18 years of age
|
333.90
|
347.26
|
At 19 years of age
|
376.20
|
391.24
|
At 20 years of age
|
414.60
|
431.18
|
Adults
|
Grade 1
|
510.90
|
531.34
|
Grade 2
|
543.33
|
565.06
|
Grade 3
|
577.21
|
600.30
|
Grade 4
|
604.40
|
628.58
|
Grade 5
|
633.24
|
658.57
|
Note 1:
Any employee paid on a classification/grade carrying a
higher wage rate as at 10 November, 1998 shall have the difference between the
higher rate and the new agreed grade/rate preserved whilst remaining to
undertake the duties associated with the classification held prior to the date
referred to above.
Note 2:
Clerks who are paid at a grade above that of Grade 5 as at
10 November, 1998 shall have the difference between that grade, inclusive of
the 1998 State Wage Case Increase, and the new agreed grade preserved whilst
employed in a clerical position with their current employer.
For example, the difference between the then new Grade 5 and
the previous Grade 6 as at 10 November 1998 was $19.40 (ie $604.50 - $585.10 =
$19.40). Accordingly it is this amount, which constitutes that historical
difference, that is paid in addition to the current award rate for a Grade 5.
Similar calculations will need to be made for Grades 7 and 8
Table 2 - Other Rates And Allowances
Item
|
Clause No
|
Brief Description
|
|
Amount as
|
Amount
|
No
|
|
|
|
of 1 July
|
as of 1
|
|
|
|
|
2001
|
July
|
|
|
|
|
|
2002
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
$
|
1
|
7(xi)(c)
|
Broken Shift
|
Per shift
|
6.00
|
6.24
|
2
|
9(iii)(a)
|
Overtime - Breakfast
|
Per meal
|
9.52
|
9.92
|
3
|
9(iii)(b)
|
Overtime - Luncheon
|
Per meal
|
12.33
|
12.82
|
4
|
9(iii)(c)
|
Overtime - Evening Meal
|
Per meal
|
18.07
|
18.79
|
5
|
10(iii)(b)
|
Overtime - recall use of own vehicle
|
Per klm
|
0.26
|
0.27
|
6
|
10(iii)(c)
|
On Call Allowance
|
Per day (24 hrs)
|
9.70
|
10.08
|
7
|
14(i)
|
Climatic & Isolation Allowance
|
Pro rata
|
3.89
|
4.05
|
8
|
14(ii)
|
Climatic & Isolation Allowance
|
Pro rata
|
7.35
|
7.64
|
9
|
17(i)(a)
|
Cleaning/Scraping Work - confined
|
Per hour
|
0.37
|
0.38
|
|
|
space
|
|
|
|
10
|
17(i)(b)
|
Cleaning/Scraping Work - boiler/flue
|
Per hour
|
0.59
|
0.61
|
11
|
17(iii)
|
Linen Handling - nauseous nature
|
Per hour
|
0.17
|
0.17
|
12
|
17(v)
|
Use of Own Vehicle **
|
Per klm
|
0.5075
|
|
13
|
17(ix)
|
Laundry and Dry Cleaning Certificate
|
Pro rata
|
6.07
|
6.84
|
|
|
Allowance
|
|
|
|
14
|
28(ii)
|
Leading Hand Allowance - in charge
|
Pro rata
|
15.90
|
16.54
|
|
|
2-5 employees
|
|
|
|
15
|
28(ii)
|
Leading Hand Allowance - in charge
|
Pro rata
|
22.72
|
23.63
|
|
|
6-10 employees
|
|
|
|
16
|
28(ii)
|
Leading Hand Allowance - in charge
|
Pro rata
|
28.69
|
29.84
|
|
|
11-15 employees
|
|
|
|
17
|
28(ii)
|
Leading Hand Allowance - in charge
|
Pro rata
|
35.06
|
36.46
|
|
|
16-19 employees
|
|
|
|
18
|
30(i)(c)
|
Uniform Allowance
|
Pro rata
|
4.93
|
5.13
|
19
|
30(i)(d)
|
Special Type Shoes Allowance
|
Pro rata
|
1.53
|
1.59
|
20
|
30(i)(e)
|
Cardigan or Jumper Allowance
|
Pro rata
|
1.48
|
1.54
|
21
|
30(i)(f)
|
Laundry Allowance - Uniform
|
Pro rata
|
4.11
|
4.27
|
22
|
31(ii)(d)
|
Sleepover Allowance
|
Per shift
|
29.62
|
30.81
|
23
|
41(vi)
|
Apprentice - TAFE Examination
|
Per week
|
1.41
|
1.47
|
|
|
Allowance
|
|
|
|
Note:
This rate will be adjusted on 1 July of each year by the
variation that has occurred in the NRMA recommended rate for private vehicle
use.
I. R. NEAL, Commissioner.
____________________
Printed by
the authority of the Industrial Registrar.