Casual Coal Miners Granted Fair Long Service Leave

MEU

Casual coal miners will finally have their hours fairly counted towards long service leave under new laws being introduced to Federal Parliament this week.

Measures included in the Albanese Government's Protecting Worker Entitlements Bill fix an unfair provision in the Coal Long Service Leave Act that limit the number of hours counted towards long service leave to 35 per week.

Mining and Energy Union General Secretary Grahame Kelly said that because coal miners work compressed rosters – which can include long hours one week and few hours the next – casual miners were being denied their full entitlements.

"Australian coal miners have a very good long service leave scheme, but it needs updating to close loopholes and reflect the nature of today's industry," said Mr Kelly.

"Casuals have been short-changed because there has been no provision to average out the 35 ordinary hours over the roster cycle, as is the case for permanent employees.

"We made the case for addressing this inequity for casuals in our submission to the 2021 review into the Coal Long Service Leave Scheme.

"We are very pleased that the Albanese Government has seen the importance of addressing this issue, which affects many thousands of workers across our coalfields."

"Mining companies' aggressive push to casualise the workforce has undermined rights and entitlements for coal mineworkers across the industry. We are very pleased to have a Federal Government willing to push back and strengthen laws in the interests of workers."

/Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).