Hospital Scientists (State) Award 2023
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS
COMMISSION OF NEW SOUTH WALES
Application by NSW Ministry of Health.
(Case No. 213299 of 2023)
Before Chief Commissioner Constant
|
17 August 2023
|
AWARD
PART A
Arrangement
Clause No. Subject Matter
1. Definitions
2. Salaries
3. Grading Employees
4. Hours
4A. Multiple Assignments
5. Shift Work and Weekend Work
6. Rostering Hours
7. On-Call
8. Permanent Part-Time and Part-Time
Employees
9. Overtime
10. Meals
11. Higher Duties
12. Public holidays
13. Annual Leave
14. Long Service Leave
15. Sick Leave
16. Payment and Particulars of Salary
17. Termination of Employment
18. Accommodation and Amenities
19. Inspection of Lockers of Employees
20. Uniform and Laundry Allowance
21. Climatic and Isolation Allowance
22. Notice Boards
23. Union Representative
24. Exemptions
25. Blood Counts
26. Settlement of Disputes
27. Anti-Discrimination
28. Travelling Allowance
29. General Conditions
30. Promotions and Appointments
31. Board and Lodgings
32. Maternity, Adoption & Parental Leave
32A. Lactation Breaks
33. Family and Community Services Leave and
Personal/Carer’s Leave
33A. Family Violence Leave
34. Mobility, Excess Fares and Travelling
35. Labour Flexibility
36. Salary Packaging
37. Reasonable Hours
38. Salary Sacrifice to Superannuation
39. No Extra Claims
40. Area, Incidence and Duration
PART B
Table 1 -
Allowances
PART A
1. Definitions
Unless the context otherwise indicates or requires the
several expressions hereunder defined shall have their respective meaning
assigned to them:
"ADA" means the daily average of occupied beds
adjusted by counting each 700 registered outpatients as one occupied bed. The
average shall be taken for the twelve months for the year ending 30 June in each and every year and such average shall relate to the
salary for the succeeding year.
"Day Worker" means a worker who works ordinary
hours from Monday to Friday inclusive and who commences work on such days at or
after 6:00 a.m. and before 10:00 a.m. otherwise than as part of a shift system.
"Director/Deputy Director" means an employee
appointed as Head of a Department or as second in-charge of a Department, provided that such a position is approved as
such by the employer.
"Employee" means a Hospital Scientist, Senior
Hospital Scientist, Principal Hospital Scientist, or Trainee Hospital Scientist
as defined.
"Employer" means the Secretary of the Ministry of
Health exercising employer functions on behalf of the Government of New South
Wales.
"Health
Service" means a Local Health District constituted under section 8 of the Health Services Act 1997, a Statutory
Health Corporation constituted under section 11 of that Act, and an Affiliated
Health Organisation constituted under section 13 of that Act, as amended or
varied from time to time.
"Hospital" means a public hospital as defined
under section 15 of the Health Services
Act 1997, as amended and varied from time to time.
"Hospital Scientist" means an employee who has
acquired the Diploma in Medical Technology of the Australian Institute of
Medical Technologists (before 1974) or who has obtained a degree in science
from an approved university or college of advanced education requiring a
minimum of three years full-time study or such qualifications as the employer
deems equivalent.
"Principal Hospital Scientist" means a Hospital
Scientist who has been appointed as such and holds a post graduate degree in
science at least equivalent to the degree of Master of Science of an approved
university, or such other qualifications deemed by the employer to be
equivalent and who has had not less than ten years post graduate experience in
an appropriate scientific field.
"Senior Hospital Scientist" means an employee who
is engaged in scientific work of a professional nature in a public hospital
laboratory who holds a degree in science from an approved University or a
college of advanced education or such other qualifications deemed by the
employer to be appropriate who -
(a) has been appointed to a position in
charge of a section of a laboratory; or
(b) has been approved by the employer for
appointment on the recommendation of the Credentials Committee.
"Secretary" means the Secretary of the Ministry of
Health.
"Senior or Chief Hospital Scientist" means an
employee who is engaged in scientific work of a professional nature in a public
hospital laboratory who holds a degree in science from an approved University
or a college of advanced education or such other qualifications deemed by the
employer to be appropriate who:
(a) has been appointed to a position in
charge of a laboratory; or
(b) has been approved by the employer for
appointment on the recommendation of the Credentials Committee.
"Service" means service before and/or after the
commencement of this Award in any one or more hospitals as defined under s
section 15 of the Health Services Act
1997, or any other hospital deemed acceptable by the employer.
"Shift Worker" means a worker who is not a day
worker as defined.
"Trainee Hospital Scientist" means an employee
appointed as such who is undertaking a part-time degree course in science at an
approved University and is engaged in work related to the profession for which
they are qualifying.
"Union" means the Health Services Union NSW.
2. Salaries
Full time Hospital Scientist employees, as defined herein,
shall be paid the salaries as set out in the Health Professional and Medical Salaries (State) Award 2022 as
varied or replaced from time to time.
3. Grading of Employees
(i) Grades: Every employee other than
Trainee Hospital Scientist shall be classified in one of the grades of Hospital
Scientist, Chief/Senior Hospital Scientist, or Principal Hospital Scientist as
provided hereunder.
(ii) Years of Scale -
(a) Within each grade employees shall, at all times be classified not lower than the year of scale
corresponding to the minimum described hereunder for their respective
qualifications and/or duties advanced by:
(1) At least one year of scale for each
completed year of service in that grade and hospital; and
(2) At least one further year of scale for
each completed year of service in the same branch of science in that grade in
any other hospital or hospitals.
(b) In determining an employee's
classification due allowance also shall be made for any post graduate
experience.
(iii) Hospital Scientists who hold or are
qualified to hold a degree, diploma or other qualification, as shown hereunder
shall not be classified below the respective year of scale in this grade, as
follows, with advancement as provided for in subclause (ii) of this clause.
Bachelor's
Degree (3 year course) - 1st year;
Bachelor's
Degree with Honours (3 year course); Bachelor's degree
(4 year course) - 2nd year;
Bachelor's
Degree with Honours (4 year course); diploma or
Bachelor's degree with at least two years’ experience concurrent with or after
the last two years of the course - 3rd year;
Master's Degree
- 4th year;
Fellow of the
Institute of Physics, and/or Fellow of the Australian Institute of Physics,
Degree of Doctor of Philosophy - 6th year.
provided such degree with honours
or such Master's Degree has been obtained in a subject
relevant to the branch of science in which the employee is engaged.
(iv) Credentials Committee. A committee
consisting of two representatives of the employer and two representatives of
the Union shall be constituted to consider and recommend to the employer upon
application by the Union or the relevant Health Service.
(a) The appointment of a new employee as a
Senior Hospital Scientist (other than a Senior Hospital Scientist in charge of
a laboratory or a section of a laboratory), or a Principal Hospital Scientist.
(b) The promotion of an employee from
Hospital Scientist to Senior Hospital Scientist.
(c) The promotion of an employee from Senior
Hospital Scientist to Principal Hospital Scientist.
4. Hours
(i) The ordinary hours of work for day
workers, exclusive of meal times, shall be 152 hours
per 28 calendar days to be worked from Monday to Friday inclusive and to
commence on such days at or after 6:00 a.m. and before 10:00 a.m.
(ii) The ordinary hours of work for shift
workers exclusive of meal times, shall not exceed an
average of 38 hours per week in each roster cycle.
(iii) Each day worker shall be free from duty for
not less than two full days in each week and each shift worker shall be free
from duty for not less than two full days in each week or four full days in
each fortnight. Where practicable such days off duty shall be consecutive.
(iv)
(a) The hours of work prescribed in
subclauses (i) and (ii) of this clause shall, where
possible, be arranged in such a manner that in each roster cycle of 28 days
each employee shall not work their ordinary hours of work on more than nineteen
days in the cycle. The hours worked on each of those days shall be arranged to
include a proportion of one hour (in the case of employees working shifts of
eight hours duration the proportion of 0.4 of an hour) which shall accumulate
towards the employee's allocate day off duty on pay, as the twentieth working
day of the cycle.
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of
paragraph (a) of this subclause, employees who were, as at the 30th June, 1984, working shifts of less than eight hours
duration may:
(1) continue to work their existing hours
each 28 days but spread over 19 days, or
(2) with the agreement of the hospital,
continue to work shifts of the same duration over 20 days in each cycle of 28
days.
(v) The employee's allocated day off duty
prescribed in subclause (iv) of this clause shall be determined by mutual
agreement between the employee and the employer having regards to the needs of
the employer. Where practicable such allocated day off duty shall be
consecutive with the days off duty prescribed by subclause (iii) of this clause.
(vi) Once set the allocated day off duty may not
be changed in a current cycle unless there are genuine unforeseen circumstances
prevailing. Where such circumstances exist and the allocated day is changed,
another day shall be substituted in the current cycle. Should this not be
practicable, the day must be given and taken in the next cycle immediately
following.
(vii) Where the employer and the Union agree that
exceptional circumstances exist in a particular Health Service, an employee’s
allocated days off duty prescribed by subclause (iv) of this clause may, with
the agreement of the employee concerned, accumulate and be taken at a time
mutually agreed between the employee and the employer. Provided that the
maximum number of days off duty which may accumulate under this subclause shall
be three.
(viii) There shall be no accrual of 0.4 of an hour for each day of ordinary annual leave taken in
accordance with subclause (i) of Clause 13, Annual
Leave, of this Award. However where an employee has
accumulated sufficient time to take his/her allocated day off duty prior to
entering on annual leave, and that day would have been taken if the employee
had not gone on annual leave, it shall be allowed to the employee on the first
working day immediately following the period of leave.
Where an employee has not
accumulated sufficient time for an allocated day off duty prior to entering on
annual leave, time in credit shall count towards taking the next allocated day
off duty falling in sequence after the employee's return to duty.
(ix) An employee entitled to allocated days off
duty in accordance with subclause (iv) of this clause shall continue to
accumulate credit towards his/her allocated day off duty whilst on sick leave.
Where an employee's allocated day off duty falls during a period of sick leave,
the employee's available sick leave shall not be debited for that day.
(x) Where an employee's allocated day off
duty falls due during a period of workers compensation, the employee, on
returning to duty, shall be given the next allocated day off duty in sequence
irrespective of whether sufficient credits have been accumulated or not.
(xi) Where an employee's allocated day off duty
falls on a public holiday as prescribed by Clause 12 - Public Holidays of this
Award, the next working day shall be taken in lieu thereof.
(xii) Except for one meal break each day all time
worked between the normal starting and ceasing time each day shall be at the
ordinary rates of pay.
(xiii) There shall be one tea break of twenty
minutes duration. This is additional to the meal break provided for in
subclause (xii) of this clause.
(xiv) There shall be a minimum break of eight (8)
hours between ordinary rostered shifts.
4A. Multiple Assignments
(This Clause has had
application from 13 August 2018)
(i) Multiple assignments under this Award
exist when:
a. An employee has more than one position
under this Award within the New South Wales Health Service, and
b. The same conditions of employment
within the Award apply to the positions.
Each of these
positions is referred to in this clause as “assignments”.
(ii) Where an employee has multiple assignments
with different ordinary rates of pay, the employee shall be paid in relation to
the ordinary hours worked in each separate assignment at the ordinary rate of
pay applicable to that assignment.
(iii) This clause does not apply to employees who
have multiple casual assignments only.
The Award provisions are to apply separately to each casual assignment.
Multiple Assignments Within a Single Organisation in the
Public Health System
(iv) The following provisions apply to employees
with two or more assignments, that comply with 4A(i),
within a single Organisation in the Public Health System:
(a) The work performed in each of an
employee’s assignments shall be aggregated for the purposes of determining all of the employee’s entitlements under this Award.
Hours,
Additional Days Off, and Overtime
(b) The combined total number of ordinary
hours worked under an employee’s multiple assignments shall not exceed the
hours of work as set out in Clause 4, Hours.
(c) Where the combined total number of
ordinary hours worked under an employee’s multiple assignments is equivalent to
those set out for the ordinary hours of work for day workers (ie full time) in Clause 4 they
will be considered as a full time employee for the purposes of the Award and:
1. that employee is entitled to allocated
days off in accordance with Clause 4, Hours, and
2. Clause 9, Overtime, shall apply for the
purposes of overtime.
(d) Where the combined total number of
ordinary hours worked under an employee’s multiple assignments is less than
those set out in subclause (c) of this subclause they will be treated in
accordance with Part 1 of Clause 8, Permanent Part-Time and Part-Time
Employees.
1. All ordinary hours and additional hours
paid at ordinary rates in each assignment shall be aggregated and treated as if
they were worked under a single assignment, in accordance with Part 1 of Clause
8 Permanent Part-Time and Part-Time Employees, and
2. Overtime as prescribed in Clause 9,
Overtime (including subclauses (v) and (vi)).
(e) The rostering of additional days off will
be co-ordinated between the employee’s line managers to ensure that the
additional days off are proportionately rostered across the employee’s
assignments. Where an employee has
multiple assignments with different ordinary rates of pay, the additional day
off will be paid at the rate of pay relevant to the assignment in which it is
rostered.
(f) Where an employee has multiple
assignments with different ordinary rates of pay, the rate of pay used to
determine the additional hours or overtime payable shall be the rate applicable
to the assignment which generated the additional hours or overtime.
(g) Where overtime is compensated by way of
time off in lieu that time off in lieu must be taken in the assignment which
generated the overtime.
(h) Employees who are in full time or part
time assignments cannot be engaged on a second or further assignment as a
casual employee under the Award. Any
additional hours worked by such employees are to be remunerated in accordance
with paragraphs (c) or (d) of this subclause.
Public
Holidays – Rostered Day Off
(i) Each
assignment will stand alone when calculating payment for a public holiday that
falls on a rostered day off under Clause 12, Public Holidays subclause (iv).
Temporary Employees
(j) Where an employee has
an assignment which attracts a 10% loading in accordance with subclause 3.2 of
the Health Industry Status of Employment
(State) Award 2022, as varied or replaced from time to time, the 10%
loading shall only apply to hours worked in that assignment. While ever this
loading is paid, the provisions of subclauses (p), (q) and (s) of this
subclause shall not apply to the temporary assignment.
Employees Engaged as Part Time as at 1
November 2001
(k) Where an employee:
1. has elected to receive the benefits set
out in Part 2 of Clause 8, Permanent Part-Time and Part-Time Employees, in
relation to an assignment, and
2. after the date this clause was
operative in this Award the employee commences in a second or further permanent
part time assignment (as set out in Part 1 of Clause 8, Permanent Part-Time and
Part-Time Employees) and their combined total number of ordinary hours worked
in all assignments is less than those set out in subclause (c) of this subclause;
Part 2 of
Clause 8, Permanent Part-Time and Part-Time Employees, shall cease to apply and
the employee will be a Permanent Part-Time Employee for the purposes of the
Award.
(l) Where an employee:
1. has elected to receive the benefits set
out in Part 2 of Clause 8 Permanent Part-Time and Part-Time Employees, in
relation to an assignment, and
2. his/her combined total number of
ordinary hours worked in all assignments is equal to or more than those set out
in subclause (c) of this subclause,
Part 2 of
Clause 8, Permanent Part-Time and Part-Time Employees shall not apply to any of
their assignments.
Incremental
Progression
(m) Where an employee has multiple assignments
in the same classification and pay rate, the employee will progress from one
increment (year step) to the next increment after the employee has completed
the full time equivalent of one year in the increment having regard to the work
performed in all assignments. Further,
an employee must complete a minimum of one calendar year in an increment before
progressing to the next increment.
(n) Where an employee has multiple
assignments in the same classification, but different grades and/or pay rates,
the employee’s service in the higher grade will count for the purposes of
incremental progression in the lower grade.
However, service in the lower grade shall not count for the purposes of
incremental progression in the higher grade.
(o) Where an employee has multiple
assignments in different classifications, the employee’s service in each assignment
will not count for the purpose of incremental progression in the other
assignment.
Leave
(p) All ordinary hours worked by an employee
in multiple assignments shall count towards determining the employee’s leave
entitlements.
(q) Employees with multiple assignments shall
be entitled to take all forms of leave in any of their assignments. That is, leave accrued by an employee through
work performed in one assignment, can be taken by that employee in their other
assignment/s.
(r) Where an employee has multiple
assignments with different ordinary rates of pay, the employee shall be paid
for leave taken at the rate of pay relevant to the assignment in which the
leave was taken or rostered.
(s) An employee’s combined total number of
ordinary hours worked in their multiple assignments will be used to calculate
additional annual leave in accordance with subclause (iii)(b) of Clause 13
Annual Leave.
(t) Service in all assignments will be
recognised for the purposes of entitlements under Clause 32, Maternity,
Adoption and Parental Leave.
(u) Where an employee’s assignment is
terminated but the employee remains employed under another full time or part
time assignment, all leave credits will be transferred to the remaining
assignments. The employee shall not be paid out the monetary value of the
annual leave or long service leave accrued in the terminated assignment.
Disclosures,
Notifications and Approvals
(v) Employees must, at the time they apply
for any second or further assignment, disclose in writing that they are already
employed by NSW Health and provide details of that assignment including:
1. the position/s currently held
2. the facility in which the existing
position/s are worked
3. the classification/s under which they
are engaged in each position
4. the number of ordinary hours worked in
each position
5. any regular additional hours or
overtime that is worked in each position
6. whether the position/s is worked
according to a set roster and if so, the details of that roster arrangement;
and
(w) Prior to accepting an offer for a second
or further assignment, employees must provide to their current manager details
of that proposed assignment including:
1. the position they have applied for
2. the facility in which the proposed new
assignment is to be worked
3. the classification under which they
would be engaged in the new assignment
4. the number of ordinary hours to be
worked in the proposed assignment
5. whether the position is to be worked
according to a set roster and if so, the details of that roster arrangement.
(x) A Public Health Organisation may elect on
reasonable grounds to withhold the approval of a second or further assignment
to employees who are already employed in another assignment.
(y) Before accepting any change in roster or
undertaking additional hours or overtime that will impact on another
assignment, employees who hold multiple assignments must notify their current
manager of the details of their next shift in either assignment. Managers must not change rosters or require
employees to work additional hours or overtime where these will impact on the
employee’s roster in the other assignment (for example by generating overtime)
without first consulting the manager of the other assignment/s. (By way of example, if an employee is
requested by Manager 1 in Assignment 1 to undertake additional hours in
Assignment 1 that may impact on the roster in Assignment 2, the employee must
notify Manager 1 of the impact. Manager
1 must not change rosters/hours that impact on Assignment 2 without first
consulting Manager 2.)
Multiple Assignments Across Different Organisations in
the Public Health System
(v) Multiple Assignments, that meet the
criteria in paragraph (i) of this clause and they are
worked in different Organisations in the Public Health System, will be regarded
as entirely separate for all purposes under the Award, including the accrual
and taking of leave. The only exceptions are:
(a) At the time an employee commences an
assignment in another Organisation in the Public Health System the employee’s
accrued leave will be apportioned across their assignments (for example, a 0.6
full time equivalent employee who commences another 0.4 full time equivalent
assignment in another Organisation in the Public Health System will have 60% of
their leave accruals allocated to the former assignment and 40% to the latter
assignment) unless prior to commencing the new assignment the employee elects
that this apportioning does not occur.
After this apportioning, leave accrues separately in each assignment,
based on the hours worked in each assignment.
The employer will notify the employee of their right to make this
election prior to the apportioning taking place.
(b) Employees who have multiple assignments
across different Organisations in the Public Health System at the time this
clause became operative in this award may elect to apportion their accrued
leave across their assignments.
(c) Service in all assignments will be
aggregated for the purposes of calculating entitlements under Clause 14, Long
Service Leave.
(d) Service in all assignments will be
recognised for the purposes of entitlements under Clause 32, Maternity,
Adoption and Parental Leave.
(e) Service in all assignments will be
recognised for the purposes of entitlements of Family and Community Services
Leave and Personal/Carer’s Leave as provided in Clause 33.
(f) Service in all assignments will be
recognised for the purposes of entitlements of Family Violence Leave as
provided in Clause 33A.
(g) Where an employee terminates an
assignment, any leave credits that are held against that assignment will be
transferred to the remaining assignment/s.
(h) If prior to the introduction of this clause
and/or the StaffLink payroll system an employee
received additional days off and/or overtime in accordance with subclause (ii)
of Clause 9, Overtime, that employee shall continue to receive those benefits
until one of the assignments is terminated.
(i) Where an
employee has three or more assignments, one or more of which are in different
Organisation in the Public Health System, subclause (iv) of this clause shall
apply to those assignments which are within a single Organisation in the Public
Health System.
Changes to the composition of Organisation in the Public
Health System
(vi) The employer and the Association agree to
review this clause in the event that the boundaries of
any Organisation in the Public Health System change.
(vii) Where any change to the boundaries of any
Organisation in the Public Health System causes an employee’s multiple
assignments to which subclause (iv) of this clause previously applied to then
be subject to subclause (v) of this clause, subclause (iv) of this clause shall
continue to apply (to the exclusion of subclause (v) of this clause) to those
assignments until one of them is terminated.
5. Shift Work and Weekend Work
(i) Subject to the provisions of this clause,
employees may be employed on shift work.
(ii) The ordinary hours of shift workers shall
be worked on not more than five days per week and shall not exceed 152 hours
per 28 calendar days.
(iii) As far as practicable, no employee shall be
obliged to work shift work against his/her wishes.
(iv) Senior Hospital Scientists and Principal
Hospital Scientists shall not be required to work shift work against their
wishes.
(v) Before shift work is introduced into any
section or department of a Health Service, the proposals relating thereto shall
be conveyed to the Union and an opportunity given to discuss such proposals
with representatives of the Health Service concerned and the employer.
(vi) Any disputes arising out of the
introduction of new shift systems shall be referred to a committee consisting
of not more than six members with equal representatives of the employer and the
Union.
In the event of
no unanimous decision being arrived at, the matter in dispute may be notified
to the Industrial Registrar for the consideration of the Public Health
Employees (State) Industrial Committee or the Industrial Relations Commission
of New South Wales.
(vii) Work performed by shift workers working
during ordinary hours shall be paid at the following rates:
(a) On Mondays to Fridays between 8:30 a.m.
and 9:00 p.m. at ordinary time rate of pay.
(b) On Mondays to Fridays before 8:30 a.m.
and after 9:00 p.m. at the rate of time and a half.
(c) On Saturdays at the rate of time and a
half.
(d) On Sundays at the rate of time and three
quarters.
Provided that a
part-time employee shall not be entitled to be paid in addition the loading
prescribed in subclause (ii) of Part 2 of clause 8, Permanent Part-Time
Employees and Part-Time Employees, of this Award.
Provided further
that, positions which prior to 31 August 1988 were covered under the terms of
the Hospital Employees Conditions of
Employment (State) Award, shall continue to be paid in accordance with
provisions of Penalty Rates for Shift Work, Weekend Work and Special Working
Conditions, of that Award. Further provided that the provisions of subclauses
(iii) and (iv) shall not apply to these positions.
6. Roster of Hours
(i) The ordinary hours of work for each
employee shall be displayed on a roster in a place conveniently accessible to
employees. Where reasonably practicable such roster shall be displayed two
weeks but, in any case at least one week, prior to the commencing date of the
first working period in any roster.
Provided that
this provision shall not make it obligatory for the employer to display any
roster of ordinary hours of work of members of the relieving staff.
Provided
further that a roster may be altered at any time to enable the services of the
Health Service to be carried on where another employee is absent from duty on
account of illness or in emergency but where any such alteration involves an
employee working on a day which would have been his/her day off such time
worked shall, subject to subclause (vi) of clause 4, Hours, be paid for at
overtime rates. Furthermore, where a change in roster hours occurs with less
than 24 hours’ notice to the employee affected, all time worked outside that
shown on the employee's roster (prior to the alteration) shall be paid for at
overtime rates.
(ii) Where an employee is entitled to an
allocated day off duty in accordance with clause 4, Hours of this Award, that
allocated day off duty is to be shown on the roster of hours for that employee.
7. On-Call
An employee required by the employer to be on-call in any
one 24 hour period shall be paid an allowance as set
out in Item 1 of table 1, Allowances, for that period or any part thereof,
provided that only one allowance shall be paid in any period of 24 hours.
Provided that an on-call roster shall not be introduced by a
Health Service without the approval of the employer. Principal Hospital
Scientists are excluded from the provisions of this clause.
Provided that this clause shall not apply to positions
covered by the Public Hospital Medical
Technologists (State) Award, prior to 31 August 1988.
8. Permanent Part-Time and Part-Time Employees
Part 1 Permanent Part-Time Employees
(i) A permanent part-time employee is one
who is appointed by the employer to work a specified number of hours each
roster cycle which are less than those prescribed for a full-time employee.
(ii) A permanent part-time employee shall be
paid an hourly rate calculated on the basis of one
thirty eighth of the normal weekly rate available for full-time employees of
the same classification.
(iii) Persons employed on a permanent part-time
basis may be employed for not less than two (2) or more than thirty
two (32) hours in any full week of seven days, such week to be
coincidental with the pay period. Permanent part-time employees are not
entitled to an allocated day off. The specified number of hours may be balanced
over a roster cycle, provided that the average weekly hours worked shall be
deemed to be the specified number of hours for the purposes of accrual of leave
provided for by this Award. Provided further that there shall be no
interruption to the continuity of employment merely by reason of an employee
working on a "week-on", "week-off" basis in accordance with
this subclause.
(iv) Employees engaged under this clause shall
be entitled to all other benefits of the Award not otherwise expressly provided
for herein in the same proportion as their ordinary hours of work bear to
full-time hours.
(v) All time worked by permanent part-time
employees in excess of the total rostered daily ordinary hours of work
prescribed for the majority of full-time employees
employed on that shift in the ward or section concerned shall be paid for at
the rate of time and one half for the first two hours and double time
thereafter except that on Sundays such overtime shall be paid for at the rate
of double time.
(vi) Time worked up to the total rostered daily
ordinary hours of work prescribed for a majority of
the full-time employees employed on that shift in the ward or section concerned
shall not be regarded as overtime but an extension of the contract hours for
that day and shall be paid at the ordinary rate of pay.
Part 2 Part-Time Employees
(i) Employees engaged as part-time employees
on or before 1 November 2001 are entitled to exercise the option of receiving
the benefits of employment specified in Part 1 of this clause.
(ii) Persons employed on a part-time basis,
other than on a permanent part-time basis as outlined in Part 1 of this clause,
may be employed for not less than eight or more than thirty hours in any full
week of seven days, such week to be coincidental with the pay period of each
hospital respectively, and shall be paid for the actual number of hours worked
each week an hourly rate calculated on the basis of one thirty-eighth of the
appropriate rate prescribed plus 15 per cent thereof.
(iii) In an emergency, part-time employees may be
allowed to work more than thirty hours in one week and in such case will be
paid for the hours actually worked at a rate
calculated in accordance with subclause (ii) of Part 2 of this clause.
(iv) With respect to employees employed as
part-time workers the provisions of clause 4, Hours, subclauses (iv) to (xi) of
this Award shall not apply.
(v) All time worked by part-time employees in
excess of the total rostered daily ordinary hours of work prescribed for the majority of full-time employees employed on that shift
in the ward or section concerned shall be paid for at the rate of time and one
half for the first two hours and double time thereafter except that on Sundays
such overtime shall be paid for at the rate of double time.
(vi) Time worked up to the total rostered daily
ordinary hours of work prescribed for a majority of
the full-time employees employed on that shift in the ward or section concerned
shall not be regarded as overtime but an extension of the contract hours for
that day and shall be paid at the ordinary rate of pay.
(vii) With respect to employees
employed as part-time workers the provisions of clause 9, Overtime, of this
Award, except where provided in subclauses (v) and
(vi) of Part 2 of this clause, shall not apply.
9. Overtime
(i) All time worked by day workers and shift
workers in excess of or outside the ordinary hours prescribed by clause 4,
Hours, and clause 5, Shift Work and Weekend Work of this Award, respectively,
shall be paid for at the rate of time and one half for the first two hours and
double time thereafter, provided that all time worked on Sundays shall be paid
for at double time; provided further that all overtime worked on public
holidays shall be paid for at the rate of double time and one half.
(ii) Subject to subclauses (iii) - (vii) below,
employees who are recalled for duty, whether notified before or after leaving
the employer’s premises, shall be paid for all time worked at the appropriate
overtime rate, with a minimum of four hours at such rates.
(iii) Employees may be required to perform other
work that arises during the recall period. Employees shall not be required to
work the full four hour minimum payment period if they
complete the work they were recalled to perform and any additional work they
are required to undertake, within a shorter period.
(iv) The employer must have processes in place
for the formal release of employees from recall duty.
(v) Employees who are not formally released
and who are recalled again during the four hour
minimum payment period are not entitled to any additional payment until the
expiration of the four hour period.
(vi) Employees who are advised they will not be
required to perform any additional work and are formally released and who are
subsequently recalled again during the four hour
minimum payment period, shall be entitled to another four hour minimum payment.
(vii) Employees required to work overtime after
leaving the employer’s premises to provide a technology support resolution or
clinical appraisal remotely without onsite presence, shall be paid for such
work at the appropriate overtime rate, with a minimum payment of one hour at
such rates.
(viii) An employee recalled to
work overtime as prescribed by this subclause shall be paid all fares
and expenses reasonably incurred in travelling to and from his/her place or
work.
Provided
further that where an employee elects to use their own mode of transport they
shall be paid an allowance equivalent to the "Transport Allowance" as
provided by determination made under the Health
Services Act 1997, as varied from time to time.
(ix) When overtime is necessary it shall
wherever reasonably practical, be so arranged that employees have at least
eight consecutive hours off duty between the work on successive days or shifts.
For the
purposes of assessing overtime each day shall stand alone, provided however,
that where any one period of overtime is continuous and extends beyond
midnight, all overtime hours in this period shall be regarded as if they had
occurred within the one day.
(x) An employee who works such overtime:
(a) between the termination of his/her
ordinary work on any day or shift and the commencement of his/her ordinary work
on the next day or shift that they have not had at least eight consecutive
hours off duty between these times; or
(b) on a Saturday, a Sunday and a holiday,
not being ordinary working day, or on a rostered day off without having had
eight consecutive hours off duty in the twenty-four hours preceding his/her
ordinary commencing time on his/her next day or shift;
shall, subject
to this subclause, be released after completion of such overtime until they
have had eight consecutive hours off duty without loss of pay for ordinary
working time occurring during such absence. If on the instruction of his/her
employer such an employee resumes or continues to work without having had such
eight consecutive hours off duty, they shall be paid at double rates until they
are released from duty for such period and they then shall be entitled to be
absent until he/she has had eight consecutive hours off duty without loss of
pay for ordinary working time occurring during such absence.
(xi) When an employee works overtime as an extension
of shift and ceases work at a time when reasonable means of transport are not
available, they shall be paid at ordinary rates for the time reasonably spent
travelling from the employer’s premises to the employee's home with a maximum
payment of one (1) hour.
This subclause
shall not apply in the case of call-back nor where the employee has their own
vehicle available for conveyance home.
(xii) The provisions of this clause shall not apply
to Principal Hospital Scientists.
10. Meals
(i) An employee who works authorised
overtime shall be paid in addition for such overtime -
(a) as set out in Item 2 of Table 1,
Allowances, for breakfast when commencing such overtime work at or before 6:00 a.m.;
(b) as set out in Item 2 of Table 1, for
luncheons when such overtime extends beyond 2:00 p.m. on Saturdays, Sundays or holidays;
(c) as set out in Item 2 of the said Table 1,
for an evening meal when such overtime is worked for at least one hour
immediately following his/her normal ceasing time, exclusive of any meal break,
and extends beyond or is worked wholly or after 7:00 p.m;
or shall be provided with adequate
meals in lieu of payment.
(ii) The value of payments for meals shall be
varied as the equivalent rates in the Crown
Employees (Public Service Condition of Employment) Award 2009, as varied
or replaced from time to time.
(iii) Time not exceeding one hour and not less
than thirty minutes shall be allowed for each meal, provided that where an
employee is called upon to work for any portion of the meal break, such time
shall count as ordinary working time.
(iv) An employee required to work overtime
following on the completion of their normal shift for more than two hours shall
be allowed twenty minutes for the partaking of a meal and a further twenty
minutes after each subsequent four hours' overtime; all such time shall be
counted as time worked.
(v) An employee recalled to
work overtime after leaving the employer's premises and who is required
to work for more than four hours shall be allowed twenty minutes for partaking
of a meal and a further twenty minutes after each subsequent four hours
overtime; all such time shall be counted as time worked.
(vi) Where practicable, employees shall not be
required to work more than four (4) hours without a meal break.
11. Higher Duties
An employee who is called upon to relieve an employee in a
higher classification continuously for five working days or more, and who
satisfactorily performs the whole of the duties and assumes the whole of the
responsibilities of the higher classification, shall be entitled to receive,
for the period of relief, the minimum pay of such
higher classification
12. Public Holidays
(i) Public Holidays shall be allowed to
employees on full pay.
(ii) Where an employee is required to and does
work on any of the holidays set out in subclause (iii) of this clause, whether
for a full shift or not, the employee shall be paid one and one half day's pay
in addition to the weekly rate prescribed by Clause 2, Salaries, of this Award,
such payment in the case of shift workers to be in lieu of any additional rate
for shift work or weekend work which would otherwise be payable had the day not
been a public holiday:
Provided that
if the employer and the employee so agree, an employee may be paid one half
day's pay in addition to the weekly rate and have one day added to his/her
period of annual leave for each public holiday worked in lieu of the provisions
of the preceding paragraph.
(iii) For the purpose of this clause, the
following shall be deemed public holidays, viz: New Year's Day, Australia Day,
Good Friday, Easter Saturday, Easter Monday, Christmas Day, Boxing Day, Anzac
Day, Queen's Birthday, local Labour Day, and other days proclaimed and observed
as a public holiday within the area in which the hospital or health institution
is situated.
(iv) Where a public holiday occurs on a shift
worker's rostered day off, they shall be paid one day's pay in addition to the
weekly rate, or if the employer and the employee so agree, have one day added
to his period of annual leave.
(v) An employee who has accrued additional
annual leave under subclause (ii) or (iv) of this clause can elect at any time
to be paid an amount equivalent to the value of the accrued additional annual
leave in lieu of taking additional leave, provided that the amount is a minimum
of one weeks’ accrued additional leave and that the salary for the period of
additional leave paid out will be calculated as if the period of leave was
actually taken.
(vi) Subclauses (i)
and (ii) of this clause shall not apply to part-time employee of this Award but
each such employee who is required to work on a public holiday as defined in
subclause (iii) of this clause shall be paid at the rate of double time and
one-half but such employee shall not be entitled to be paid in addition the
loading of 15 per cent prescribed in subclause (i) of
clause 8, Part-Time Employees, of this Award.
(vii) Provided that this clause
shall not apply to positions covered by the Hospital Employees Conditions of
Employment (State) Award, prior to 31 August 1988, the provisions of
"Public Holidays" of that Award shall apply.
(viii) In addition to those public
holidays specified in subclause (iii), employees are entitled to an extra
public holiday each year. Such public holiday will occur on a day in the
Christmas-New Year period as determined by the employer following consultation
with the Union, or other suitable day as agreed between the employer and the
Union. Such public holiday shall be regarded for all purposes of this clause as
any other public holiday.
The foregoing will not apply in
areas where in each year a day in addition to the ten named public holidays
specified in subclause (iii) is proclaimed and observed as a public holiday and
will not apply in areas where, in each year, at least two half days in addition
to the ten named public holidays specified in the said subclause are proclaimed
and observed as half public holidays.
Provided further that in areas
where in each year only one half day in addition to
the ten named public holidays specified in subclause (iii) is proclaimed and
observed as a half public holiday for the purposes of this Award, the whole day
will be regarded as a public holiday and no additional public holiday, which
otherwise would, as a result of this subclause apply, will be observed.
13. Annual Leave
(i) All employees: See Annual Holidays Act 1944.
(ii) Annual leave on full pay shall be granted
on completion of each twelve months service as follows:
(a) Principal Hospital Scientists - 5 weeks.
(b) All other employees - 4 weeks.
(iii)
(a) This subclause does not apply to
part-time employees.
(b) Employees who are rostered to work their
ordinary hours on Sundays and/or public holidays during the qualifying period
of employment for annual leave purposes shall be entitled to receive additional
annual leave as follows:
(1) If 35 ordinary shifts on such days have
been worked - one week.
(2) If less than 35 ordinary shifts on such
days have been worked and the employees work 38 hours per week -
proportionately calculated on the basis of 38 hours
leave for 35 such shifts worked.
(3) If less than 35 ordinary shifts on such
days have been worked and the employees work less than 38 hours per week -
proportionately calculated on the basis of leave
equivalent to the number of hours ordinarily worked per week for 35 such shifts
worked.
The
calculations referred to above shall be made to the nearest one fifth of the
ordinary hours worked, half or more than half of one fifth being regarded as
one fifth and less than half being disregarded.
Provided that
an employee, entitled to additional annual leave by virtue of this subclause,
may elect to be paid an amount equivalent to the value of their additional
leave entitlement, in lieu of taking the additional leave. Such election is to
be made in writing by the employee at the commencement of each year of
employment.
An employee
with accrued annual leave pursuant to this subclause can elect at any time to
be paid an amount equivalent to the value of the accrued additional leave in
lieu of taking additional leave, provided that the amount is a minimum of one weeks’ accrued additional leave and that the salary for the
period of additional leave paid out will be calculated as if the period of
leave was actually taken.
(c) Provided further that on termination of
employment, employees shall be entitled to payment for any untaken leave due under
this subclause together with payment for any untaken leave in respect of an
uncompleted year of employment, calculated in accordance with this subclause.
(iv) The annual leave shall be given by the
employer and shall be taken by the employee before the expiration of a period
of six months after the date upon which the right to such holidays accrues;
provided that the giving and taking of the whole or any separate period of such
annual holiday may, with the consent of the employee, be postponed for a period
not exceeding 18 months.
(v) The employer shall give to each employee
three months’ notice where practicable and not less than one months’ notice of
the date upon which the employee shall enter upon annual leave.
(vi) An employee who is normally employed to
work shifts shall be paid whilst on annual leave his/her ordinary pay plus
shift allowances and weekend penalties relating to ordinary time the employee
would have worked if they had not been on annual leave, provided that shift
allowances and weekend penalties shall not be payable for public holidays which
occur during a period of annual leave or for days which have been added to
annual leave in accordance with the provisions of Clause 12, Public Holidays,
of this Award.
(vii) Credit of time towards an allocated day off
duty shall not accrue when an employee is absent on ordinary annual leave in
accordance with subclause (i) of this clause.
Employees entitled to allocated days off duty in accordance with clause 4,
Hours, of this Award shall accrue credit towards an allocated day off duty in
respect of each day those employees are absent on additional annual leave in
accordance with subclause (ii) of clause 12, Public Holidays, of this Award.
(viii) Employees shall be entitled to an annual
leave loading of 17.5 per centum, or shift penalties as set out in subclause
(vi) of this clause, whichever is the greater.
NOTATION: The conditions under
when the annual leave loading shall be paid to employees are the same as
generally applied through circulars issued by the Ministry of Health, as varied
or replaced from time to time.
14. Long Service Leave
(i)
(a) Each employee shall be entitled to two
months long service leave on full pay after ten years of service; thereafter
additional long service shall accrue on the basis of
five months long service leave on full pay for each ten years’ service.
Employees with at least seven
years’ service and less than 10 years’ service are entitled, proportionate to
their length of service, to proceed on a proportionate period of long service
leave on the basis of two months' long service leave
for ten years' service on full pay.
(b) Where the services of an employee with at
least five years’ service and less than seven years’ service are terminated by
the employer for any reason other than the employee's serious and wilful
misconduct, or by the employee, on account of illness, incapacity or domestic
or other pressing necessity, they shall be entitled to be paid a proportionate
amount for long service leave on the basis of two
months' long service leave for ten years' service.
Where the
services of an employee with at least seven years are terminated by the
employer or by the employee, they shall be entitled to be paid a proportionate
amount for long service leave on the basis of two
months' long service leave for ten years' service. Where the services of an
employee with at least 10 years’ service are terminated by the employer or by
the employee, they shall be entitled to be paid on the basis
of two months' long service leave for ten years' service and thereafter
on the basis of five months long service leave for each ten years’ service.
(ii) For the purposes of subclause (i) of this clause:
(a) Service shall mean continuous service
with the employer. For the purpose of this paragraph, continuous service will
be determined in accordance with Section 7 of the NSW Health Policy Directive
PD2023_006 Leave Matters for the NSW Health Service, as amended or
replaced from time to time.
(b) Broken periods of service with the
employer in one or more hospitals shall count as service.
(c) Service shall not include -
(1) any period of leave without pay except in the case of employees who have completed at
least ten years’ service (any period of absence without pay being excluded
there from) in which case service shall include any period of leave without pay
not exceeding six months taken after 1 January, 1973;
(2) any period of part-time service, except
permanent part-time service, as provided for in subclause (ix).
(iii) An employee with an entitlement to long
service leave may elect to access such entitlement:
(a)
on full pay;
(b) on half pay; or
(c) on double pay.
(iv) When an employee takes long service leave,
the leave entitlement will be deducted on the following basis:
(a) a period of leave on full pay - the
number of days so taken;
(b) a period of leave on half pay - half the
number of days so taken; or
(c) a period of leave on double pay - twice
the number of days so taken.
(v) When taking long service leave and an
employee would otherwise have had a rostered shift fall on a public holiday
during that period, the amount of long service leave to be deducted is to be
reduced by one day for the public holiday.
(vi) Long Service Leave shall be taken at a time
mutually arranged between the employer and the employee.
(vii)
(a) On the termination of employment of an
employee, otherwise than by his/her death, an employer shall pay to the
employee the monetary value of all long service leave accrued and not taken at
the date of such termination and such monetary value shall be determined
according to the salary payable to the employee at the date of such
termination, unless the employee elects to transfer their leave entitlement in
accordance with Section 158 of the NSW Health Policy Directive
PD2023_0062019_010 Leave Matters for the NSW Health Service, as amended
or replaced from time to time.
(b) Where an employee who has acquired a
right to long service leave, or after having had five years’ service and less
than ten years’ service dies, the widow or the widower of such employee, or if
there is no such widow or widower, the children of such employee, or if there
is no such widow, widower, or children, such person who, in the opinion of the
employer, was at the time of the death of such employee, a dependent relative
of such employee, shall be entitled to receive the monetary value of the leave
not taken or which would have accrued to such employee, had his/her services
terminated as referred to in paragraph (b) of subclause (i)
of this clause and such monetary value shall be determined according to the
salary payable to the employee at the time of his/her death.
Where there is
a guardian of any children entitled under this paragraph the payment, to which
such children are entitled, may be made to such guardian for their maintenance,
education and advancement.
Where there is
no person entitled under this paragraph to receive the monetary value of any
leave payable under the foregoing provisions payment in respect thereof shall
be made to the legal personal representative of such employee.
(viii) The provisions of subclauses (i) to (v) of this clause shall not apply to part-time
employees who receive an adjusted hourly rate (as defined in Part II, of clause
8, of this Award). Such employees shall be entitled to long service leave in
accordance with the provisions of the Long Service Leave Act 1955,
and/or Determination under the Health Services Act 1997.
(ix) A full-time employee shall be entitled to
have previous part-time service which is the equivalent of at least two full
days' duty per week taken into account for long service purposes in conjunction
with full-time service on the basis of the proportion that the actual number of
hours worked each week bears to forty hours up until 30 June 1984 and bears to
38 on and from 1 July 1984, provided the part-time service merges without break
with the subsequent full-time service.
(x) Except as provided for in subclause (xi)
of this clause, rights to long service leave under this clause shall be in
replacement of rights to long service leave, if any, which at the date of
commencement of this Award may have accrued or may be accruing to an employee
and shall apply only to persons in the employ of the employer on or after the
date of commencement of this Award. Where an employee has been granted long
service leave or has been paid its monetary value prior to the date of
commencement of this Award, the employer shall be entitled to debit such leave
against any leave to which the employee may be entitled pursuant to this
clause.
(xi) The following provisions shall apply only
to employees employed in a hospital at 1 January 1973:
(a) An employee who -
(1) has had service in a hospital, to which
Clause 21, Climatic and Isolation Allowance, applies, prior to 1 January 1973;
(2) Is employed in a hospital, to which
Clause 21, Climatic and Isolation Allowance, applies, at
1 January 1973 shall be granted long service leave in accordance with the long
service leave provisions in force prior to 1st January 1973, in lieu of the
provisions provided by this Award where such benefits are more favourable to
the employee.
(b) An employee employed -
(1) as a part-time employee at 1st January 1973 may be allowed to continue to be granted
long service leave in accordance with the long service provisions in force
prior to 1st January 1973 in lieu of the provisions of the Long Service Leave
Act 1955, as provided for in sub-clause (viii) of this clause;
(2) on a full-time basis at 1 January 1973, but who had prior part-time service may
be allowed to continue to be granted long service leave in accordance with the
long service leave provisions in force prior to 1 January 1973, in lieu of the
provisions provided by this Award where such benefits are more favourable to
the employee.
(xii) Where an employee has accrued a right to an
allocated day off duty on pay prior to entering a period of long service leave
such day shall be taken on the next working day immediately following the
period of long service leave.
An employee returning to duty from
long service leave shall be given the next allocated day off duty in sequence
irrespective of whether sufficient credits have been accumulated or not.
15. Sick Leave
(i) Full-time employees - a full-time
employee shall be entitled to sick leave on full pay by allowing 76 rostered
ordinary hours of work for each year of continuous service, less any sick leave
on full pay already taken subject to the following conditions.
(a) All periods of sickness shall be
certified to by the Medical Superintendent of the hospital or by a legally
qualified Medical Practitioner approved by the employer, provided such approval
shall not be unreasonably withheld; provided however, that the employer may
dispense with the requirement of the medical certificate where the absence does
not exceed two (2) consecutive days or where in the employer's opinion the
circumstances are such as to not warrant such requirements.
(b) The employer shall not change the
rostered hours of work of an employee fixed by the roster or rosters applicable
to the seven days immediately following the commencement of sick leave merely
by reason of the fact that the employee is on sick leave.
(c) An employee shall not be entitled to sick
leave until after three months continuous service.
(d) Service for the purpose of this clause,
shall mean service with the employer and shall be deemed to have commenced on
the date of engagement by the employer in respect of any period of employment
with the employer current at the date of the commencement of this Award in
respect of employees then so employed and in respect of others it shall be
deemed to commence on the first day of engagement by the employer after the
commencement of this Award.
(e) Employees who are employed at the date of
the commencement of this Award shall retain to their credit, until exhausted,
any accumulation of sick leave to their credit immediately prior to such a
date; provided that such credit is not less than the entitlement otherwise
prescribed by this clause.
(f) "Continuous
Service" for the purpose of this clause, shall be calculated in the same
manner as provided under subclause (ii) (a) of Clause 14, Long Service Leave,
of this Award, excepting that all periods of service with the employer in any
hospital (providing such service is not less than three months actual service)
shall be counted.
(g) Each employee shall take all
reasonably practicable steps to inform the employer of their inability to
attend for duty and as far as possible state the estimated duration for the
absence.
Where practicable such notice
shall be given within twenty-four hours of the commencement of such absence.
(ii) Part-time employees - A part-time employee
shall be entitled to sick leave in the same proportion of 76 hours as the
average weekly hours worked over the preceding twelve months or from the time
of the commencement of the employment, whichever is the lesser, bears to 38
ordinary hours of one week. Such entitlements shall be subject to all the above
conditions applying to full-time employees.
(iii) An employee shall not be entitled to sick
leave on full pay for any period in respect of which such employee is entitled
to accident pay, or workers compensation; provided, however, that where an
employee is not in receipt of accident pay, an employer shall pay to an
employee, who has sick leave entitlements under this clause, the difference
between the amount received, as workers compensation and full pay. The
employee's sick leave entitlement under this clause shall for each week during
which such difference is paid, be reduced by the proportion of hours which the
difference bears to full pay. On the expiration of available sick leave, weekly
compensation payments only shall be payable.
(iv) For the purpose of determining a full-time
employee's sick leave credit as at the 1st July 1984,
sick leave entitlement shall be proportioned on the basis of 76/80.
16. Payment and Particulars of Salary
(i) Salaries shall be paid weekly or
fortnightly.
(ii) Employees shall have their salary paid
into one account with a bank or other financial institution in New South Wales
as nominated by the employee except where agreement as to another method of
payment has been reached between the Union and the employer due to the
isolation of the work location. Salaries shall be deposited by the employer in
sufficient time to ensure that salaries are available for withdrawal by
employees no later than pay day provided that this requirement shall not apply
where employees nominate accounts with non-bank financial institutions which
lack the technological or other facilities to process salary deposits within 24
hours of the employer making deposits with such financial institutions but in
such cases the employer shall take all reasonable steps to ensure that the
salaries of such employees are available for withdrawal by no later than pay
day.
Subject to adequate notice in
writing on each occasion, employees who are rostered off on pay day shall be
entitled to have their salary deposited before proceeding on their days off.
(iii) Notwithstanding the provisions of
subclauses (i) and (ii) of this clause, any employee
who was given or who has been given notice of termination of employment in
accordance with Clause 17, Termination of Employment, of this Award, shall be
paid all monies due to him/her prior to ceasing duty on the last day of
employment. Where an employee is dismissed or their services are terminated
without notice in accordance with Clause 17, Termination of Employment, of this
Award, any moneys due to him or her shall be paid as soon as possible after
such dismissal or termination, but in any case, not more than three days
thereafter.
(iv) On each pay day an employee, in respect of
the payment then due, shall be furnished with a statement in writing containing
the following particulars, namely: name, the amount of ordinary salary, the
total hours of overtime worked, if any, other monies paid, and the purpose for
which they are paid and the amount of deductions made
from the total earnings and the nature thereof.
(v) Where the retrospective adjustments of
wages are paid to employees, such payments where practical shall be paid as a
separate payment to ordinary wages. Such payment shall be accompanied by a
statement containing particulars as set out in subclause (iv) of this clause.
(vii) Underpayment and overpayment of salaries -
the following process will apply once the issue of underpayment or overpayment
is substantiated.
(a) Underpayment
(1) If the amount underpaid is equal to or
greater than one day’s gross base pay the underpayment
will be rectified within three working days;
(2) If the amount underpaid is less than one
day’s gross base pay it will be rectified by no later than the next normal pay.
However, if the employee can demonstrate that rectification in this manner
would result in undue hardship, every effort will be made by the employer to
rectify the underpayment within three working days.
(b) Overpayment
(1) In all cases where overpayments have
occurred, the employer shall as soon as possible advise the employee concerned
of both the circumstances surrounding the overpayment and the amount involved.
The employer will also advise the employee of the pay period from which the
recovery of the overpayment is to commence.
(2) One off overpayments
will be recovered in the next normal pay, except that where the employee can
demonstrate that undue hardship would result, the recover
rate shall be at 10% of an employee’s gross fortnightly base pay.
(3) Unless the employee agrees otherwise, the
maximum rate at which cumulative overpayments can be recovered is an amount,
calculated on a per fortnight basis, equivalent to 10% of the employee’s gross
fortnightly base pay.
(4) The recovery rate of 10% of an employee’s
gross fortnightly base pay referred to in subclause (b)(3) above may be reduced
by agreement, where the employee can demonstrate that undue hardship would
result.
(5) Where an employee’s remaining period of
service does not permit the full recovery of any overpayment to be achieved on
the fortnightly basis prescribed in subclause (b)(3) above, the employer shall
have the right to deduct any balance of such overpayment from monies owing to
the employee on the employee’s date of termination, resignation or retirement, as the case may be.
17. Termination of Employment
(i) During the first three months of
employment, employment shall be from week to week. After three months
continuous service, employment may be terminated only by twenty
eight days’ notice given either by the employer or the employee at any
time during the week or by payment or forfeiture of twenty eight days salary,
as the case may be. Nothing in this clause, however, shall prevent the summary
dismissal of an employee for misconduct or neglect of duty.
(ii) Employees with a credit of time accrued
towards an allocated day off duty shall be paid for such accrual upon
termination.
(iii) Provided that this clause shall not apply
to positions covered by the Hospital
Employees Conditions of Employment (State) Award, prior to 31 August
1988, the provisions of "Termination of Employment", subclause (ii),
of that Award, shall apply.
18. Accommodation and Amenities
(i) Suitable dining room accommodation and
lavatory conveniences shall be provided for all resident and non-resident
employees.
(ii) In all hospitals erected after 1st January
1960, dressing room, lockers, hot and cold showers and conveniences also shall
be provided for non-resident employees and where practicable, such facilities
shall be provided in hospitals erected prior to that date.
(iii) The following outlines the minimum
standards which the employer seeks to achieve in all hospitals:
Sanitary
conveniences -
(a) Seats - in the proportion of 1 seat to
every 15 employees or fraction of 15 employees of each sex.
(b) Separate and distinct conveniences for
each sex, together with screened approaches to ensure privacy. These facilities
must be located conveniently to work places, they must
be adequately lighted and ventilated and floors, walls and ceilings finished
with a smooth faced surface resistant to moisture.
Washing and
Bathing Facilities
(a) Washing provision by way of basins of
suitable impervious material with taps set at 600mm centres with hot and cold
water supplied, in proportion of one hot tap and one cold tap for each fifteen
employees or part of 15 employees of each sex. Space in front of the wash
points shall not be less than 900mm.
(b) Showers spaced at not less than 900mm and
with hot and cold water connected for persons ceasing work at any one time in a
minimum ratio of one shower for every twenty persons or part of twenty persons
of each sex ceasing work at any one time.
Washing and bathing
facilities must be adequately lighted and ventilated; floors, walls and
ceilings finished with a smooth-faced surface resistant to moisture.
These
facilities should be incorporated in or communicated direct
with the change room and should not be contained within any closet block.
Change Rooms
and Lockers
(a) Properly constructed and ventilated
change rooms equipped with a vented steel locker, at least 300mm wide by 450mm
deep and 1800mm high for each employee.
(b) Floor area not less than 0.56 sq. m. per
employee to be accommodated.
(c) Space between lockers - set up facing one
another and not less than 1.5 metres. Trafficways not less than one metre wide.
(d) Sufficient seating not less than 260mm
wide by 380mm high should be provided.
(e) Lockers should be set up with at least
150mm clearance between the floor of the locker and the floor of the room.
Lockers shall be of the lock-up type with keys provided.
Dining Room
(a) Well constructed, ventilated and adequately
lighted dining room(s). Generally, floor area should not be less than 1.0 sq.
m. per employee using the meal room at any one time.
(b) Tables not more than 1.8 m. long, spaced
1.2 m. apart, allowing 0.6 m. of table space per person.
(c) Chairs or other seating with back rests.
Sufficient tables and chairs must be provided for all persons who will use the
dining room at any one time.
(d) Facilities for boiling water, warming and
refrigerating food and for washing and storing of dining utensils shall be
provided.
Rest Room
A well constructed and adequately
lighted and ventilated room or screened off portion of the change room for
women. Such rest room or rest area to be equipped with day bed or couch with
mattress, blankets, pillow and hot water bottle.
(iv) The above standards shall be the minimum to
be included in working drawings approved after 1st December 1976, for new
hospitals.
(v) Where major additions to presently
occupied buildings or new buildings are erected within a presently constituted
hospital the amenities to be provided in such additions or new buildings shall
be the subject of negotiations between the parties.
19. Inspection of Lockers of Employees
Lockers may be opened for inspection in the presence of the
employee but in cases where the employee neglects or refuses to be present or
in any circumstances where notice to the employee is impracticable such
inspection may be carried out in the absence of the employee by an employee
appointed by the employer, and if practicable, a Union Branch Employee,
otherwise by any two employees so appointed by the employer.
20. Uniform and Laundry Allowance
(i) Subject
to subclause (iii) of this clause, sufficient suitable and serviceable uniforms
shall be supplied free of cost to each employee required to wear a uniform
provided that an employee to whom a new uniform or part of a uniform has been
supplied by the employer who, without good reason, fails to return the
corresponding article last supplied to him or her, shall not be entitled to
have such article replaced without payment thereof at a reasonable price.
(ii) An employee, on leaving the
service of the employer shall return any uniform or part thereof supplied by
the employer which is still in use immediately prior to leaving.
(iii) In lieu of supplying a
uniform to an employee, the employer shall pay to such employee an amount per
week as set in Item 3 of Table 1, Allowances.
(iv) If at any hospital the uniform
of the employee is not laundered at the expense of the employer, an allowance
per week as set in Item 3 of the said Table 1, shall be paid to such employee.
(v) Each employee whose duties
require him/her to work in a hazardous situation shall be supplied with the
appropriate protective clothing and equipment.
(vi) The allowances referred to in
subclauses (iii) and (iv) are payable to part-time employees on
the basis of one fifth of the full weekly allowance for each shift
worked in the week.
21. Climatic and Isolation Allowance
(i) Employees employed in hospitals in any
place situated upon or to the west of a line drawn as specified in this
subclause but not including places as specified in subclause (ii) of this
clause shall be paid a weekly allowance as set in Item 4 of Table 1,
Allowances, in addition to the salary to which they otherwise are entitled. The
line shall be drawn as follows: commencing Tocumwal and thence to the following
towns in the order stated, namely, Lockhart, Narrandera, Leeton, Peak Hill,
Gilgandra, Dunedoo, Coolah, Boggabri, Inverell, and Bonshaw.
(ii) Employees employed in hospitals in any
place situated upon or to the west of a line drawn as specified in this
subclause shall be paid a weekly allowance as set in Item 4 of Table 1,
Allowances, in addition to the salary to which they otherwise are entitled. The
line shall be drawn as follows: commencing at a point on the right bank of the
Murray River at Swan Hill (Victoria) and thence to the following towns in the
order stated, namely, Hay, Hillston, Nyngan, Walgett, Collarenebri and
Mungindi.
(iii) Except for the computation of overtime, the
allowances prescribed in this clause shall be regarded as part of the salary
for the purpose of this Award.
(iv) The allowances prescribed by this clause
are not cumulative.
(v) A part-time employee shall be entitled to
the allowances prescribed in this clause in the same proportion as average
hours worked each week bears to 38 ordinary hours.
22. Notice Boards
The hospital shall permit notice boards of reasonable
dimensions to be erected in a prominent position upon which the representative
of the Union shall be permitted to post Union Notices.
23. Union Representatives
An employee appointed as Union representative shall upon
notification thereof in writing by the Union to the employer, be recognised as
an accredited representative of the Union and shall be allowed the necessary
time during working hours to interview the employer on matters affecting
employees and shall be allowed suitable facilities to collect the Union’s dues.
24. Exemptions
This Award shall not apply to members, novices or aspirants
of religious orders in public hospitals, the names of whom are included or
hereafter shall be in the third schedule to the Health Services Act 1997.
25. Blood Counts
Every employee who works in close
proximity to diagnostic and/or therapeutic X-Ray equipment or any other
form of radio-active equipment or substance shall have a blood count carried
out free of charge, by the employer at least once in every period of three
months including any such period of work.
26. Settlement of Disputes
(i) Where a dispute arises in a particular
section which cannot be resolved between the employees or their representative
and the supervising staff, it shall be referred to the Chief Executive Officer
of the Health Service or establishment or his/her nominee, who will arrange to
have the matter discussed with the employees concerned and a local
representative or representatives of the Union.
(ii) Failing settlement of the issue at this
level, the matter shall be referred to the Secretary and the Head office of the
Union. The dispute will be dealt with pursuant to subclause (v) of this clause.
(iii) Whilst these procedures are continuing, no
stoppage of work or any form of ban or limitation of work shall be applied.
(iv) The Union reserves the right to vary this
procedure where it is considered a safety factor is involved.
(v) With view to an amicable and speedy
settlement, all disputes that firstly cannot be settled in accordance with
subclauses (i) and (ii) of this clause may be
submitted to the committee consisting of not more than six (6) members, with equal
representatives of the Union and the Secretary. Such committee shall have the
power to investigate all matters in dispute and to report to the Chief
Executive Officer of the Health Service and the Union respectively with such
recommendation as it may think right and, in the event of no mutual decision
being arrived at by such committee, the matter in dispute may be referred to
the Public Health Employees (State) Industrial Committee.
(vi) This clause shall not interfere with the
rights of either to institute proceedings for the determination of any matter
in accordance with the Industrial
Relations Act 1996.
27. Anti-Discrimination
(i) It is intention of the parties bound by
this Award to seek to achieve the object in section 3(f) of the Industrial Relations Act 1996 to prevent
and eliminate discrimination in the workplace. This includes discrimination on
the grounds of race, sex, marital status, disability, homosexuality,
transgender identity, age and responsibilities as a carer.
(ii) It follows that in fulfilling their
obligations under the dispute resolution procedure prescribed by this Award the
parties have obligations to take all reasonable steps to ensure that the
operation of the provisions of this Award are not directly or indirectly
discriminatory in their effects. It will be consistent with the fulfilment of
these obligations for the parties to make application to vary any provision of
the Award which, by its terms or operation, has a direct or indirect
discriminatory effect.
(iii) Under the Anti-Discrimination Act 1977, it is unlawful to victimise an
employee because the employee has made or may make or has been involved in a
complaint of unlawful discrimination or harassment.
(iv) Nothing in this clause is to be taken to
affect:
(a) any conduct or act which is specifically
exempted from anti-discrimination legislation;
(b) offering or providing junior rates of pay
to persons under 21 years of age;
(c) any act or practice of a body established
to propagate religion which is exempted under section 56(d) of the Anti-Discrimination Act 1977;
(d) a party to this Award from pursuing
matters of unlawful discrimination in any State or Federal jurisdiction.
(v) This clause does not create legal rights
or obligations in addition to those imposed upon the parties by the legislation
referred to in this clause.
NOTES -
(a) Employers and employees may also be
subject to Commonwealth anti-discrimination legislation.
(b) Section 56(d) of the Anti-Discrimination Act 1977 provides:
"Nothing in this Act affects
... any other act or practice of a body established to propagate religion that
conforms to the doctrines of that religion or is necessary to avoid injury to
the religious susceptibilities of the adherents of that religion.”
28. Travelling Allowance
(i) An employee seconded to another hospital
may be granted a daily travel allowance at the rate of the difference between
the cost of travel by public transport to his/her normal place of employment
and travel by public transport to the seconding hospital. Provided that where
an employee drives his/her own vehicle, they shall, in lieu, be eligible for an
allowance based on the casual rate prescribed by the Crown Employees (Public Service Conditions of Employment) Award 2009,
as varied or replaced from time to time, for the difference between the
distance to his/her normal place of employment and distance to the seconding
hospital.
(ii) An employee who with the approval of the
employer, uses on official business a motor vehicle primarily for other than
official business, shall be paid the above mentioned
allowance from time to time effective. However, where it is estimated that an
employee will, with the approval of the employer, be required to use his/her
private vehicle on official business on at least fifty days during any period
of twelve months and during that period, aggregate at least 850 kilometres of
official running, he shall be paid the official business rate prescribed by the
Crown Employees (Public Service
Conditions of Employment) Award 2009, as varied or replaced from time to
time, at the rate in force from time to time throughout the year.
(iii) For the purpose of subclause (ii) travel on
official business -
(a) occurs when an employee is required by
the employer as part of his/her duty to use his/her motor vehicle to attend
away from his/her normal place of employment or seconding hospital to another
clinic, annexe or hospital. Where an employee travels on official business
direct from his/her place of residence to a clinic, annexe or hospital, other
than normal place of employment they shall be paid the difference between the
distance to his/her normal place of employment or seconding hospital and that
other clinic, annexe or hospital.
(b) shall include other arrangements as
agreed to between the employer and the Union from time to time.
(c) does not include "call backs".
(iv) Nothing in this clause shall make the
employer liable for the cost of the employee's daily travel to his/her usual
and normal place of employment.
29. General Conditions
An employee required to answer emergency phone calls outside
of ordinary working hours, but not recalled to duty, shall be reimbursed rental
charges on such telephone on production of receipted accounts.
Provided that, where an employee is required to answer out
of hours telephone calls on a relief basis they shall
be paid one-twelfth of his/her yearly telephone rental for each month or part
thereof they are so employed.
30. Promotions and Appointments
(i) Promotion and/or appointment shall be by
merit.
(ii) In the case of an employee or employees
disputing a promotion and/or appointment the Union may apply to the Public
Health Employees (State) Industrial Committee or its chairman or the Industrial
Relations Commission of New South Wales for determination of the dispute.
31. Board and Lodging
(i) Where an employee lives at a hospital,
deductions from his/her salary for accommodation and/or board may be made by
the employer at the rates prescribed from time to time by the Public Health System Nurses’ and Midwives’
(State) Award 2022 as varied or replaced from time to time.
(ii) Where individual meals only are provided,
the employee may be charged the charges applicable under the Public Health System Nurses’ and Midwives’
(State) Award 2022, as varied or replaced from time to time.
(iii) No deductions shall be made from the salary
of an employee for board or lodging when the employee is absent on annual, sick
or long service leave.
32. Maternity, Adoption and Parental Leave
A. Maternity Leave
(i) Eligibility for Paid Maternity Leave
To be eligible
for paid maternity leave a full time or permanent part-time employee must have
completed at least 40 weeks continuous service prior to the expected date of
birth.
An employee who
has once met the conditions for paid maternity leave will not be required to
again work the 40 weeks continuous service in order to qualify for a further
period of paid maternity leave, unless -
(a) there has been a break in service where
the employee has been re-employed or re-appointed after a resignation, medical
retirement, or after her services have been otherwise dispensed with, or
(b) the employee has completed a period of
leave without pay of more than 40 weeks. In this context, leave without pay
does not include sick leave without pay, maternity leave without pay, or leave without pay associated with an illness or
injury compensable under the Workers
Compensation Act (NSW) 1987.
(ii) Portability of Service for Paid Maternity
Leave
Portability of service for paid
maternity leave involves the recognition of service in government sector
agencies for the purpose of determining an employee's eligibility to receive
paid maternity leave. For example, where an employee moves between a public
service department and a public hospital, previous continuous service will be
counted towards the service prerequisite for paid maternity leave.
When determining an employee's
eligibility for paid maternity leave, continuous service with an organisation
that is part of the government sector as defined in the Government Sector Employment Act 2013 will be recognised, provided
that:
(a) service was on a full-time or permanent
part-time basis:
(b) cessation of service with the former
employer was not by reason of dismissal on any ground, except retrenchment or
reduction of work;
(c) the employee immediately commences duty
with the new employer. There may be a break in service of up to two months
before commencing duty with the new employer. However, such a break in service
will not be counted as service for the purpose of calculating any prior service
prerequisite for paid maternity leave.
(iii) Entitlement to Paid Maternity Leave
An eligible employee is entitled
to fourteen weeks at the ordinary rate of pay from the date maternity leave
commences. This leave may commence up to fourteen weeks prior to the expected
date of birth.
It is not compulsory for an
employee to take this period off work. However, if an employee decides to work
during the nine weeks prior to the date of birth it is subject to the employee
being able to satisfactorily perform the full range of normal duties.
Paid maternity leave may be paid:
on a normal fortnightly basis; or
in advance in a lump sum; or
at the rate of half pay over a
period of twenty-eight weeks on a regular fortnightly basis.
Annual and/or long service leave
credits can be combined with periods of maternity leave on half pay to enable
an employee to remain on full pay for that period.
(iv) Unpaid Maternity Leave
(a) Full time and permanent part
time employees who are entitled to paid maternity leave are entitled to a
further period of unpaid maternity leave of not more than 12 months after the
actual date of birth.
(b) Full time and permanent part
time employees who are not eligible for paid maternity leave are entitled to
unpaid maternity leave of not more than 12 months.
(v) Applications
An employee who intends to proceed
on maternity leave should formally notify her employer of such intention as
early as possible, so that arrangements associated with her absence can be
made.
Written notice of not less than
eight weeks prior to the commencement of the leave should accordingly be given.
This notice must include a medical certificate stating the expected date of
birth and should also indicate the period of leave desired.
(vi) Variation after Commencement of Leave
After
commencing maternity leave, an employee may vary the period of her maternity
leave once only without the consent of her employer by giving the employer
notice in writing of the extended period at least fourteen days’
before the start of the extended period. An employer may accept less notice if
convenient.
An employee may
extend the period of maternity leave at any time with the agreement of the
employer.
The conditions
relating to variation of maternity leave are derived from Section 64 of the Industrial Relations Act 1996.
(vii) Staffing Provisions
In accordance
with obligations established by the Industrial
Relations Act 1996 (Section 69) any person who occupies the position of an
employee on maternity leave must be informed that the employee has the right to
return to her former position. Additionally, since an employee has the right to
vary the period of her maternity leave, offers of temporary employment should
be in writing, stating clearly the temporary nature of the contract of
employment. The duration of employment should be also set down clearly; to a
fixed date or until the employee elects to return to duty, whichever occurs
first.
(viii) Effect of Maternity Leave on Accrual of
Leave, Increments etc.
When the employee has resumed
duties, any period of full pay leave is counted in full for the accrual of
annual leave, sick leave and long service leave and any period of maternity
leave on half pay is taken into account to the extent
of one half thereof when determining the accrual of annual leave, sick leave
and long service leave.
Except in the case of employees
who have completed ten years' service, the period of maternity leave without
pay does not count as service for long service leave purposes. Where the
employee has completed ten years' service the period of maternity leave without
pay shall count as service provided such leave does not exceed six months.
Maternity leave without pay does
not count as service for incremental purposes. Periods of maternity leave at
full pay and at half pay are to be regarded as service for incremental
progression on a pro-rata basis.
Where public holidays occur during
the period of paid maternity leave, payment is at the rate of maternity leave
received i.e., public holidays occurring in a period of full pay maternity
leave are paid at full rate and those occurring during a period of half pay
leave are paid at half rate.
(ix) Illness Associated with Pregnancy
If, because of an illness
associated with pregnancy an employee is unable to continue to work then they
can elect to use any available paid leave (sick, annual and/or long service
leave) or to take sick leave without pay.
Where an employee is entitled to
paid maternity leave, but because of illness, is on sick, annual, long service
leave, or sick leave without pay prior to the birth, such leave ceases nine
weeks prior to the expected date of birth. The employee then commences
maternity leave with the normal provisions applying.
(x) Transfer to a More Suitable Position
Where, because of an illness or
risk associated with pregnancy, an employee cannot carry out the duties of
their position, an employer is obliged, as far as practicable, to provide
employment in some other position that they are able to satisfactorily perform.
This obligation arises from Section 70 of the Industrial Relations Act 1996. A position to which an employee is
transferred under these circumstances must be as close as possible in status
and salary to their substantive position.
(xi) Miscarriages
In the event of a miscarriage any
absence from work is to be covered by the current sick leave provisions
(xii) Stillbirth
In the case of a stillbirth, (as
classified by the Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages) an employee may
elect to take sick leave, subject to production of a medical certificate, or
maternity leave. They may resume duty at any time provided they produces a
doctor's certificate as to her fitness.
(xiii) Effect of Premature Birth on
Payment of Maternity Leave
An employee who gives birth
prematurely and prior to proceeding on maternity leave shall be treated as
being on maternity leave from the date leave is commenced to have the child.
Should an employee return to duty during the period of paid maternity leave,
such paid leave ceases from the date duties are resumed.
(xiv) Right to Return to Previous
Position
In accordance with the obligations
set out in Section 66 of the Industrial
Relations Act 1996, an employee returning from maternity leave has the
right to resume her former position.
Where this position no longer
exists, the employee is entitled to be placed in a position nearest in status
and salary to that of her former position and to which the employee is capable
or qualified.
(xv) Further Pregnancy While on
Maternity Leave
Where an employee becomes pregnant
whilst on maternity leave, a further period of maternity leave shall be
granted. If an employee enters on the second period of maternity leave during
the currency of the initial period of maternity leave, then any residual
maternity leave from the initial entitlement ceases.
An employee who commences a
subsequent period of maternity leave while on unpaid maternity leave under
subclause (iv)(a) of Part A of this clause or subclause (i)(b)
of Part D of this clause is entitled to be paid at their normal rate (i.e. the rate at which they were paid before proceeding on
maternity leave).
An employee who commences a
subsequent period of maternity leave during the first 12 months of a return to
duty on a part time basis as provided under subclause (i)(c)
of Part D of this clause is entitled to be paid at their substantive full time rate for the subsequent period of maternity leave.
An employee who commences a
subsequent period of maternity leave more than 12 months after returning to
duty on a part time basis under subclause (i)(c) of
Part D of this clause, will be entitled to paid maternity leave for the
subsequent period of maternity leave at their part time rate.
B. Adoption Leave
(i) Eligibility
All full time and permanent part
time employees who are adopting a child and are to be the primary care giver of
the child are eligible for unpaid adoption leave.
To be eligible for paid adoption
leave a full time or permanent part-time employee must also have completed at
least 40 weeks continuous service prior to the date of taking custody of the
child.
An employee, who has once met the
conditions of paid adoption leave, will not be required to again work the 40
weeks continuous service in order to qualify for further periods of paid
adoption leave, unless:
(a) there has been a break in service where
the employee has been re-employed or re-appointed after a resignation, medical
retirement, or after their services have been otherwise dispensed with; or
(b) the employee has completed a period of
leave without pay of more than 40 weeks. In this context, leave without pay
does not include sick leave without pay, maternity leave without pay, or leave without pay associated with an illness or
injury compensable under the Workers
Compensation Act (NSW) 1987.
(ii) Portability of Service for Paid Adoption
Leave
As per maternity leave conditions.
(iii) Entitlement
(a) Paid Adoption Leave
Eligible employees are entitled to
paid adoption leave of fourteen weeks at the ordinary rate of pay from and
including the date of taking custody of the child.
Paid adoption leave may be paid:
on a normal fortnightly basis; or
in advance in a lump sum; or
at the rate of half pay over a
period of twenty-eight weeks on a regular fortnightly basis.
Annual and/or long service leave
credits can be combined with periods of adoption leave at half pay to enable an
employee to remain on full pay for that period.
(b) Unpaid Adoption Leave
Eligible employees are entitled to
unpaid adoption leave as follows:
where the child is under the age
of 12 months - a period of not more than 12 months from the date of taking custody;
where the child is over the age of
12 months and under 18 years old - a period of up to 12 months, such period to
be agreed upon by both the employee and the employer.
(iv) Applications
Due to the fact
that an employee may be given little notice of the date of taking
custody of a child, employees who believe that, in the reasonably near future,
they will take custody of a child, should formally notify the employer as early
as practicable of the intention to take adoption leave. This will allow
arrangements associated with the adoption leave to be made.
(v) Variation after Commencement of Leave
After commencing adoption leave,
an employee may vary the period of leave, once without the consent of the
employer and otherwise with the consent of the employer. A minimum of fourteen
days’ notice must be given, although an employer may accept less notice if
convenient.
(vi) Staffing Provisions
As per maternity leave conditions.
(vii) Effect of Adoption Leave on Accrual of
Leave, Increments, etc.
As per maternity leave conditions.
(viii) Right to Return to Previous Position
As per maternity leave conditions.
C. Parental Leave
(i) Eligibility
To be eligible for parental leave
a full time or permanent part-time employee must have completed at least 40
weeks continuous service prior to the expected date of birth or to the date of
taking custody of the child.
An employee who has once met the
conditions for paid parental leave will not be required to again work the 40
weeks continuous service in order to qualify for a further period of paid
parental leave, unless-
(a) there has been a break in
service where the employee has been re-employed or re-appointed after a
resignation, medical retirement, or after their services have been otherwise
dispensed with, or
(b) the employee has completed a
period of leave without pay of more than 40 weeks. In this context, leave
without pay does not include sick leave without pay, maternity leave without pay, or leave without pay associated with an illness or
injury compensable under the Workers
Compensation Act (NSW) 1987.
(ii) Portability of Service for
Paid Parental Leave
As per maternity leave conditions.
(iii) Entitlements
Eligible employees whose spouse or
partner (including a same sex partner) is pregnant or is taking custody of a
child, are entitled to a period of leave not exceeding 52 weeks, which includes
one week of paid leave, and may be taken as follows:
(a) an unbroken period of up to
one week at the time of the birth of the child, taking custody of the child or
other termination of the pregnancy (short parental leave), and
(b) a further unbroken period in
order to be the primary caregiver of the child (extended parental leave).
(c) The entitlement of one week’s
paid leave may be taken at any time within the 52 week
period and shall be paid:
at the employees' ordinary rate of
pay for a period not exceeding one week on full pay, or
two weeks at half pay or the
period of parental leave taken, whichever is the lesser period.
(d) Extended parental leave
cannot be taken at the same time as the employee’s spouse or partner is on maternity
or adoption leave except as provided for in subclause (i)(a)
of Part D Right to Request of this clause.
Annual and/or long service leave
credits can be combined with periods of parental leave on half pay to enable an
employee to remain on full pay for that period.
(iv) Applications
An employee who intends to proceed
on parental leave should formally notify their employer of such intention as
early as possible, so that arrangements associated with their absence can be
made.
(a) In the case of extended
parental leave, the employee should give written notice of the intention to
take the leave.
(b) The employee must, at least
four weeks before proceeding on leave, give written notice of the dates on
which they propose to start and end the period of leave, although it is
recognised in situations of taking custody of a child, little or no notice may
be provided to the employee. In such an instance, the employee should notify
the employer as early as practicable.
(c) The employee must, before the
start of leave, provide a certificate from a medical practitioner confirming
that their spouse or partner is pregnant and the expected date of birth, or in
the case of an adoption, an official form or notification on taking custody of
the child.
(d) In the case of extended
parental leave, the employee must, before the start of leave, provide a
statutory declaration by the employee stating:
(1) if applicable, the period of
any maternity leave sought or taken by his spouse, and
(2) that they are seeking the
period of extended parental leave to become the primary care giver of the
child.
(v) Variation after Commencement
of Leave
After commencing parental leave,
an employee may vary the period of her/his parental leave, once without the
consent of the employer and otherwise with the consent of the employer. A
minimum of fourteen days’ notice must be given, although an employer may accept
less notice if convenient.
(vi) Effect of Parental Leave on
Accrual of Leave, Increments etc.
As per maternity leave conditions.
(vii) Right to Return to Previous
Position
As per maternity leave conditions.
D. Right to Request
(i) An employee entitled to maternity,
adoption or parental leave may request the employer to allow the employee:
(a) to extend the period of simultaneous
maternity, adoption or parental leave use up to a maximum of eight weeks;
(b) to extend the period of unpaid maternity,
adoption or extended parental leave for a further continuous period of leave
not exceeding 12 months;
(c) to return from a period of maternity,
adoption or parental leave on a part time basis until the child reaches school age;
to assist the
employee in reconciling work and parental responsibilities.
(ii) The employer shall consider
the request having regard to the employee’s circumstances and, provided the
request is genuinely based on the employee’s parental responsibilities, may
only refuse the request on reasonable grounds related to the effect on the workplace
or the employer’s business. Such grounds might include cost, lack of adequate
replacement staff, loss of efficiency and the impact on customer service.
(iii) The employee’s request and
the employer’s decision made under subclauses (i)(b)
and (c) must be recorded in writing.
(iv) Where an employee wishes to
make a request under subclause (i)(c):
(a) the employee is to make an
application for leave without pay to reduce their full time
weekly hours of work
(b) such application must be made
as early as possible to enable the employer to make suitable staffing
arrangements. At least four weeks’ notice must be given.
(c) salary and other conditions
of employment are to be adjusted on a basis proportionate to the employee’s full time hours of work i.e. for long service leave the
period of service is to be converted to the full time equivalent and credited
accordingly.
(d) employees who return from
leave under this arrangement remain full time employees. Therefore, the payment
of any part time allowance to such employees does not arise.
E. Communication During Leave
(i) Where an employee is on maternity,
adoption or parental leave and a definite decision has been made to introduce
significant change at the workplace, the employer shall take reasonable steps
to:
(a) make information available in relation to
any significant effect the change will have on the status or responsibility
level of the position the employee held before commencing the leave; and
(b) provide an opportunity for the employee
to discuss any significant effect the change will have on the status or
responsibility level of the position the employee held before commencing the
leave.
(ii) The employee shall take reasonable steps
to inform the employer about any significant matter that will affect the
employee’s decision regarding the duration of the leave to be taken, whether
the employee intends to return to work and whether the employee intends to
request to return to work on a part time basis.
(iii) The employee shall also notify the employer
of changes of address or other contact details which might affect the
employer’s capacity to comply with subclause (i).
NOTE:
(a) The entitlement to maternity,
adoption and parental leave for part-time employees who receive an adjusted
hourly rate (as defined in clause 8, Part 2, in this Award), along with casual
employees, are in accordance with the provisions of Part 4, Parental Leave of
the Industrial Relations Act 1996
and/or Determination under the Health Services
Act 1997.
(b) Where a casual employee is
entitled to parental leave under the Industrial
Relations Act 1996, the following provisions shall also apply in addition
to those set out in the Act.
An employer must not fail to
re-engage a casual employee because:
the employee or employee’s spouse
is pregnant; or
the employee is or has been
immediately absent on parental leave.
The rights of the employer in
relation to engagement and re-engagement of casual employees are not affected,
other than in accordance with this clause.
(c) Part time employees who
receive an adjusted hourly rate are also entitled to the provisions of Part D
Right to Request and Part E Communication During Leave of this clause.
(d) Liability for Superannuation
Contributions
During a period of unpaid
maternity, adoption or parental leave, the employee will not be required to
meet the employer's superannuation liability.
32A. Lactation Breaks
(i) This
clause applies to employees who are lactating mothers. A lactation break is
provided for breastfeeding, expressing milk or other activity necessary to the
act of breastfeeding or expressing milk and is in addition to any other rest
period and meal break as provided for in this Award.
(ii) A full time
employee or a part time employee working more than four hours per day is
entitled to a maximum of two paid lactation breaks of up to 30 minutes each per
day or per shift.
(iii) A part time employee working
four hours or less on any day or shift is entitled to only one paid lactation
break of up to 30 minutes each per day or per shift worked.
(iv) A flexible approach to
lactation breaks can be taken by mutual agreement between an employee and their
manager provided the total lactation break time entitlement is not exceeded.
When giving consideration to any such requests for
flexibility, a manager needs to balance the operational requirements of the
organisation with the lactating needs of the employee.
(v) The employer shall provide
access to a suitable, private space with comfortable seating for the purpose of
breastfeeding or expressing milk. Other suitable facilities, such as
refrigeration and a sink, shall be provided where practicable. Where it is not
practicable to provide these facilities, discussions between the manager and
the employee will take place to attempt to identify reasonable alternative
arrangements for the employee’s lactation needs.
(vi) Employees experiencing
difficulties in effecting the transition from home based
breastfeeding to the workplace will have telephone access in paid time to a
free breastfeeding consultative service, such as that provided by the
Australian Breastfeeding Association’s Breastfeeding Helpline Service or the
Public Health System.
(vii) Employees needing to leave the
workplace during time normally required for duty to seek support or treatment
in relation to breastfeeding and the transition to the workplace may utilise
sick leave or other leave in accordance with the Award.
33. Family and Community Services Leave and
Personal/Carers’ Leave
(i) Family and Community Services (FACS) Leave and Personal/Carer’s Leave are separate, stand alone entitlements.
(ii) The provisions outlined in Parts A and B
of this clause are available to all employees covered by this Award, other than
casual employees as defined in subclause (iii) below.
(iii) Casual employees as defined in the Health Industry Status of Employment (State)
Award 2022, as varied from
time to time, are entitled to the provisions outlined in Part C of this clause.
A. FACS Leave
(i) FACS
Leave - General
(a) For the purpose of this
clause relating to FACS leave:
"relative" means a
person related by blood, marriage or affinity;
"affinity" means a
relationship that one spouse because of marriage has to blood relatives of the other; and
"household" means a
family group living in the same domestic dwelling.
(b) The employer may grant FACS
leave to an employee:
(1) to provide care and/or
support for sick members of the employee’s relatives or household; or
(2) for reasons related to the
family responsibilities of the employee (e.g. to
arrange and or attend a funeral of a relative; to accompany a relative to a
medical appointment where there is an element of emergency; parent/teacher
meetings; education week activities; to meet elder-care requirements of a
relative); or
(3) for reasons related to the
performance of community service by the employee (e.g.
in matters relating to citizenship; to office holders in local government,
other than as a mayor, for attendance at meetings, conferences or other
associated duties; representing Australia or the State in major amateur sport
other than in Olympic/Commonwealth Games); or
(4) in a case of pressing
necessity (e.g. where an employee is unable to attend
work because of adverse weather conditions which either prevent attendance or
threaten life or property; the illness of a relative; where a child carer is
unable to look after their charge).
(ii) FACS leave replaces compassionate
leave.
(iii) An employee is not to be
granted FACS leave for attendance at court to answer a criminal charge, unless
the employer approves the grant of leave in the particular
case.
Applications for FACS leave to
attend court, for reasons other than criminal charges, will be assessed on an
individual basis.
(iv) FACS Leave - entitlement
(a) The maximum amount of FACS
leave on full pay that may be granted to an employee is:
(1) 3 working days during the first
year of service, commencing on and from 1 January 1995, and thereafter 6
working days in any period of 2 years; or
(2) 1 working day, on a
cumulative basis effective from 1 January 1995, for each year of service after
2 years’ continuous service, minus any period of FACS leave already taken by
the employee since 1 January 1995,
whichever method provides the
greater entitlement.
(b) For the purposes of
calculating entitlements under (iv)(a)(1) and (2) above, a working day for
employees working 38 hours per week shall be deemed to consist of 8 hours, and
a working day for employees working 35 hours per week shall be deemed to
consist of 7 hours. The rate at which FACS leave is paid out and utilised shall
be on actual hours absent from a rostered shift.
Example A: An employee working 38
hours per week will have an entitlement, in their first year of employment, to
24 hours of FACS leave. If the employee takes FACS leave for a full 10 hour shift, the employee would be debited 10 hours of
FACS leave.
Example B: An employee working 35
hours per week will have an entitlement, in their first year of employment, to
21 hours of FACS leave. If the employee takes FACS leave for a full 7 hour shift, the employee would be debited 7 hours of FACS
leave.
Example C: An employee, employed
prior to 1 January 1995, applies for FACS leave on 20 February 1997. The
employee is entitled to 6 days in any period of two years. Therefore, to
calculate the employee’s available FACS leave as at 20
February 1997, add all FACS leave taken from 21 February 1995 to 20 February
1997 and deduct that amount from the 6 days entitlement.
(c) FACS leave is available to
part-time employees on a pro rata basis, based on the average number of hours
worked per week. A working day shall consist of one-fifth of the employee’s
average weekly hours during the preceding 12 months or during the employee’s
period of employment, whichever is the lesser period.
Example: An employee working an
average of 30 hours per week will have an entitlement, in first year of
employment, of 18 hours of FACS leave. If the employee takes FACS leave for a
full rostered shift e.g. of 4 hours, the employee
would be debited 4 hours of FACS leave. Likewise, if the employee was rostered
for 8 hours and was absent for the full 8 hours on FACS leave, they would be
debited 8 hours of FACS leave.
(v) Additional FACS leave for
bereavement purposes
Where FACS leave has been
exhausted, additional FACS leave of up to 2 days for bereavement may be granted
on a discrete, "per occasion" basis to an employee on the death of a
relative or member of a household as defined in subclause (i)
(a) of Part A of this clause.
(vi) Use of other leave
entitlements
The employer may grant an employee
other leave entitlements for reasons related to family responsibilities or
community service, by the employee.
An employee may elect, with the
consent of the employer, to take annual leave; long service leave; or leave
without pay.
B. Personal/Carer’s Leave
(i) Use
of sick leave to care for the person concerned - definitions
A person who needs the employee’s
care and support is referred to as the "person concerned" and is:
(a) a spouse of the employee; or
(b) a de facto spouse, who, in relation to a person,
is a person of the opposite sex to the first mentioned person who lives with
the first mentioned person as the husband or wife of that person on a bona fide
domestic basis although not legally married to that person; or
(c) a child or an adult child (including an
adopted child, a step child, a foster child or an ex
nuptial child), parent (including a foster parent and legal guardian),
grandparent, grandchild or sibling of the employee or spouse or de facto spouse
of the employee; or
(d) a same sex partner who lives with the
employee as the de facto partner of that employee on a bona fide domestic
basis; or
(e) a relative of the employee who is a
member of the same household, where for the purpose of this clause relating to
Personal/Carer’s Leave:
"relative"
means a person related by blood, marriage or affinity;
"affinity"
means a relationship that one spouse because of marriage has to blood relatives
of the other; and
"household"
means a family group living in the same domestic dwelling.
(ii) Use of sick leave to care for the person
concerned - entitlement
(a) The entitlement to use sick
leave in accordance with this subclause is subject to:
(1) the employee being responsible for the
care and support of the person concerned; and
(2) the person concerned being as defined in
subclause (i) of Part B of this clause.
(b) Other than a casual or any other employee
who receives a loading in lieu of sick leave, an employee with responsibilities
in relation to a person who needs their care and support shall be entitled to
use the untaken sick leave, from that year’s annual sick leave entitlement, to
provide care and support for such persons when they are ill.
(c) Sick leave accumulates from year to year.
In addition to the current year’s grant of sick leave available under (b)
above, sick leave untaken from the previous 3 years may also be accessed by an
employee with responsibilities in relation to a person who needs their care and
support.
(d) The employer may, in special
circumstances, make a grant of additional sick leave. This grant can only be
taken from sick leave untaken prior to the period referred to in paragraph (c)
above.
(e) The employee shall, if required,
establish either by production of a medical certificate or statutory
declaration, that the illness of the person concerned is such as to require
care by another person.
(f) The employee has the right to choose the
method by which the ground for leave is established, that is, by production of
either a medical certificate or statutory declaration.
(g) The employee is not required to state the
exact nature of the relevant illness on either a medical certificate or
statutory declaration.
(h) The employee shall, wherever practicable,
give the employer notice prior to the absence of the intention to take leave,
the name of the person requiring care and that person’s relationship to the
employee, the reasons for taking such leave and the estimated length of
absence. If it is not practicable for the employee to give prior notice of
absence, the employee shall notify the employer by telephone of such absence at
the first opportunity on the day of absence.
(i) In normal circumstances, the employee
must not take leave under this part where another person has taken leave to
care for the same person.
(iii) Use of other leave entitlements
An employee may elect, with the
consent of the employer, to take:
(a) annual leave, including annual leave not
exceeding 10 days in single day periods or part thereof, in any calendar year
at a time or times agreed by the parties. An employee and employer may agree to
defer payment of the annual leave loading in respect of single day absences,
until at least 5 consecutive annual leave days are taken. An employee may elect
with the employer’s agreement to take annual leave at any time within a period
of 24 months from the date at which it falls due.
(b) long service leave; or
(c) leave without pay for the purpose of
providing care and support to the person concerned as defined in subclause (i) of Part B of this clause.
(iv) Time off in lieu of payment of
overtime
(a) An employee may elect, with
the consent of the employer, to take time off in lieu of payment of overtime at
a time or times agreed with the employer within 12 months of the said election
(b) Overtime taken as time off
during ordinary time shall be taken at the ordinary time rate, that is, one
hour off for each hour of overtime worked.
(c) If, having elected to take
time as leave in accordance with (iv)(a) above and the leave is not taken for
whatever reason, payment for time accrued at overtime rates shall be made at
the expiry of the twelve 12 month period from the date
the overtime was worked, or earlier by agreement, or on termination.
(d) Where no election is made in
accordance with paragraph (iv)(a) above, the employee shall be paid overtime
rates in accordance with the provisions of clause 9, Overtime.
(v) Use of make-up time
(a) An employee may elect, with
the consent of the employer, to work "make-up time". "Make-up
time" is worked when the employee takes time off during ordinary hours for
family or community service responsibilities, and works those hours at another
time, during the spread of ordinary hours provided for in clause 4 of this
Award, at the ordinary rate of pay.
(b) An employee on shift work may
elect, with the consent of the employer, to work "make-up time"
(under which the employee takes time off during ordinary hours and works those
hours at another time) at the applicable shift work rate which would have been
applicable to the hours taken off.
C. Entitlements for Casual Employees
(i) Bereavement entitlements for casual
employees
(a) Casual employees are entitled to not be
available to attend work or to leave work upon the death in Australia of a
relative or member of a household as prescribed in subclause (i)(a) of Part A of this clause.
(b) The employer and the employee shall agree
on the period for which the employee will be entitled to not be available to
attend work. In the absence of agreement, the employee is entitled to not be
available to attend work for up to 48 hours (i.e. two
days) per occasion. The casual employee is not entitled to any payment for the
period of non-attendance.
(c) An employer must not fail to re-engage a
casual employee because the employee accessed the entitlements provided for in
this part. The rights of an employer to engage or not engage a casual employee
are otherwise not affected.
(ii) Personal carer’s entitlement for casual
employees
(a) Subject to the evidentiary and notice
requirements in subclauses (ii)(e) - (h) of Part B of this clause casual
employees are entitled to not be available to attend work, or to leave work if
they need to care for a person prescribed in subclause (i)
of Part B of this clause who are sick and require care and support, or who
require care due to an unexpected emergency, or the birth of a child.
(b) The employer and the employee shall agree
on the period for which the employee will be entitled to not be available to
attend work. In the absence of agreement, the employee is entitled to not be
available to attend work for up to 48 hours (i.e. two
days) per occasion. The casual employee is not entitled to any payment for the
period of non-attendance.
(c) An employer must not fail to re-engage a
casual employee because the employee accessed the entitlements provided for in
this part. The rights of an employer to engage or not to engage a casual
employee are otherwise not affected.
33A. Family Violence Leave
(i) For the purpose of this clause, family
violence means domestic violence as defined in the Crimes (Domestic and Personal Violence) Act 2007. The violence may
have been reported to the police and/or may be the subject of an Apprehended
Violence Order.
(ii) An employee experiencing family and
domestic violence can utilise Award leave entitlements provided for in Sick
Leave and Family and Community Services Leave provisions of the Award.
(iii) Where leave entitlements to Sick Leave and
Family and Community Services Leave are exhausted, the employer will grant up
to five days per year of paid special leave to attend legal proceedings,
counselling, appointments with a medical or legal practitioner and relocation
and safety activities directly associated with alleviating the effects of
family and domestic violence. This leave entitlement does not accumulate from
year to year.
(iv) Upon exhaustion of the paid leave
entitlement, an employee may request further periods of unpaid leave, for the
same activities for which paid leave would be available.
(v) To access paid and unpaid leave, the
employee must provide the employer with evidence, to the employer’s
satisfaction, substantiating the purpose of the leave and that the leave is
related to alleviating the effects of family violence. The employer may accept
a variety of agreed documentation in support of an application for leave.
Supporting documentation may be presented in the form of an agreed document
issued by the Police Force, a Court, a doctor, a Family Violence Support
Service or a lawyer.
(vi) Matters related to family violence can be
sensitive. Information collected by the employer will be kept confidential. No
information relating to the details of the family violence will be kept on an
employee’s personnel file without their express permission. However, records
about the use of family violence leave will need to be kept.
(vii) The employer, where appropriate, may
facilitate flexible working arrangements subject to operational requirements.
This may include changes to working times and locations, telephone numbers and
email addresses.
(viii) The employer will co-operate with all legal
orders protecting an employee experiencing domestic violence.
34. Mobility, Excess Fares and Travelling
For the purpose of this clause accustomed place of work
shall mean the location where an employee is regularly required to commence
duty by the employer.
(i) An employee shall be required to proceed
to the accustomed place of work and return home once on each ordinary working
day or shift in the employee's own time and at the employee's own expense.
(ii)
(a) Where an employee is directed to report
for duty to a place of work other than the employee's accustomed place of work
the employee shall travel to and from the alternative place of work in the
employer's time for those periods in excess of time normally taken to travel to
and from the accustomed place of work.
(b) If the excess of travelling time on a
particular day or shift is greater than the prescribed ordinary hours of duty
for the particular category of staff for that day or
shift, then the excess of hours shall be paid at the ordinary rate of pay to
the extent of travelling time.
(c) Fares incurred by such employee in excess
of the fares normally incurred in travelling to the employee's accustomed place
of work and returning home from the accustomed place of work shall be
reimbursed.
(d) Where the employee is required to report
to an alternative place of work and has the prior approval of the employer to
travel by their own mode of conveyance, the employee shall be paid a kilometre
allowance for kilometres travelled in excess of the kilometres the employee
normally travels between the accustomed place of work and home. The kilometre
allowance will be prescribed from time to time by the Crown Employees (Public Service Conditions of Employment) Award 2009,
as varied or replaced from time to time.
(iii)
(a) Where an employer has determined that an
employee or employees should report to a new accustomed place of work on a
permanent basis, the decision must be discussed with the affected employee(s)
and the local branch of the Union prior to notice of changed accustomed place
of work being given.
(b) The employer shall give the employee
reasonable notice of the requirement to report to a new accustomed place of
work. For the purpose of this subclause "reasonable notice" shall be
one calendar month prior to the date the employee is first required to report
to the new accustomed place of work.
(c) Where the accustomed place of work is
changed on a permanent basis by the employer, the employee shall report to the
new accustomed place of work on the date specified by the employer.
(d) If there is disagreement about such a
decision after such discussion or if a significant number of employees are
involved, the matter should be referred to the Secretary, who will discuss the
matter with the Union and will determine the date upon which notice will be
given to employee(s).
(iv)
(a) The provision of this clause shall not
apply to an employee appointed to regularly perform relief duties or to
employees specifically employed to perform duties at more than one place of
work except as provided in (b) hereunder.
(b) If a reliever incurs fares in excess of
$5.18 per day in travelling to and from the relief site, the excess shall be
reimbursed.
Where a
reliever, with the prior approval of the employer, travels by their own mode of
conveyance and incurs travelling costs in excess of $5.18 per day to and from
the relief site, such excess shall be reimbursed. The rate applicable shall be
the kilometre allowance prescribed from time to time in the Crown Employees (Public Service Conditions
of Employment) Award less $5.18.
This $5.18
shall be reviewed annually by the employer.
(v) No payment shall be made under this
clause unless the employer is satisfied that the employee has incurred
additional expenditure in having to report to an alternative place of work, at
the direction of the employer.
(vi) Travel to an alternative place of work,
either by public transport or own mode of conveyance, shall in all instances be
by the most direct route.
35. Labour Flexibility
(i) The employer may direct an employee to
carry out such duties as are reasonable, and within the limits of the
employee's skill, competence and training consistent with employee's
classification, grouping and/or career stream provided that such duties are not
designed to promote deskilling.
(ii) The employer may direct an employee to
carry out such duties and use such tools and equipment as may be required
provided that the employee has been properly trained or has otherwise acquired
the necessary skills in the use of such tools and equipment.
(iii) Any direction issued by the employer
pursuant to subclause (i) and (ii) shall be
consistent with the employer's responsibilities to provide a safe and healthy
work environment.
(iv) Existing provisions with respect to the
payment of higher duties allowances shall apply in such circumstances.
36. Salary Packaging
(i) By agreement with their employer,
employees may elect to package part or all of their
salary in accordance with this clause, to obtain a range of benefits as set out
in the NSW Health Policy Directive PD2018_044 Salary Packaging, as amended from time to time. Such election must
be made prior to the commencement of the period of service to which the
earnings relate. Where an employee also elects to salary sacrifice to superannuation
under this Award, the combined amount of salary packaging/sacrificing may be up
to 100 per cent of salary.
Any salary packaging above the
fringe benefit exemption cap will attract fringe benefits tax as described in
paragraph (iv) below.
(ii) Where an employee elects to package an
amount of salary:
(a) Subject to Australian taxation law, the
packaged amount of salary will reduce the salary subject to PAYE taxation
deductions by that packaged amount.
(b) Any allowance, penalty rate, overtime
payment, payment for unused leave entitlements, weekly workers’ compensation,
or other payment other than any payment for leave taken in service, to which an
employee is entitled under this Award or statute which is expressed to be
determined by reference to an employee’s salary, shall be calculated by
reference to the salary which would have applied to the employee under this
Award in the absence of any salary packaging or salary sacrificing made under
this Award.
(c) ‘Salary’ for the purpose of this clause,
for superannuation purposes, and for the calculation of Award entitlements,
shall mean the Award salary as specified in Clause 2 - Salaries, and which
shall include ‘approved employment benefits’ which refer to fringe benefit
savings, administration costs, and the value of packaged benefits.
(iii) Any pre-tax and post-tax payroll deductions
must be taken into account prior to determining the
amount of available salary to be packaged. Such payroll deductions may include
but are not limited to superannuation payments, HECS payments, child support
payments, judgement debtor/garnishee orders, union fees, and private health
fund membership fees.
(iv) The salary packaging scheme utilises a
fringe benefit taxation exemption status conferred on public hospitals and
Local Health Districts, which provides for a fringe benefit tax exemption cap
of $17,000 per annum. The maximum amount of fringe benefits-free tax savings
that can be achieved under the scheme is where the value of benefits when
grossed-up, equal the fringe benefits exemption cap of $17,000. Where the
grossed-up value exceeds the cap, the employer is liable to pay fringe benefits
tax on the amount in excess of $17,000 but will pass this cost on to the
employee. The employer’s share of savings, the combined administration cost,
and the value of the package benefits are deducted from pre-tax dollars.
(v) The parties agree that the application of
the fringe benefits tax exemption status conferred on public hospitals and area
health services is subject to prevailing Australian taxation laws.
(vi) If an employee wishes to withdraw from the
salary packaging scheme, the employee may only do so in accordance with the
required period of notice as set out in the NSW Health Policy Directive
PD2018_044 Salary Packaging, as
amended or replaced from time to time.
(vii) Where an employee ceases to salary package,
arrangements will be made to convert the agreed package amount to salary. Any
costs associated with the conversion will be borne by the employee, and the
employer shall not be liable to make up any salary lost as a
consequence of the employee’s decision to convert to salary.
(viii) Employees accepting the offer to salary
package do so voluntarily. Employees are advised to seek independent financial
advice and counselling to apprise them of the implications of salary packaging
on their individual personal financial situations.
(ix) The employer and the employee shall comply
with the procedures set out in the NSW Health Policy Directive PD2018_044 Salary Packaging, or as amended from
time to time.
37. Reasonable Hours
(i) Subject to subclause (ii) the employer
may require an employee to work reasonable overtime at overtime rates unless or
as otherwise provided for under the Award.
(ii) The employee may refuse to work overtime
in circumstances where the working of such overtime would result in the
employee working hours which are unreasonable.
(iii) For the purposes of subclause (ii) what is
unreasonable or otherwise will be determined having regard to:
(a) any risk to employee health and safety.
(b) The employee’s personal circumstances
including any family and carer responsibilities.
(c) The needs of the workplace or enterprise.
(d) The notice (if any) given by the employer
of the overtime and by the employee of their intention to refuse it; and
(e) Any other relevant matter.
38. Salary Sacrifice to Superannuation
(i) Notwithstanding the salaries prescribed
in Clause 2, Salaries, as varied from time to time, an employee may elect,
subject to the agreement of the employee’s employer, to sacrifice a part or all of the salary payable under the salaries clause to
additional employer superannuation contributions. Such election must be made
prior to the commencement of the period of service to which the earnings
relate. The amount sacrificed together with any salary packaging arrangements
under Clause 36 Salary Packaging, of this Award may be made up to one hundred
(100) per cent of the salary payable under the salaries clause, or up to one
hundred (100) per cent of the currently applicable superannuable salary,
whichever is the lesser.
In this clause,
‘superannuable salary’ means the employee’s salary as notified from time to time
to the New South Wales public sector superannuation trustee corporations.
(ii) Any pre-tax and post-tax payroll
deductions must be taken into account prior to
determining the amount of available salary to be packaged. Such payroll
deductions may include but are not limited to superannuation payments, HECS
payments, child support payments, judgement debtor/garnishee orders, union fees
and private health fund membership fees.
(iii) Where the employee has elected to sacrifice
a part or all of the available payable salary to
additional employer superannuation contributions:
(a) The employee shall be provided with a
copy of the signed agreement. The salary sacrifice agreement shall be
terminated at any time at the employee’s election and shall cease upon
termination of the employee’s services with the employer;
(b) Subject to Australian taxation law, the
amount of salary sacrificed will reduce the salary subject to appropriate PAYE
taxation deductions by the amount sacrificed; and
(c) Any allowance, penalty rate, overtime,
payment for unused leave entitlements, weekly workers’ compensation, or other
payment, other than any payment for leave taken in service, to which an
employee is entitled under the relevant Award or any applicable Award, Act, or
statute which is expressed to be determined by reference to an employee’s
salary, shall be calculated by reference to the salary which would have applied
to the employee under the salaries clause in the absence of any salary
sacrifice to superannuation made under this Award.
(iv) The employee may elect to have the
specified amount of payable salary which is sacrificed to additional employer
superannuation contributions:
(a) paid into the superannuation scheme
established under the First State
Superannuation Act 1992 as optional employer contributions; or
(b) subject to the employer’s agreement, paid
into a private sector complying superannuation scheme as employer
superannuation contributions.
(v) Where an employee elects to salary
sacrifice in terms of subclause (iv) above, the employer will pay the
sacrificed amount into the relevant superannuation fund.
(vi) Where the employee is a member of a
superannuation scheme established under:
(a) the Police Regulation (Superannuation)
Act 1906;
(b) the Superannuation Act 1916;
(c) the State Authorities Superannuation
Act 1987;
(d) the State Authorities Non-contributory
Superannuation Act 1987; or
(e) the First State Superannuation Act
1992.
The employee’s employer must
ensure that the amount of any additional employer superannuation contributions
specified in subclause (i) above is included in the
employee’s superannuable salary which is notified to the New South Wales public
sector superannuation trustee corporations.
(vii) Where, prior to electing to sacrifice a part
or all of their salary to superannuation, an employee had entered into an
agreement with their employer to have superannuation contributions made to a
superannuation fund other than a fund established under legislation listed in
subclause (v) above, the employer will continue to base contributions to that
fund on the salary payable under Clause 2, Salaries, of this Award to the same
extent as applied before the employee sacrificed that amount of salary to
superannuation. This clause applies even though the superannuation
contributions made by the employer may be in excess of the superannuation
guarantee requirements after the salary sacrifice is implemented.
39. No Extra Claims
Other than as provided for in the Industrial Relations Act 1996 and the Industrial Relations (Public Sector Conditions of Employment)
Regulation 2014 (or its successor however described), there shall be no further
claims/demands or proceedings instituted before the Industrial Relations
Commission of New South Wales for extra or reduced wages, salaries, rates of
pay, allowances or conditions of employment with respect to the employees
covered by the Award that take effect prior to 30 June 2024 by a party to this
Award.
40. Area, Incidence and Duration
(i) This Award takes effect from 1 July 2023
and shall remain in force for a period of one year. The allowances in the last
column in Table 1 of Part B - Monetary Rates will apply from the first full pay
period on or after (ffppoa) 1 July 2023.
(ii) This Award rescinds and replaces the Hospital Scientists (State) Award 2022
published 04 November 2022 (393 I.G. 148) and all variations thereof.
(iii) This Award shall apply to persons employed
in classifications contained herein employed in the NSW Health Service under
section 115(1) of the Health Services Act
1997, or their successors, assignees or transmittees.
PART B
Table 1 –
Allowances
In the period 1 July 2023 to the commencement of the first
full pay period on or after 1 July 2023, the applicable rates of pay are those
that applied immediately prior to the first full pay period on or after 1 July
2023.
Item No.
|
Clause No.
|
Description
|
Rate from ffppoa 01/07/2023
$
|
1
|
7
|
On call
- per 24 hours or any part thereof
|
13.60
|
2
|
10
|
Meals
allowance for overtime
|
|
|
(a)
Breakfast at or before 6.00 a.m.* (each)
|
33.25
|
|
|
(b)
Evening at least 1 hour after normal ceasing time and extends beyond or is
worked wholly after 7.00 p.m.* (each)
|
33.25
|
|
|
(c)
Lunch beyond 2.00 p.m. Saturdays, Sundays or Holidays* (each)
|
33.25
|
3
|
20(iii),
(iv)
|
Uniform
and Laundry Allowance
|
|
|
Uniform
(per week)
|
3.06
|
|
|
Laundry
(per week)
|
3.18
|
4
|
21(i)
|
Climatic
and Isolation Allowance for persons employed in hospitals upon or west of the
line commencing at Tocumwal, etc. (per week)
|
4.35
|
4
|
21(ii)
|
Climatic
and Isolation Allowance for persons employed in hospitals upon or west of the
line commencing at Murray River etc. (per week)
|
8.46
|
* NB: These allowances are varied in accordance with
Treasury Circular C2021-03 Meal, Traveling
and other Allowances for 2020-21, as varied or replaced from time to time.
N. CONSTANT, Chief Commissioner
____________________
Printed by
the authority of the Industrial Registrar.