Business groups have slammed a union deal with small business on multi-employer bargaining as risking further complexity for employers and potentially opening the door to mass strikes.this week’s jobs summit
Industrial Relations Minister Tony Burke jumped on the COSBOA-ACTU agreement as “exactly the sort of cooperation we’ve been hoping to achieve with the summit” and urged other employer groups to engage with the union peak body.“I’m encouraging the different business organisations not to simply draw the lines of ‘haven’t needed this in the past, don’t want it’, and to lean in and see where these sorts of opportunities might work.
“Small businesses will not welcome the prospect of being subject to industrial action in support of conditions or pattern agreements, negotiated by others, being imposed upon them.”, known as the BOOT, for enterprise agreements was not working but warned that did not justify “radical change”. However, she stressed that the proposed multi-employer deals would not be sector-wide and would be an opt-in for small business.
“Enterprise bargaining at the moment is not working: it’s not lifting productivity, it’s not working for workers, it’s not working for business. “We’re going through a process at the moment which has been absolutely horrible and terribly traumatic for me and most of our staff,” he told“It’s also been extremely expensive, so I think something like what COSBOA and the ACTU are putting forward could be good, as it puts everyone on a level playing field, which is an advantage.”
They are now government backed
Any pre deal undermines the summit - particularly one this bad!
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