Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees Association

Case

[2022] FWCA 713

1 MARCH 2022


[2022] FWCA 713

FAIR WORK COMMISSION

DECISION

Fair Work (Transitional Provisions and Consequential Amendments) Act 2009

Item 16 Sch. 3—Termination of transitional instrument

Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees Association

(AG2021/4743)

Le Max Group Supermarkets Workplace Agreement (2006)

Retail industry

DEPUTY PRESIDENT HAMILTON

MELBOURNE, 1 MARCH 2022

Application to terminate individual agreement-based transitional instrument.

Introduction and background

  1. On 20 April 2021, Employee X, represented by the Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees Association (SDA) applied for the termination of the Le Max Group Supermarkets Workplace Agreement (2006) (the Agreement), under Schedule 3, Item 16 of the Fair Work (Transitional Provisions and Consequential Amendments) Act 2009 (Cth) (the TPCA Act).

  1. Schedule 3, Item 16 of the TPCA Act provides that Subdivision D of Division 7 of Part 2-4 of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) (the FW Act) applies in relation to a collective agreement-based transitional instrument as if a reference to an enterprise agreement included a reference to a collective agreement-based transitional instrument.

  1. I am satisfied that the Agreement is a collective agreement-based transitional instrument. The Agreement was lodged with the former Office of the Employment Advocate on 10 April 2006. Employee collective agreements commence operation on their date of lodgement. The Agreement at clause 4.1 provides that the Agreement will operate from the lodgement date and shall remain in operation for a period of at least 12 months. I am therefore satisfied that the Agreement has passed its nominal expiry date.

  1. The FW Act provides as follows:

225 Application for termination of an enterprise agreement after its nominal expiry date

If an enterprise agreement has passed its nominal expiry date, any of the following may apply to the FWC for the termination of the agreement:

(a)       one or more of the employers covered by the agreement;

(b)       an employee covered by the agreement;

(c)       an employee organisation covered by the agreement.

226 When the FWC must terminate an enterprise agreement

If an application for the termination of an enterprise agreement is made under section 225, the FWC must terminate the agreement if:

(a)       the FWC is satisfied that it is not contrary to the public interest to do so; and

(b)       the FWC considers that it is appropriate to terminate the agreement taking into account all the circumstances including:

(i)           the views of the employees, each employer, and each employee organisation (if any), covered by the agreement; and

(ii)          the circumstances of those employees, employers and organisations including the likely effect that the termination will have on each of them.’

  1. Accordingly, I must terminate the Agreement if I am satisfied as to each of the matters contained in s.226 of the Act.

  1. A further application was received from Ms Corinne Bardini which was forwarded to the other parties to the application. On 29 April 2021, the Fair Work Commission (the Commission) directed the Respondent to provide a copy of the Notice of Listing, Form F28 applications, statutory declarations and any other accompanying materials submitted by the SDA and Ms Bardini to all employees (and any other relevant party) who stood to be affected by the application. The Respondent was also directed to send an email to Chambers explaining how they had complied with the Direction. A Conference was scheduled to occur on 20 May 2021.

  1. On 3 May 2021, the Respondent sought for the Directions to be varied on the basis that the SDA did not appear to be an employee organisation covered by the Agreement, and Ms Bardini was no longer engaged as an employee of the Respondent. The Directions were subsequently varied so as to no longer require the Respondent to distribute the Notice of Listing, Form F28 applications, statutory declarations and any other accompanying materials submitted by the SDA and Ms Bardini. The issue of standing was to be discussed further during the Conference where the SDA and Ms Bardini were expected to demonstrate that they have standing to pursue the applications.

  1. At the Conference on 20 May 2021, Ms Bardini confirmed that she was no longer an employee of the Respondent and that she was not an employee of the Respondent at the time she lodged the application with the Commission. It was jointly agreed amongst all parties during the Conference that Ms Bardini had no standing to pursue the application as she was not an employee of the Respondent at the time she lodged the application pursuant to s.225(b) of the FW Act. Ms Bardini was then requested to leave the Conference and she complied with this request. I note that further submissions were received by Ms Bardini to the Commission on 12 September 2021, 27 November 2021 and 13 February 2022. Even if I take these submissions into consideration it provides no assistance, because they are unintelligible and provide no assistance in relation to the statutory tests.

  1. The SDA was directed to provide a statutory declaration confirming that Employee X was a current employee of the Respondent along with payslips. Based on the information supplied I am satisfied that Employee X is a current employee of the Respondent and has standing to bring the application before the Commission. The parties were directed to have private discussions to reach agreement on how to move forward with the application from Employee X.

  1. On 25 June 2021, the SDA indicated that the parties had reached an in-principle agreement regarding the commencement of bargaining for a BOOT compliant replacement enterprise agreement. On 28 July 2021, the SDA confirmed that they would submit an undertaking with the Commission detailing that the parties had agreed in-principle to begin negotiations for a BOOT compliant replacement enterprise agreement, that it would include a timely process for the company to introduce the penalties of the applicable Award, and that there would be an agreed termination of date of the Agreement of no later than 14 December 2021.

  1. On 11 August 2021, the SDA provided the abovementioned undertaking to the Commission.

  1. On 13 December 2021, leave was sought and granted to extend the termination date of the collective agreement to 4 March 2022 with an agreed undertaking attached. It was stated that as bargaining had been progressing positively an extension of time would assist with the bargaining process.

  1. Based on the application and the material before me, I am satisfied that termination of the Agreement is not contrary to the public interest. Taking into account all of the circumstances including those in ss.226(b)(i) and (ii), I consider that it is appropriate to terminate the Agreement. There is nothing before me that raises public interest considerations which might lead me to conclude that the Agreement should not be terminated.

  1. I am satisfied that it is appropriate to terminate the Agreement, and I do so.

  1. The termination will come into effect from 4 March 2022.

  1. No objections or oppositions to the application were raised by parties for this Decision to be issued on 1 March 2022.

DEPUTY PRESIDENT

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