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Creating an In the Press item
Submitted by Anonymous on Tue, 07/28/2009 - 13:20
- Enter a Title, e.g. ‘CFMEU has a new website’.
- Branch: Select the appropriate branch that the press article belongs to. If using a branch login, this option will not appear.
- Link: In the field, enter the full URL of the site wish to link to or in the Upload field.
- If adding a document, the maximum file size you can upload is 8mb and the allowed extensions are: .pdf, .doc, .docx, .rtf or .txt. Please note the preferred file extension is .pdf.
Travel Insurance
...ompanying Immediate Family* are insured for: Interstate travel whilst engaged on private pleasure travel by air, rail, motor vehicle or sea; andInternational travel from poin...
Create a Secretary Message
Submitted by cfmeupublish on Mon, 03/01/2010 - 14:11
Step 1. Open: Create/ a Secretary Message. Paste document from Word and format with subheads (Heading 2) as required.
Leave Menu link Title blank. Save. The document is automatically added to the Secretary's Archive page.
Open saved page and copy the URL.
Step 2: Open: Create / a News Story. Paste the first two pars (or an appropriate intro) of the Message from Word into News story.
Add line: Read more of Dave Noonan's Message + URL link to the Message page.
Creating a News article
Submitted by Anonymous on Mon, 07/27/2009 - 16:08
- Select Create > News in the Drupal administrator menu (in the top left corner).
- Enter a Title, e.g. ‘CFMEU has a new website’.
- Branch: Select the appropriate branch that the news article belongs to. If using a branch login, this option will not appear.
- Main content: Place your main content here.
- Image field: Use this field if you wish to have an image in the top-right side of your news article.
National Asbestos Declaration
Submitted by cfmeupublish on Tue, 07/26/2011 - 16:39
... and a legacy of asbestos containing materials (ACMs) in many workplaces and buildings - public and private, commercial, domestic and industrial.The use of all forms of asbestos in Australia has been ...
Green Bans 40th Anniversary
Submitted by pubworks on Wed, 05/18/2011 - 13:01
...We saved this city: construction workers mark 40th anniversary of first Green Ban Imagine it: McDonalds at Centennial Park; modern high-rise at The Rocks; a “privatised” harbour foreshore lined by hig...
SECTION 3 - Additional Expenses
...ion so that you are unable to arrive at a Scheduled Meeting which cannot be delayed because of late arrival, payment of a sum of up to ten thousand ($10,000) dollars (clear of any amount paid by any C...
Slam the Sham
Submitted by cfmeupublish on Fri, 04/23/2010 - 17:33
... construction industry. Sham contracts in construction damage the national interest - the Union and workers are taking action.
Main content:
What is sham contracting? Sham contracting is an illegal but widespread practice in the Australian construction industry. It occurs when a company signs up workers as independent contractors (also known as ABN* workers) instead of hiring them properly as employees. Companies use sham contracting so they can avoid giving an employee their working rights and entitlements. Employees on sham contracts miss out on rights and entitlements such as: paid sick leave, holiday leave and long service leaveovertime and public holiday ratesprotection against unfair dismissalredundancy payments superannuation payments from employersworkers' compensation insurancefares and travel allowancesand more. *ABN stands for Australian Business Number What does this mean for workers? Think about it. No sick leave, long service leave or paid holidays means every day you don’t work, you earn no money. If your employer doesn’t pay Superannuation, you can end up with no pension. If the boss doesn’t pay Workers’ Compensation, who is going to cover you if you are injured at work?How do I know if I'm on a Sham Contract? What can I do about it? - go to Campaign Downloads (left) and read the Slam the Sham booklet in English, Arabic, Chinese, Croatian, Greek, Italian, Korean, Serbian and Vietnamese. Or download the flyer in language of your choice.Why do we need to stamp out sham contracting? Sham contracting erodes the wages and conditions of workers. When workers who should be employees are put on sham contracts, they are denied many of the benefits and protections that employees are legally entitled to. The community misses out as well. By disguising employment relationships as independent contracts, companies avoid paying payroll tax. That means less money for our schools, roads and hospitals. When companies don’t pay superannuation, it shifts the burden of funding workers’ retirement on to society. Workers with no super have to rely on government pensions. Sham contracting also gives an unfair advantage to companies doing the wrong thing. By evading tax, not contributing super and not paying industry standard wages and entitlements, companies that engage sham contractors are able to undercut honest employers who are doing the right thing by their workers and the community. CFMEU's plan to stop sham contracting includes changes to the Fair Work and Tax laws: see Race to the Bottom report March 2011 in Campaign Downloads (left).What needs to be done NOW? A new CFMEU investigation has brought to a halt hundreds of sham contracts at construction sites across Australia on big-name contractor projects, as well as smaller sites. Bovis Lend Lease, Multiplex, Leighton construction jobs are among those which have come under the scrutiny of the Union since March 1. These companies are taking lucrative Government contracts with one hand, while undermining Australia’s tax base with the other. Nationwide audits are continuing. The CFMEU is stepping up its campaign against sham contracting because the authorities are turning a blind eye to the practice. STOP the scam at source: The CFMEU demands that: Banks and financiers prove their corporate responsibility – no money for projects with Sham ContractingBuilders and developers must weed out Sham Contracting at the tender stage – cheap tenders lead to Sham ContractingBuilders and developers must ban Sham Contracting on their jobsGovernment projects ban sham contracting immediatelyPrincipal contractors should check their subcontractors: 100% of wages, entitlements and tax should be paid to workers before subbies get their next progress paymentContractors who are forcing workers on to sham contracts should be banned from the industry. Download the CFMEU Campaign flyer to Stop Sham Contracting (left) and get involved today. NOTE: there are separate flyers for each State/Territory with CFMEU Construction contact numbers for each Branch campaign.
Facts:
According to 2009 ABS figures, construction accounts for 33% of all persons working as ‘independent contractors’* in Australia, although it accounts for only 9% of total Australian employment.
36% of all persons working in construction in Australia (or 336,000 people) were working as ‘independent contractors’ in November 2009.
The proportion of the construction industry working as ‘independent contractors’ was more than five times the rate in all other industries (36% vs. 7%).
The 336,000 people working in construction as ‘contractors’ included 49,000 labourers, a category the ATO has decided is ineligible to hold an ABN and work as a contractor.
In 12 months, 2008-2009, the number of ‘independent contractors’ in construction grew by 7.6%, even though employment in the industry declined by 4.9%
Based on official figures, the CFMEU estimates the number of sham contracting arrangements in the industry at November 2010 to be between 92,000 and 168,000. This represents between 26-46% of all independent contractors in the industry. Anecdotal evidence and industry experience suggests the real figure is much higher.
The CFMEU estimates that tax revenue leakage attributable to sham contracting in construction may be $2.475 billion per year.
There are 336,000 ‘independent contractors’ in construction and 890,000 ABNs.
The current Fair Work Act 2009 does not make sham contracting unlawful. It only deals with what employers say about an employment relationship and whether they incorrectly describe someone who is an employee as an independent contractor. It allows employers to argue that they didn’t think about the difference between an independent contractor and an employee when they made statements about a person’s employment status.
Current Tax laws allow the tax treatment of income derived from personal services to be distorted by the use of artificial business structures and sham contracting arrangements.
*NOTE: Citation of these ABS figures should not be taken as acceptance by the CFMEU that all persons cited by the ABS as being within the category of ‘independent contractor’ would in fact be an independent contractor as a matter of law.
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