The National Code of Practice for the Construction Industry (the Code) establishes minimum standards businesses must meet to be eligible for Australian Government building and construction work.
The Australian Government Implementation Guidelines for the National Code of Practice for the Construction Industry (the Guidelines) provide further detail on Code compliance requirements.
Only parties who are Code compliant can tender to undertake building and construction activities on Australian Government funded projects. This condition applies to head contractor, subcontractors, project managers, consultants and material suppliers.
Prior to the Australian Government’s introduction of the Code and Guidelines it was common to find unacceptable workplace practices on building and construction sites. These included behaviours that were unlawful, undermined the freedom of association principles and hindered the adoption of world best practice.
The introduction of the Code and Guidelines works to remove these unacceptable practices by putting in place a model for behaviour to reform the building and construction industry and bring about productivity improvements.
Unacceptable practices in relation to freedom of association
The following practices are inconsistent with the Code and Guidelines:
- employers providing the names of new staff or job applicants to unions
- supplying the names of contractors to unions
- ‘no ticket, no start’ signs, or other notices such as posters, helmets, stickers or union flags, that imply union membership isn’t a matter of individual choice
- ‘show card’ days
- employers encouraging or discouraging employees to join a union
- the imposition upon a subcontractor or employer to employ a non-working shop steward or job delegate or other person, or to hire an individual nominated by a union
- pressuring subcontractors to join employer associations
- using site delegates to undertake or administer site induction processes
- using induction forms or requiring employees to identify their union status
- a requirement for an employer to apply union logos, mottos or other promotional material to company supplied property, equipment and clothing
- a requirement for an employee to be exclusively represented by a union in a dispute settlement
- a requirement for any person or enterprise to pay a fee to a registered organisation of which they are not a member.
Breaches in workplace arrangements
Your workplace arrangements and practices MUST NOT:
- prescribe the ratio or number of permanent, temporary and casual employees a company can employ on a site
- include ‘one-in-all-in’ arrangements in relation to workplace practices such as overtime
- contain ‘last on, first off’ arrangements or criteria for redundancy that relates to seniority of employees - redundancy arrangements must relate to the employer’s organisational requirements
- restrict the employer’s short or long term labour requirements or the terms and conditions of any employee who is not a party to the industrial instrument or workplace arrangements
- contain any provisions that the union must be consulted or approve the employer’s short or long term labour requirements
- prohibit employers making ‘all-in payments’ to an employee for work done that is made on an hourly, daily or weekly basis and which is in lieu of payment for all or some entitlement specifically provided for by agreements, awards or legislation, such as annual leave loading or overtime. This does not include statutory obligations, such as superannuation contributions
- negate or make the Code or Guidelines ineffective. The workplace agreement should not include clauses with wording such as ‘nothing shall be contrary to the law…’, ‘clauses that are inconsistent with Commonwealth law…’, and ‘clauses that are inconsistent with the Code and Guidelines will have no effect...’
Project and sector agreements
Unregistered project and sector agreements are strictly prohibited and no attempts should be made to enforce their requirements. A specific review should be undertaken to remove any ‘legacy provisions’ of these project and sector agreements from existing contractual documents.
Legal Obligations
The reform of these workplace practices in no way relieves building industry participants from their legal obligations. All parties must comply with the provisions of their industrial instruments. All employers must comply with employment obligations, such as workers compensation, superannuation, long service leave and employee entitlements.
Further Information
You can download a printable version of this fact sheet here: Unacceptable Workplace Practices and Workplace Arrangements (PDF - 159KB)
To make an enquiry or obtain copies of the Code and Guidelines, fact sheets and other reference material, visit the National Code page and Fact Sheets page of the ABCC website or go to:
The Office of the Australian Building and Construction Commissioner
Hotline: 1800 003 338
Website: www.abcc.gov.au
Email: enquiry@abcc.gov.au
Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations
National Code Mailbox: building@deewr.gov.au
Code Hotline on 1300 731 293.
Assessment of workplace arrangments for Code compliance:
Go to Code Assessments Online at www.workplace.gov.au/building
The information contained in this fact sheet is correct as at 26 February 2008.
This material is for general information only. You should seek legal advice in relation to your particular circumstances. The Australian Government, its employees and agents do not accept any liability for action taken in reliance on this document and disclaim all liability arising from any error or omission. ABN 68 003 725 098
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