Intelligence Committee and Employment Law Reform
MPs today will set the rules the Intelligence and Security Committee work under and its membership.
The two motions to achieve this include setting the members as: Amy Adams and Chris Finlayson, nominated by the Leader of the Opposition; and Hon Winston Peters, Andrew Little, and James Shaw, nominated by the Prime Minister.
Following the debate on the two motions, MPs will debate the first reading of the Employment Relations Amendment Bill.
A summary of the changes proposed to the Employment Relations Act.
Collective bargaining and unions
The amendments in the Bill include proposals designed to strengthen collective bargaining and union rights in the workplace in order to secure improved terms and conditions for union members, while supporting workplace productivity.
The amendments to Part 4 of the Act
• remove the requirement for a union representative to
gain consent from an employer before entering a
workplace:
• require employers to allow union delegates
reasonable time during working hours to perform their duties
in respect of the employees of that employer.
The amendments to Part 5 of the Act
• reinstate the
principle that the duty of good faith requires parties to
conclude a collective agreement, and repeal the provisions
that enable the Employment Relations Authority to determine
bargaining has concluded:
• reinstate the ability of
unions to initiate collective bargaining 20 days before an
employer:
• repeal sections which allow employers to
opt out of multi-employer collective bargaining once
bargaining has been initiated:
• require collective
agreements to contain rates of pay and that rates of pay
must be agreed during collective bargaining.
Sections of the Act are also repealed to remove an employer’s ability to deduct pay as a response to partial strikes.
The amendments to Part 6 of the Act will improve employees’ ability to make an informed choice about whether to join a union. The amendments intend to achieve this by —
• requiring new employees are afforded the same
terms and conditions as the applicable collective agreement
relating to their work for the first 30 days of their
employment:
• requiring employers to provide the
applicable collective agreement and union contact details
and the option to join the union at the same time as they
provide an intended individual employment agreement to an
employee:
• requiring employers provide information
about the role and functions of the applicable union when
the intended employment agreement is given to prospective
employees:
• encouraging an active choice by a new
employee on whether to join the union, and whether to object
to the employee’s employer providing the employee’s name
and notice of the employee’s choice to the relevant
union.
The amendments to Part 9 of the Act are intended to protect union members from unfair treatment by an employer —
• extending the grounds for discrimination to
include an employee’s union membership:
• extending
the time frame for which an employee’s union activities
may be considered to contribute to an employer’s
discriminatory behaviour from 12 months to 18
months.
Restoring key minimum standards and protections
for employees
The amendments reintroduce minimum standards and protections that are intended to make vulnerable workers more secure in their employment while still allowing flexibility for employers. These include—
• removing
the exemption for employers with fewer than 20 employees
from the current rules about business transfers, which will
allow employees of these employers to elect to transfer to
an incoming employer:
• extending the time frame for
employees to elect to transfer to an incoming employer and
placing information and notification requirements on
employers in respect of their employees’ personal
information:
• reinstating the right to prescribed rest
and meal breaks, with limited exceptions:
• restoring
reinstatement as the primary remedy in unjustified dismissal
cases, where the employee requests it and where
reinstatement is practicable and reasonable:
• limiting
trial periods to employers with fewer than 20
employees.