Three certified agreements case
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The "three certified agreements case" was a decision of the Australian Industrial Relations Commission. The case resolved the confusion created by the High Court's decision of Electrolux v AWU.
Name of the case
The "three certified agreements case" (A.K.A.: "In Re Schefenacker" / "The Australian Nursing Federation and the Rural City of Murray Bridge") was a case which combined appeals from single Commissioners decisions not to certify enterprise agreements as they believed that the agreements contained clauses that did not pertain to the relationship between employer and employee. The three agreements were:- The Murray Bridge Enterprise Bargaining Agreement
- The Schefenacker Vision Systems Enterprise Bargaining Agreement
- The La Trobe University Enterprise Bargaining Agreement.
Background to the case
The decision was necessary to clarify the High Court's decision of Electrolux. The aftermath of the Electrolux decision was that a huge degree of uncetainty existed around what could be placed into enterprise bargaining agreements.
Significance of the case
The decision was handed down on the 21 March 2005.The case got major attention around Australia at the time. It was one of the longest awaited decisions in industrial relations law as industrial relations professionals had awaited clarification of the Electrolux decision of the High Court of Australia for over five months. [link] It is commonly regarded as the final landmak decision of the Australian Industrial Relations Commission. (That is before its wage setting, award formation and agreement certification powers were removed from it by the Workchoices reform in 2006.)
Decision in the case
The case dealt with whether a large number of union friendly provisions, including:
- union training leave
- the recognition of delegates
- right of entry
- salary sacrifice
- use of labour hire (and setting or terms of conditions for labor hire).
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