NEWS-HR

The Albanese government has appointed Carol Austin as chair of the National Housing Finance and Investment Corporation, and Nigel Ray and former Victorian Planning Minister Richard Wynne as members of the board.

The Health Services Union and The Sisters of Our Lady of China Peakhurst Nursing Home T/A Our Lady of China Health Care Pty Ltd will contest a s.739 (Application to deal with a dispute) answerable before Commissioner McKenna at 2PM (By Telephone AEST (NSW Time) in Sydney.

Mission Australia T/A Mission Australia has a s.739 (Application to deal with a dispute) with which it must deal before Commissioner Riordan in Fair Work Commission Level 10 NT House 22 Mitchell Street Darwin (Kumar)

Scope (Aust) Ltd T/A Scope (Aust) Ltd has been served with a s.739 (Application to deal with a dispute) to answer in fronrt of Commissioner Connolly (Video using Microsoft Teams) in Melbourne (Mason)

Direct Care Australia is facing a s.394 (Application for unfair dismissal remedy) in front of Fair Work Commissioner Platt in Chambers in Adelaide (Praino)

For Care Pty Ltd will face a s.372 (Application to deal with other contravention disputes) at 2pm in Front of Fair Work Commissioner Durham (In Chambers) in Brisbane (Deng)

Eastern Health, Maroondah Hospital will face a s.394 (Application for unfair dismissal remedy) before Commissioner Johns (Video using Microsoft Teams) in Melbourne (Hoffman)

Personal care worker launches appeal against court decision

ADELAIDE: A personal care worker has failed to persuade an appeal tribunal that she be allowed to challenge her dismissal. Jacobs v Moonta Health Aged Care Services T/A Parkview Aged Care TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT – misconduct – valid reason – s.394 Fair Work Act 2009 – applicant was a personal care worker at aged care facility – respondent dismissed applicant alleging serious and wilful misconduct which occurred during a night shift – this included misconduct in documenting safety checks; negligence involving a failure to conduct pressure care and safety checks; and a breach of infection control by failure to wear PPE during a Covid-19 outbreak – a resident of the facility had a medical episode, fell out of bed, and was left unattended for some time – resident admitted to hospital and after a subsequent medical episode the resident passed away – Commission emphasised its role is not to determine whether the events relevant to the dismissal contributed to this outcome – several facts relating to the applicant's conduct and responsibility of this conduct were contested – applicant submitted dismissal was unfair because alleged misconduct did not occur as alleged – applicant submitted she was not properly advised of increased care requirements for particular resident and the facility was understaffed during the shift – with respect to allegation she failed to wear PPE, applicant submitted she did not breach any facility policy – applicant submitted the procedure adopted by the respondent was not fair and breached its own policies – respondent submitted applicant erroneously documented safety checks but in fact failed to perform them – respondent further submitted applicant’s failure to wear correct PPE at specific times was in breach of policy and applicant had no reasonable excuse to not do so – the Commission preferred the evidence of the respondent – the Commission found the applicant failed to perform all the required safety checks and pressure care – the Commission found this was partially mitigated by understaffing and context of the Covid-19 outbreak – the Commission found the applicant provided false accounts of the safety checks – however the Commission was not satisfied the applicant deliberately and substantially breached the PPE requirements – further, the Commission stated it was not clear whether the applicant was solely responsible for the resident in question at critical times – on balance the Commission found the applicant's conduct constituted a valid reason for dismissal for the purposes of s.387(a) – the Commission gave consideration to the other relevant matters raised by the applicant under s.387(h), including impact to the applicant – ultimately the Commission found dismissal not harsh, unjust or unreasonable – application dismissed. U2022/9272                                                  [2023] FWC 330 Hampton DP                Adelaide                 30 March 2023