• Specific Year
    Any

FAIR WORK ACT 2009 - SECT 188 Determining whether an enterprise agreement has been genuinely agreed to by employees

FAIR WORK ACT 2009 - SECT 188

Determining whether an enterprise agreement has been genuinely agreed to by employees

Statement of principles

  (1)   The FWC must take into account the statement of principles made under section   188B in determining whether it is satisfied that an enterprise agreement has been genuinely agreed to by the employees covered by the agreement.

Sufficient interest and sufficiently representative

  (2)   The FWC cannot be satisfied that an enterprise agreement has been genuinely agreed to by the employees covered by the agreement unless the FWC is satisfied that the employees requested to approve the agreement by voting for it:

  (a)   have a sufficient interest in the terms of the agreement; and

  (b)   are sufficiently representative, having regard to the employees the agreement is expressed to cover.

Note:   In One Key Workforce Pty Ltd v Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union [2018] FCAFC 77 (2018) 262 FCR 527, a Full Court of the Federal Court observed that whether an agreement has been genuinely agreed involves consideration of the authenticity of the agreement of the employees, including whether the employees who voted for the agreement had an informed and genuine understanding of what was being approved.

Agreement of bargaining representatives that are employee organisations

  (2A)   The FWC cannot be satisfied that an enterprise agreement to which section   180A or 180B applies has been genuinely agreed to by the employees covered by the agreement unless the FWC is satisfied that the employer complied with section   180A or 180B (as the case requires) in relation to the agreement.

Where notice of employee representational rights was required

  (3)   Subsection   (4) applies in relation to an enterprise agreement if an employer was required by subsection   173(1) (which deals with giving notice of employee representational rights) to take all reasonable steps to give notice in relation to the agreement.

  (4)   The FWC cannot be satisfied that the agreement has been genuinely agreed to by the employees covered by the agreement unless the FWC is satisfied that the employer complied with the following provisions in relation to the agreement:

  (a)   sections   173 and 174 (which deal with giving notice of employee representational rights);

  (b)   subsection   181(2) (which requires that employees not be requested to approve certain enterprise agreements until 21 days after the last notice of employee representational rights is given).

Explanation of terms of the agreement

  (4A)   The FWC cannot be satisfied that the agreement has been genuinely agreed to by the employees covered by the agreement unless the FWC is satisfied that the employer complied with subsection   180(5) in relation to the agreement.

Minor errors may be disregarded

  (5)   In determining whether it is satisfied that an enterprise agreement has been genuinely agreed to by the employees covered by the agreement (including determining whether it is satisfied that an employer complied with the provisions mentioned in subsection   (2A) or   (4) or (4A)), the FWC may disregard minor procedural or technical errors made in relation to the following requirements if it is satisfied that the employees were not likely to have been disadvantaged by the errors:

  (a)   section   173 or 174 (which deal with notices of employee representational rights for certain agreements);

  (aa)   subsection   180(5) (which requires employers to explain the terms of agreements);

  (ab)   section   180A or 180B (which deal with agreement of certain bargaining representatives);

  (b)   subsection   181(2) (which requires that employees not be requested to approve certain enterprise agreements until 21 days after the last notice of employee representational rights is given);

  (c)   subsection   182(1) or (2) (which deal with the making of different kinds of enterprise agreements by employee vote).

Regulations

  (6)   The FWC cannot be satisfied that an enterprise agreement has been genuinely agreed to by the employees covered by the agreement unless the FWC is satisfied that the requirements (if any) prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this subsection are met.

Download

No downloadable files available