Proposed changes to the Fair Work Act – what will this mean for employers?

The proposed changes to the Fair Work Act will have significant implications for employers and employees. Employers should ensure they are well-informed about the proposed changes prior to them taking effect.

The changes to the Fair Work Act will have significant implications for employers and employees. Employers should ensure they are well-informed about the proposed changes prior to them taking effect.

What employers need to know

The amendments to the Fair Work Act will have significant implications. Employers should note that the changes introduce:

As an upside, there are changes to simplify some enterprise bargaining processes.

What are the changes?

On 6 December 2022, the Fair Work Legislation Amendment (Secure Jobs, Better Pay) Act 2022 (Amending Act) received royal assent. The amendments within the Amending Act will be implemented over the next 12 months, with some having commenced on 7 December 2022.

The Amending Act makes a number of changes to the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) and its associated legislation to:

This article provides an overview of these key changes.

Improving job security by limiting the use of fixed term employment contracts

Fixed term employment contracts are contracts that terminate after a specified period of time (e.g. two years) or after the completion of a specific task or project. At the end of the specified time, task or project, the employment contract automatically comes to an end, giving employers the ability to ‘end’ an employee’s employment at the specified time, without needing to give a reason for termination, provide notice of the termination or to pay any redundancy if the position is no longer required to be performed by anyone. The validity of long-term fixed term contracts has been the subject of significant legal scrutiny over the years.

The Amending Act limits the use of these contracts, particularly when those contracts are simply for arbitrary periods of time and not linked to identifiable funding, the performance of distinct identifiable tasks or linked to training arrangements. Subject to the Amending Act’s listed exceptions, the Fair Work Act will from 6 December 2023 prohibit employers from engaging employees under the terms of a fixed term employment contract that:

Employers who wish to retain employees for periods of over two years will need to engage these employees under permanent ongoing contracts, which will have major implications for many employers currently relying on rolling fixed‑term contracts.

Amending enterprise bargaining rules to reduce onerous processes

The Amending Act makes significant changes to several enterprise bargaining rules in the Fair Work Act. The amendments include: