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News in brief, June 25, 2003

Massive OHS fine for Abigroup; Survey says wage growth to decline to 3.75% in the 2003-04 financial year; Employers slow to adopt formal anti-bullying policies; and CFMEU's Brian Miller dies.

Men still dominant in the law

Only one in every three solicitors or barristers employed by law firms are women, while employment in law firms has grown by 18% in the past three years, according to the ABS.

Electrolux non-union deal voted down

Workers at the Electrolux fridge and freezer manufacturing site at Orange (NSW) have narrowly rejected a s170LJ agreement that sought to introduce new seasonal working hours patterns.

Lockout in response to Campaign 2003 bans

Car components manufacturer FMP Group Australia (formerly Bendix Mintex) has locked out its Ballarat factory workforce for a month in retaliation for unions imposing bans the company says would have halted production.

Militants take key MUA state leadership jobs

Stevedoring and shipping employers face a push for greater job security and the MUA looks set for a shake-up, after militant challengers appear to have won key union leadership positions in three states.

Footballers' union seeks registration

Professional rugby league players will be the first sport to have a dedicated union registered under the Workplace Relations Act, if the AIRC approves an application gazetted today.

Bench makes a stand against paternalism

An AIRC full bench has made it clear that the public interest test for terminating AWAs doesn't extend to considering the risk of employees losing money by reverting to another industrial instrument, saying that by doing so the Commission would be "nothing but paternalistic".

ACTU seeks new work and family rights

The ACTU will push for a UK-style right for parents to request a change in their hours or working arrangements to accommodate their caring responsibilities, when it lodges its work and family test case with the AIRC today.

Big employers face 30% redundancy cost increase: ACCI

The ACCI has today told the AIRC full bench hearing the redundancy test case that the ACTU's claim would impose massive cost imposts that would discourage essential business restructuring.