1
Fair Work Act 2009
s.604 - Appeal of decisions
United Voice
v
Gold Coast Kennels Discretionary Trust t/a AAA Pet Resort
(C2017/4888)
VICE PRESIDENT HATCHER
DEPUTY PRESIDENT BINET
COMMISSIONER CAMBRIDGE
SYDNEY, 12 JANUARY 2018
Appeal against decision [2017] FWCA 4283 of Commissioner Wilson at Melbourne on 16
August 2017 in matter number AG2017/1963.
Introduction
[1] United Voice has applied for permission to appeal and has appealed, pursuant to s 604
of the Fair Work Act 2009 (FW Act), a decision of Commissioner Wilson issued on 16
August 20171 (Decision) in which he approved the AAA Pet Resort Enterprise Agreement
2017 (Agreement). The Decision in its entirety was as follows:
“[1] An application has been made for approval of an enterprise agreement known
as The AAA Pet Resort Enterprise Agreement 2017 (the Agreement). The application
was made pursuant to s.185 of the Fair Work Act 2009 (the Act). It has been made by
Gold Coast Kennels Discretionary Trust T/A AAA Pet Resort. The Agreement is a
single enterprise agreement.
[2] The Agreement covers employees engaged in the pet grooming and boarding
industry in Queensland.
[3] Although not bargaining a representative for the Agreement, United Voice
provided submissions on the question of whether employees to be covered by the
Agreement would otherwise not be covered by an award. I have taken these
submissions into consideration however, I am satisfied that in keeping with the Fair
Work Commission’s previous decisions that these employees are not covered by an
Award.1
[4] I am satisfied that each of the requirements of ss.186, 187 and 188 as are relevant
to this application for approval have been met.
1 [2017] FWCA 4283
[2018] FWCFB 128
DECISION
E AUSTRALIA FairWork Commission
[2018] FWCFB 128
2
[5] The Agreement is approved and, in accordance with s.54 of the Act, will operate
from 23 August 2017. The nominal expiry date of the Agreement is 16 August 2021.”
[2] The footnote in paragraph [3] cited two decisions: Samboot Pty Ltd T/A Samford Pet
Resort and Northshore Pet Resort2 and GL Elin and CM Elin T/A Animal World Pet Resorts3 .
[3] United Voice contends in its appeal that the Commissioner erred in concluding that the
employees to whom the Agreement would apply if approved (Employees) were not covered
by a modern award and that the Agreement satisfied the approval requirements in ss 186, 187
and 188 of the FW Act, and he should not have followed the previous decisions referred to in
the footnote. The basis of United Voice’s contentions in this regard was that the Employees
were in fact covered by the Miscellaneous Award 2010, and the result of the identified errors
that there was no proper assessment as to whether the better off overall test (BOOT) approval
requirement contained in s 186(2)(d) and explicated in s 193 was satisfied by reference to that
award.
Statutory framework
[4] Section 186 of the FW Act relevantly provides:
186 When the FWC must approve an enterprise agreement--general
requirements
Basic rule
(1) If an application for the approval of an enterprise agreement is made
under subsection 182(4) or section 185, the FWC must approve the agreement under
this section if the requirements set out in this section and section 187 are met.
Note: The FWC may approve an enterprise agreement under this section with
undertakings (see section 190).
Requirements relating to the safety net etc.
(2) The FWC must be satisfied that:
. . .
(d) the agreement passes the better off overall test.
. . .
[5] Section 193(1) sets out the BOOT in respect of non-greenfields agreements as follows:
When a non-greenfields agreement passes the better off overall test
(1) An enterprise agreement that is not a greenfields agreement passes the better off
overall test under this section if the FWC is satisfied, as at the test time, that each
award covered employee, and each prospective award covered employee, for the
2 [2016] FWCA 4382
3 [2017] FWCA 2375
[2018] FWCFB 128
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agreement would be better off overall if the agreement applied to the employee than if
the relevant modern award applied to the employee.
[6] The expressions “award covered employee”, “prospective award covered employee”
and “test time” are defined in s 193(4), (5) and (6) as follows:
Award covered employee
(4) An award covered employee for an enterprise agreement is an employee who:
(a) is covered by the agreement; and
(b) at the test time, is covered by a modern award (the relevant modern
award ) that:
(i) is in operation; and
(ii) covers the employee in relation to the work that he or she is to
perform under the agreement; and
(iii) covers his or her employer.
Prospective award covered employee
(5) A prospective award covered employee for an enterprise agreement is a person
who, if he or she were an employee at the test time of an employer covered by the
agreement:
(a) would be covered by the agreement; and
(b) would be covered by a modern award (the relevant modern award ) that:
(i) is in operation; and
(ii) would cover the person in relation to the work that he or she would
perform under the agreement; and
(iii) covers the employer.
Test time
(6) The test time is the time the application for approval of the agreement by the FWC
was made under subsection 182(4) or section 185.
[7] Where the Commission has concerns that an agreement for which approval is sought
does not meet the statutory approval requirements (including the BOOT), it may nonetheless
approve the agreement under s 190 if those concerns are addressed by acceptable
undertakings which are not likely cause financial detriment to any employees covered by the
agreement or result in substantial changes to the agreement. The Commission may also
approve an agreement that does not satisfy the BOOT if it is satisfied that, because of
[2018] FWCFB 128
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exceptional circumstances, the approval of the agreement would not be contrary to the public
interest.
Relevant provisions of the Agreement
[8] Clause 1.2 of the Agreement provides that it applies to the “Gold Coast Discretionary
Trust ABN 82114105406” and its employees. It is unclear how a discretionary trust can
constitute a “national system employer” capable of making an enterprise agreement under Pt
2-4 of the FW Act, although we note that the ABN is held by the trustee of the discretionary
trust identified. This issue was not the subject of any appeal ground, but it will require further
attention as discussed at the end of this decision.
[9] Clause 1.4, Company Profile, states:
“AAA Pet Resort operates a Luxury Pet Holiday destination where we care about our
clients’ pets using the best modern facilities.”
[10] The Agreement provides in clauses 1.3 and 5.1 for the following classification
structure:
Level 1 – Animal Attendant (Introductory)
Level 2 – Assistant Animal Attendant
Level 3 – Animal Attendant
Level 4 – Supervisor
Level 5 – Senior Supervisor
[11] The classification definitions are set out in clause 5.1 of the Agreement as follows:
“Level 1 Animal Attendant (Introductory)
An Employee engaged without prior skills and experience in the pet boarding and
grooming industry in Queensland and who is required to complete the Employer’s
internal training program.
Progression - An Animal Attendant (Introductory) employee will progress to Level 2
following the completion of 494 hours of work. The Employer may decide to sign an
Employee off as competent at an earlier time than 494 hours, and allow the Employee
to progress to Level 2.
Level 2 Assistant Animal Attendant
In addition to the duties of a Level 1 Employee, an Employee at Level 2 must focus on
excellent client service. Additional duties will be trained at this level to ensure the
employee is competent in all duties.
Qualifications -A Level 2 will have completed the Employer’s internal training course
and up to 494 hours of training at Level 1.
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Progression -An Assistant Animal Attendant will progress to the next level when a
vacancy exists and the Employer assesses the Employee to be suitably qualified to
carry out the indicative duties of an Animal Attendant.
Level 3 Animal Attendant
In addition to the indicative duties of a Level 2 and training at that Level, an Employee
at Level 3 may possess a Certificate 3, Certificate 4 or Diploma in Animal Care and
Management or similar studies or equivalent industry experience.
An Employee appointed to this level will have no less than 12 month’s prior
experience with AAA Pet Resort or equivalent with another industry employer that is
recognised by the Employer.
An Employee at this level must provide daily demonstration to lower level employees
about best practice and upholding the Employer’s operational and good conduct
standards.
Progression - An Animal Attendant will progress to the next level when a vacancy
exists and the Employer assesses the Employee to be suitably qualified to carry out the
indicative duties of a Supervisor.
Level 4 Supervisor
An Employee employed to perform the role of Supervisor must always undertake
Animal Attendant duties as a priority in addition to the duties described below under
the Duties for a Supervisor.
In addition to the qualifications of an Animal Attendant, the Supervisor may possess a
Bachelor Degree and/or prior experience in a managerial role.
Level 5 Senior Supervisor
An Employee employed to perform the role of Senior Supervisor must always
undertake Animal Attendant duties as a priority in addition to the duties described
below under the Duties for a Senior Supervisor.
A Senior Supervisor must take on the responsibility of overall supervision of the
facility.
The duties of Senior Supervisor are detailed below.
There are no additional qualifications that would be relevant other than those
described as recognised at Animal Attendant and Supervisor level.”
[12] According to clause 5.1 of the Agreement, Level 1 – Animal Attendants, Level 2 –
Assistant Animal Attendants and Level 3 – Animal Attendants perform the following duties:
“A love of animals and the ability to anticipate their needs is necessary for this job.
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Kennel attendants work in animal boarding houses. They most often work with dogs
and cats, but may also occasionally find themselves in contact with other domestic or
companion animals.
They are in charge of the general upkeep of animals in their care and must provide
individualized attention to them so they stay healthy and happy.
General duties include keeping rooms clean and sanitized; walking, feeding and
picking up after the animals; reporting on the animal's condition to its owner,
scheduling boarding appointments, cleaning rooms runs, non- trade maintenance,
bathing, grooming, administering medication, and monitoring the behavior of animals.
They also interact with clients as they pick up and drop off their dogs.
They also must be prepared to handle companion animals that may be stressed due to
their being in an unfamiliar environment.”
[13] Clause 5.1 further provides that Level 4 – Supervisors perform the following duties:
“Supervisors must oversee the boarding animals to ensure that they are cared for
properly.
Supervisors are required to assist the duties of animal attendants wherever necessary.
Supervisors must also be great with leading their team. Supervisors must know their
team well enough to know who works better where and how to structure their team’s
work program.
Supervisors must also have excellent public relations skills so that they can interact
with owners as they drop off and pick up their pets. They also are responsible for
creating work schedules/budgets and supervising staff members. Ensuring that all of
the daily/weekly tasks (yard rotations, individual services, daily cleaning, weekly
cleaning, etc...) are complete.
Supervisors must be able to multi-task, have excellent communication skill and have
strong Customer Service Skills.
Supervisors may be required to work “on call” during emergency situations and to fill
in when employees call in sick or must miss work.
Supervisors have the ultimate responsibility for making sure all duties are completed
each day.
The Supervisor will report directly to the Managing Director of the Company or the
Senior Kennel supervisor.”
[14] Clause 5.1 also provides that Level 5 – Senior Supervisors perform the following
duties:
“The Senior Supervisor must oversee the whole facility to ensure that it is running
correctly and that animal care is being maintained to AAA Pet Resort standards.
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The Senior Supervisor may be involved with all duties of Animal Attendant and
Supervisors.
Senior Supervisors have the ultimate responsibility of the facility; it does fall on this
level to make sure everything is running smoothly.
The Senior Supervisor is expected to demonstrate good leadership skills to train new
employees and manage existing employees.
The Senior Supervisor must multitask to a high standard; have excellent
communication skills and strong Customer Service Skills.
Senior Kennel supervisors are also responsible for ensuring that the electronic media
plan is implemented consistently (Electronic media includes social media; website
updates; and online
scheduler).
The Senior Supervisor is responsible for assuring the Preparation of various
flyers/premiums for event days (print and electronic); ensuring adequate staffing levels
during events.
The Senior Supervisor must oversee/monitor documentation of health
check/medication administration for facility dogs.
Senior Kennel supervisors also have to maintain appropriate levels of kennel supplies
as well as maintaining inventory for retail.
Where AAA Pet Resort offers dog training services while dogs are being boarded, the
Senior Supervisor may be involved with performing or supervising training activities.
The Senior Supervisor must also be available to work “on call” for emergency
situations and to fill in when employees call in sick or must miss work.
The Senior Supervisor has the ultimate responsibility for making sure all duties are
completed each day.”
[15] The permanent base hourly rates of pay provided for in the Agreement are: Level 1 -
$17.70; Level 2 - $17.90; Level 3 - $18.40; Level 4 - $21.10; Level 5 - $23.00. The Level 1
rate aligns with the National Minimum Wage as it was at the date the application for approval
of the Agreement was lodged.
Coverage of the Miscellaneous Award 2010
[16] Clause 4, Coverage of the Miscellaneous Award relevantly provides as follows:
“4. Coverage
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4.1 Subject to clauses 4.2, 4.3, 4.4, 4.5 and 4.6 this award covers employers
throughout Australia and their employees in the classifications listed in clause
14 – Minimum wages who are not covered by any other modern award.
4.2 The award does not cover those classes of employees who because of the
nature or seniority of their role, have not traditionally been covered by awards
including managerial employees and professional employees such as
accountants and finance, marketing, legal, human resources, public relations
and information technology specialists.
. . .”
[17] There was no dispute that the further exclusions from coverage in clauses 4.3-4.6 were
not applicable.
[18] The classifications contained in the Miscellaneous Award are set out in Schedule B as
follows:
“Schedule B—Classification Structure and Definitions
Level 1
An employee at this level has been employed for a period of less than three months
and is not carrying out the duties of a level 3 or level 4 employee.
Level 2
An employee at this level has been employed for more than three months and is not
carrying out the duties of a level 3 or level 4 employee.
Level 3
An employee at this level has a trade qualification or equivalent and is carrying out
duties requiring such qualifications.
Level 4
An employee at this level has advanced trade qualifications and is carrying out duties
requiring such qualifications or is a sub-professional employee.”
[19] The wage rates currently prescribed for the above classifications range from $18.29
per hour for Level 1 (an amount equal to the National Minimum Wage) to $23.23 per hour for
Level 4.
Previous award coverage of pet boarding
[20] The terms of clause 4.2 of the Miscellaneous Award make relevant the extent to which
there was award coverage of pet boarding functions and other functions of an analogous
nature at the time of the award modernisation process conducted under Pt 10A of the
Workplace Relations Act 1996 (WR Act) which led to the making of the Miscellaneous
Award and other modern awards. In the course of the appeal proceedings, United Voice and
[2018] FWCFB 128
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the Commission identified a number of pre-modern awards which had apparent application to
such functions.
[21] Firstly, in Victoria, there was an award of the Australian Industrial Relations
Commission (AIRC), the Veterinary Assistants & Animal Attendants (Victoria) Interim
Award 2000 (Victorian Award).4 Clause 4, Incidence of the Victorian Award provided
(underlining added):
“This award applies to persons other than veterinary surgeons employed in connection
with:
veterinary hospitals or surgeries (however described); or
any establishment which accommodates, handles or treats animals and
household pets; or
any establishment which otherwise caters for the welfare of animals or pets.”
[22] Clause 5, Locality, provided that the Victorian Award only applied to the State of
Victoria, and Clause 6, Parties Bound, provided that it was binding on the Australian Liquor,
Hospitality and Miscellaneous Workers Union, its officers and its members, and on all the
employers listed in Schedule A - Respondents in respect of their employees, whether or not
they are members of the Union. The employers listed in Schedule A were generally of the
nature of animal welfare organisations, and did not appear to include any for-profit pet
accommodation businesses. However the declaration appended to the Victorian Award shows
that it was declared a common rule award in Victoria pursuant to ss 141 and 493A of the WR
Act effective from 1 January 2005.5 The adult classifications set out clause 16.1.2 include
“Certified Animal Nurse”, “Trainee Nurse” and “Animal Attendant”. Clause 8, Definitions
contains the following definitions of relevance:
“8.4 Animal Attendant means an adult employee, or an employee who has completed
at least three years' service as a Trainee Animal Attendant.
8.5 Trainee Animal Attendant means a junior employee who feeds animals
(including the preparation of foods) and cleans animal enclosures or kennels, but who
does not maintain clinical records or assist with the treatment of animals.”
[23] Secondly, in New South Wales there were two awards of the Industrial Relations
Commission of New South Wales of relevance: the Animal Welfare General (State) Award
(NSW) (NSW Award) and the Animal Welfare Institutional (State) Award (NSW) (NSW
Institutional Award).6 Clause 31, Area, Incidence and Duration of the NSW Award provided
that it applied “to all persons employed in the classifications set out in clause 5, Wages,
within the jurisdiction of the Animal Welfare, Non-Institutional (State) Industrial Committee”.
The jurisdiction of the Industrial Committee referred to encompassed the industries and
callings of “All employees, other than tradespersons and veterinary surgeons, employed in or
4 This award had replaced the earlier Veterinary Assistants and Animal Attendants (Victoria) Interim Award 1996.
5 PR953973
6 The Area, Incidence and Duration provisions of both awards show that there were equivalent predecessor awards dating
back to at least 1994.
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in connection with veterinary hospitals and any establishment or business which
accommodates, handles, treats, or otherwise caters for the welfare of animals and household
pets in the State, excluding the County of Yancowinna” (underlining added), subject to certain
exceptions which are not presently relevant. Clause 5 of the NSW Award provides for
minimum rates of pay as set out in Table 1, Wages of Part B of the award. Table 1 of Part B
includes minimum pay rates for the classifications of “Animal Nurse, as defined”, “General
Nurse, in transition”, “Animal Attendant, as defined” and “Food Preparer or Kennel
Cleaner”. Animal attendant is defined in clause 4 of the NSW Award to mean:
“… an employee with three years' experience in the industry and who is employed in
connection with animal welfare, or with less service if, in the opinion of the employer,
the employee is sufficiently experienced to be so classified and who may be able to
give injections and to take temperatures of animals.”
[24] Clause 33, Area, Incidence and Duration of the NSW Institutional Award provided
that it applied to “all persons employed in the classifications set out in clause 5, Wages,
within the jurisdiction of the Animal Welfare, Institutional (State) Industrial Committee”. The
jurisdiction of this Industrial Committee encompassed the industries and callings of “All
employees other than tradespersons and veterinary surgeons employed in or in connection
with animal welfare institutions in the State, excluding the County of Yancowinna”. As with
the NSW Award, the NSW Institutional Award included a classification of Animal Attendant,
which was defined in the same terms as in the NSW Award.
[25] Thirdly, in Western Australia there was (and, in respect to non-national system
employers, remains) the Animal Welfare Industry Award (WA Award), an award of the
Western Australian Industrial Relations Commission.7 Prior to the award modernisation
process, clause 3, Area and Scope of the WA Award provided that it applied throughout
Western Australia to “all employees employed in any classification referred to in clause 18 –
Rates of Pay in the veterinary industries of animal welfare, animal care, animal breeding or
animal homes and to all employers employing such employees.” Schedule B lists as
respondents to the WA Award a number of veterinary hospitals and the RSPCA. The
classification structure contained in clause 18 of the WA Award provides for six different
classification levels progressing from an Introductory Classification up to a Level 5
Classification. The specified typical duties of a Level 1 employee may include “basic animal
care” and “grooming, feeding, cleaning and restraint”; the typical duties of a Level 2
employee may include “basic animal care” and “animal handling” but also “tasks relating to
the clinic and surgery including maintaining patient records and compiling patient and client
histories” and “ability to undertake basic animal health procedures”; and the duties of a
Level 3 employee under the WA Award may include “assisting with animal care” but also
“undertaking daily clinic routines and routine monitoring of patient care”. A Level 3
employee is required to have competencies of Certificate III in Companion in Animal
Services or another equivalent qualification.
[26] Finally, the Miscellaneous Workers (Northern Territory) Award 2001 (NT Award)8,
an award of the AIRC, was a common rule award applicable in the Northern Territory which
was described by clause 3.4.1 as applying to the “industry and/or industrial pursuits of”,
among other things, “animal welfare establishment”. Its classification skill level definitions,
7 The award variation history for this award indicates that it has been operational since November 1968.
8 A predecessor version of this award was made in 1985.
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set out in Schedule B, are expressed in fairly generic terms (reflective of the diverse range of
industries and occupations covered by the NT Award), but clause 11.2.5 does, in relation to
the minimum engagement period for casual employees, make specific reference to “veterinary
assistants and kennelhands”, as does clause 14.4.1 in relation to junior rates. Schedule A
contains a list of employer respondents, and it includes “Tammaki Kennels” and “Yarrawonga
Boarding Kennels”.
[27] It is not in contest that there has never been an award applicable in the State of
Queensland to employees involved in animal care outside of veterinary practices. The
Veterinary Practice Employees’ Award - State (Queensland Award), an award of the
Queensland Industrial Relations Commission, covers employees performing unskilled animal
care functions but only when employed in veterinary practices. Specifically, the Level 1
classification defined in Appendix 1, Classification structure includes “basic animal care”
and “grooming, feeding, cleaning and restraint as instructed” in its “Roles and Expectations”.
Submissions and evidence
[28] United Voice submitted that:
it had standing to bring the appeal because it had coverage of relevant employees in
the animal care services industry, had made submissions to the Commissioner
concerning the coverage of the Miscellaneous Award and whether the Agreement
passed the BOOT, was a bargaining representative for a member employed by another
enterprise in the industry, and had a critical interest in the determination of whether
the employees in the industry were award-free or covered by the Miscellaneous
Award;
the two decisions relied on by the Commissioner did not deal with or even mention the
issue of award coverage;
to the extent that the Commissioner may have intended to rely upon the May 2010
decision in GL Elin & CM Elin t/a Animal World Pet Motel9 (instead of the 2017 Elin
decision which he cited), that decision was not determinative of the current matter
because the employer was held not to be covered by the Miscellaneous Award only
because it was a Division 2B employer and did not fall within the definition of
“employer” then appearing in clause 3 of the award;
the definition was changed by a determination issued on 4 June 201010 so that it
referred to an employer for the purpose of the Miscellaneous Award being a “national
system employer within the meaning of the Act”;
the classes of employees excluded from coverage by clause 4.2 of the Miscellaneous
Award were employees of the type in the examples given in the clause, namely
managerial, professional and other specialist white collar employees;
this approach was confirmed by the relevant Ministerial requests in the award
modernisation process;
9 [2010] FWAA 2851
10 PR997772
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the duties and wage rates prescribed by the Agreement show that the Employees
perform work at a basic and supervisory level in the areas of animal care, grooming
and accommodation, and their wage rates are modest;
the work performed is of a similar nature to work which has historically been
regulated by awards such as the Victorian Award, the NSW Award, the NSW
Institutional Award, the WA Award, the NT Award and the Queensland Award;
the type of employees to whom the Agreement would apply are the very type of
employees who were meant to be caught by the Miscellaneous Award;
the Commissioner therefore erred in concluding that the Employees were not covered
by the Miscellaneous Award, with the result that the Commissioner gave no proper
consideration to the BOOT;
the application of the BOOT by reference to the Miscellaneous Award would raise
issues about the lack of overtime rates and penalty rates for work on nights, Sundays
and public holidays, and the inferiority of the ordinary wage rates at least for the
animal attendant classifications when compared to the Miscellaneous Award;
permission to appeal should be granted because the appeal raised issues of general
importance concerning whether the pet boarding and grooming industry was covered
by the Miscellaneous Award and the proper construction of clause 4.2 of that award,
and because the Decision was attended by sufficient doubt to warrant its
reconsideration and substantial injustice would result for employees of AAA Pet
Resort if permission was refused;
the appeal should be upheld and the application for approval of the Agreement
remitted for re-determination by another member of the Commission.
[29] United Voice read two affidavits of John Barrie Spreckley, its Industrial Coordinator,
affirmed on 21 September 2017 and 11 October 2017 in the appeal. In the first affidavit Mr
Spreckley described United Voice’s constitutional coverage of animal care service employees,
its interest in the question of the coverage of the Miscellaneous Award by reference to its role
as bargaining representative at another pet accommodation establishment, and the submission
United Voice had made to the Commission in relation to the application for approval of the
Agreement concerning whether the Agreement passed the BOOT if the Miscellaneous Award
covered the Employees. In the second affidavit, Mr Spreckley said that a United Voice
member (whom he identified) had been advised by the Fair Work Ombudsman on 28 June
2017 that the Miscellaneous Award covered an animal attendant at a private boarding kennel,
but then received further advice on 22 August 2017 that there had not yet been a definitive
answer to the issue of award coverage in the pet boarding industry.
[30] AAA Pet Resorts submitted that:
United Voice was not a “person aggrieved” with standing to appeal the Decision, in
that because it was not a bargaining representative for the Agreement, did not contend
it had any members covered by the Agreement, did not seek to be covered by the
Agreement, and there was no evidence that it was likely that it would in future have
[2018] FWCFB 128
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members covered by the Agreement, it did not have any grievance beyond that of an
ordinary member of the public;
any interest which United Voice had in resolution of the question of whether the
Miscellaneous Award covered pet boarding for the purpose of enterprise bargaining at
any other establishment was a collateral purpose which was not sufficient to make it a
person aggrieved;
there was no issue of general importance in the appeal that justified the grant of
permission to appeal, and no evidence that the refusal of permission would cause any
injustice;
the view that pet boarding employees in Queensland were award free had been
adopted by the Commission for several years in relation to enterprise agreement
approvals in the pet accommodation industry, including in the decision in Young
Family Trust t/a Castalan Boarding Kennels and Cattery11, and that status quo should
not be disturbed now;
the Miscellaneous Award did not cover employees at pet boarding establishments
because the exclusion in clause 4.2 applied, and the award classifications did not cover
the functions of employees at those establishments;
the exclusion in clause 4.2 applied because the roles of animal attendants, their
assistants and supervisors in pet boarding establishments had not traditionally been
covered by awards, State or federal, in Queensland;
awards which dealt with veterinary practices were not relevant, because veterinary
practices were vastly different to pet boarding establishments, in that the former
involved caring for sick and injured pets while the latter merely provided
accommodation for pets while their owners were away;
the Queensland Award only applied to veterinary practices and had no coverage of pet
boarding establishments;
the Victorian Award’s classifications required work in the environment of ill, injured,
homeless and maltreated animals of all types and not just companion pets, and its list
of respondents included only veterinary and animal welfare establishments;
the NSW Award, by reference to its inclusion of an Animal Nurse classification, and
the requirements that an animal attendant must have three years’ experience in the
welfare industry and might have to give injections and take temperatures, was to be
read as applying to the higher-level performance necessary for animals requiring
welfare level care;
the NSW Institutional Award’s classifications covered Veterinary Assistants, Animal
Attendants required to give injections and take temperatures, and Lethalists who
clinically destroyed animals;
11 [2011] FWAA 1997
[2018] FWCFB 128
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the WA Award was concerned with clinical care of animals and animal breeding and
welfare, not pet accommodation;
the NT Award was concerned with animal welfare establishments;
while the award modernisation process which gave rise to the Miscellaneous Award
contemplated that the award to be made might be extended to cover new industries or
occupations where the work was similar in nature to work historically regulated by
awards, it did not contemplate extending award coverage to old industries and
occupations that were traditionally award-free;
alternatively, even if the exclusion in clause 4.2 did not apply, the classifications did
not capture employees in pet boarding establishments, so there was no coverage under
clause 4.1.
[31] AAA Pet Resort read two affidavits in the appeal. The first was affirmed by Carolyn
Maree Tate, sole Director of SME Assistance Group Pty Ltd, on 9 October 2017. Ms Tate’s
business provided industrial relations services to the Association of Pet Boarding and
Grooming (APBG). She described submissions she had made in relation to applications for
the approval of the Animal World Pet Motel Enterprise Agreement 2010 and the Pet Chalet
and Park Ridge Cat Resort Enterprise Agreement 2010, and written advice she had received
from the Fair Work Ombudsman dated 8 September 2010 that the Miscellaneous Award did
not apply to an animal attendant or pet groomer engaged in a boarding kennel facility in
Queensland. That letter, annexed to Ms Tate’s affidavit, relevantly stated:
“Historically these occupations have not been regulated by an award in the state of
Queensland.
The modern award applies to national system employers and their employees who are
not covered by any other modern award. However there are a number of exclusions to
these coverage provisions.
Clause 4.2 states that the modern award will not apply to employees who due to the
nature of their work have traditionally not been covered by awards. We are of the view
that an animal attendant or dog groomer engaged in a boarding kennel facility in
Queensland will not be covered by the modern award due to this exclusion.
These employees will continue to be considered award free and entitled to the
provisions of the National Employment Standards and the Fair Work Act 2009.”
[32] Ms Tate also described the subsequent approval of a number of enterprise agreements
applying to pet boarding and grooming establishments in Queensland which had been
assessed for approval by the Commission on the basis that they were not covered by any
modern award.
[33] The second affidavit was affirmed by Glenn Lewis Elim, the President of the APBG,
on 9 October 2017. He said that the APBG was peak representative body in Queensland for
the kennel and grooming industry, that the industry in Queensland originated in the late
1960s, and Queensland industrial relations authorities had advised in 2003 that the industry
[2018] FWCFB 128
15
was award-free. He also described activity which Ms Tate had conducted as a consultant to
the APBG in relation to obtaining advice from the Fair Work Ombudsman and the approval
of enterprise agreements for the industry in Queensland.
Consideration
Standing to appeal
[34] We consider that United Voice has an interest in the decision beyond that of an
ordinary member of the public and is consequently a person aggrieved by the Decision and
has standing to appeal against the Decision pursuant to s 604 of the FW Act.12 Although it
was not a bargaining agent for the Agreement, it was not in dispute that its rules permitted it
to enrol as members the Employees. Furthermore, its broader interest in the question of
whether the Miscellaneous Award covered employees in the pet accommodation industry,
which arose at least in relation to its role as a bargaining agent at another pet accommodation
establishment, caused it to make submissions concerning this question in the proceedings
below which were rejected by the Commission. Those circumstances are sufficient to confer
standing to appeal: see CEPU v Main People Pty Ltd13; MUA v Toll Energy Logistics Pty
Ltd14; CFMEU v MGI Piling (NSW) Pty Ltd15; TWU v ALDI Foods Pty Limited16; CFMEU v
CSRP Pty Ltd17; CFMEU v Concrete Constructions (WA) Pty Ltd18.
Permission to appeal
[35] We consider that permission to appeal should be granted. For the reasons which
follow, the Decision is attended by sufficient doubt to warrant its reconsideration on an issue
which affected the Commission’s power to approve the Agreement. Further, the question of
the coverage of the Miscellaneous Award is novel and, as the submissions of both parties
made clear, has broader consequences for enterprise bargaining in pet boarding businesses
generally.
Coverage of the Miscellaneous Award
[36] We have earlier set out clause 4.2 of the Miscellaneous Award, which establishes the
exception from the general coverage provision in clause 4.1 which AAA Pet Resort relies
upon to avoid the proposition that the award covers the Employees. It is necessary at the
outset therefore to construe clause 4.2 having regard to its context and purpose. Before we
turn directly to the text of clause 4.2, two observations may be made about the apparent
purpose of the Miscellaneous Award based on the context of the award’s terms as a whole.
First, the title of the award, the terms of clause 4.1, and the broad and generic nature of the
classifications descriptors in Schedule B suggest that the purpose of the award is to provide
minimum (and minimalistic) conditions of employment for a miscellaneous range of
employers and employees, not identified by reference to any industry, business function or
12 Tweed Valley Fruit Processors Pty Ltd v Ross (1996) 65 IR 393
13 [2014] FWCFB 8429 at [5]- [7]
14 [2015] FWCFB 7272; 254 IR 353 at [95]- [98]
15 [2016] FWCFB 2654; 260 IR 244 at [4]
16 [2016] FWCFB 91; 255 IR 248 at [22]- [23]
17 [2017] FWCFB 2101 at [8]- [13]
18 [2017] FWCFB 3912 at [4]
[2018] FWCFB 128
16
occupation, who are not covered by any other modern award. Second, the classifications
descriptors make it clear that no classification applies to persons with a professional
qualification or managerial responsibilities19, that Levels 3 and 4 were to apply to trade-
qualified employees, and that Levels 1 and 2 were to apply to low skilled employees with no
particular work qualification at all. Thus it may be inferred that the award was not intended to
cover professional or managerial employees, and that it was intended to cover low skilled
employees as well as trade-qualified employees not covered by any other award. In respect of
low-skilled employees, the low minimum rates of pay prescribed also tend to suggest that the
award was intended to capture low paid workers not covered by another award.
[37] We consider that clause 4.2 has a plain meaning based on the ordinary meaning of the
words used. The exclusion in clause 4.2 has two requisite elements. Stated in reverse order,
they are:
(1) the classes of employees must not have been traditionally covered by awards;
and
(2) this must have been because of the nature or seniority of their role.
[38] That is, it is not sufficient for the exclusion to apply that a particular class of
employees has not traditionally been covered by awards where this is not attributable to the
nature or seniority of the employees’ role.
[39] It may be accepted, as submitted by AAA Pet Resort, that the remainder of clause 4.2,
“...including managerial employees and professional employees such as accountants and
finance, marketing, legal, human resources, public relations and information technology
specialists”, cannot be read as exhaustively stating the scope of the exclusion. Nonetheless it
is plain that the identified classes of employees are intended both to serve as examples to
guide the interpretation and application of the clause and to constitute the principal classes of
employees excluded. Thus “managerial employees” are a class of employees traditionally
excluded from award coverage because of the “seniority of their role”, and the other identified
classes are specialist white collar professionals traditionally not covered because of the
“nature ... of their role”. To read the clause this way is consistent with the overall context of
the award to which we have referred, including the lack of any classifications applicable to
managerial or professional employees.
[40] This interpretation of clause 4.2 is consistent with the statutory and historical context.
Section 143(7) of the FW Act provides:
(7) A modern award must not be expressed to cover classes of employees:
(a) who, because of the nature or seniority of their role, have traditionally not
been covered by awards (whether made under laws of the Commonwealth or
the States); or
(b) who perform work that is not of a similar nature to work that has
traditionally been regulated by such awards.
19 That the Miscellaneous Award may however cover persons with supervisory duties may be inferred from the fact that
clause 15.3 provides for a leading hand/in-charge allowance.
[2018] FWCFB 128
17
Note: For example, in some industries, managerial employees have traditionally not
been covered by awards.
[41] The exclusion in clause 4.2 has clearly been drawn consistently with the terms of that
part of the prohibition in s 143(7)(a), which contains the same double requirement that the
class of employees must traditionally not have been covered by awards and that this is
because of the nature or seniority of their role. Although this provision did not come into
operation until 1 January 2010 (the same date as the Miscellaneous Award took effect), it was
expressly adverted to in the Full Bench decision of the Australian Industrial Relations
Commission of 4 December 2009 which finalised the terms of the Miscellaneous Award as
part of the award modernisation process.20 The Full Bench in that decision also referred to the
Ministerial request made pursuant to s 576A of the WR Act which required it to make the
Miscellaneous Award.21 That request stated:
“4A. The Commission is to create a modern award to cover employees who are not
covered by another modern award and who perform work of a similar nature to that
which has historically been regulated by awards (including State awards). The
Commission is to identify this award as such. This modern award is not to cover those
classes of employees, such as managerial employees, who, because of the nature or
seniority of their role, have not traditionally been covered by awards. The modern
award may deal with the full range of matters able to be dealt with by any modern
award however the Commission must ensure that the award deals with minimum
wages and meal breaks and any necessary ancillary or incidental provisions about NES
entitlements.”
[42] It is notable that the first sentence of the above passage requires the award to be made
to cover employees performing work of a similar nature to work historically regulated by
awards – that is, the employees to be covered do not actually have to be performing work
which was itself historically regulated by awards. The exclusion required by the third
sentence (from which clause 4.2 clearly originates) again encompasses employees who have
not traditionally been covered by awards only where this is because of the nature or seniority
of their role. The Full Bench having referred to the request and s 143(7) then said (footnote
omitted):
“[149] Although s.143(7) does not come into operation until 1 January 2010 it is clearly
relevant to the coverage of modern awards generally and the coverage of the
Miscellaneous Award in particular. Common to all of the provisions we have set out is
the requirement that awards should not cover employees who because of the nature or
seniority of their roles have traditionally not been covered by awards. Many different
approaches and drafting techniques were proposed to encapsulate that requirement.
We note also the implication in paragraph 4A of the consolidated request that an
award should be created to cover employees not covered by another modern award
and who perform work of a similar nature to that which has historically been regulated
by awards.
20 [2009] AIRCFB 945 at [148]-[149]
21 Ibid at [146]
[2018] FWCFB 128
18
[150] A number of submissions canvassed the purpose or function of the award. The
ACTU, for example, submitted that the functions of the award should be twofold. The
first is to fill gaps in modern award coverage which became apparent during the
process of setting aside award-based transitional instruments as required by the
Transitional Act. The second function is to provide interim coverage for emerging
industries pending the making of a new modern industry award or an appropriate
extension to the coverage of an existing modern award. The Australian Government
took a very similar approach, while stressing the importance to the economy of
ensuring that employees who have not traditionally been covered by awards remain
free from modern award coverage as well. In an earlier stage in the consultations
ACCI proposed that the coverage of the award should not be settled until after an audit
of modern award coverage to ascertain what if any gaps there are by comparison with
the existing pattern of federal and state award coverage. AiGroup and ACCI both
suggested that the award be limited to employees covered by a federal or state award
or a Notional Agreement Preserving a State Award (NAPSA). AiGroup proposed in
addition that industries and employers could be specified in a list attached to the award
to permit new industries and employers to be added as necessary.
[151] Almost without exception employer representatives criticised the breadth of
coverage in the exposure draft. They suggested that employees who have traditionally
been excluded from award coverage, particularly professional and managerial
employees, would be covered, including those deliberately excluded from modern
award coverage in earlier stages of the modernisation process.
[152] We have considered all of the submissions and decided to include an additional
paragraph in the coverage clause which more closely reflects the terms of the
consolidated request and the Fair Work Act. The paragraph also contains some greater
definition of the types of employees excluded. It reads:
‘4.2 The award does not cover those classes of employees who, because of the
nature or seniority of their role, have not traditionally been covered by awards
including managerial employees and professional employees such as
accountants and finance, marketing, legal, human resources, public relations
and information technology specialists.’”
[43] The above passage confirms that the addition to the draft clause 4.2 of the reference to
the exclusion including managerial employees and professional employees was intended to
assist in defining the class of employees intended to be excluded.
[44] In its submissions AAA Pet Resort referred to the paragraph in the Full Bench’s
decision which immediately followed the passage quoted above (emphasis added):
“[153] We deal now with conditions of employment. Our approach to conditions of
employment is influenced by the nature of the award’s coverage. We agree with those
who have suggested that the coverage of the award is very narrow and likely to be
limited in time where emerging industries are concerned or where the expansion of
coverage of a modern award is involved. Accordingly we do not think the award
should contain a comprehensive safety net designed for any particular occupation or
industry. Rather it should contain basic conditions only, leaving room for the
application of an appropriate safety net in another modern award in due course. That
[2018] FWCFB 128
19
said, there is still room for the exercise of considerable discretion in formulating
appropriate wages and conditions.”
[45] We do not consider that the emphasised sentence assists much in interpreting or
applying clause 4.2 of the Miscellaneous Award. To say that the coverage is narrow provides
little guidance as to its application in a particular case, and this observation probably only
reflects the fact that most employees are covered by other modern awards. The further
observation that the coverage is limited in time with respect to emerging industries does not
mean that the award was only meant to cover emerging industries but that it was envisaged
that such industries would eventually be accommodated by the making of a new modern
award or the extension in coverage of an existing one. It may also be noted, consistent with
our earlier observations, that the Full Bench made the conditions in the award without any
specific industry or occupation in mind, thus explaining their generic nature.
[46] The nature of the work required to be performed by the Employees to whom the
Agreement is intended to apply may be ascertained from the terms of the Agreement, the
relevant provisions of which we have earlier set out. Employees at Levels 1, 2 and 3 perform
basic animal care functions including feeding, cleaning, grooming, individualised attention,
and administering medication, and employees at Level 4 and Level 5 perform supervisory
duties in relation to these work functions. This work is performed at a pet boarding
establishment, in which animals can usually be expected to be in good health and to be
retrieved by their owners after their agreed stay has completed. There is no external training
qualification requirement at any level, although employees at Level 3 and above may possess
a Certificate 3, Certificate 4 or a Diploma in Animal Care and Management. The rates of pay
at all levels can fairly be described as modest, and for at least Levels 1-3 the rates of pay in
the Agreement would permit employees to whom they applied to be characterised as low-paid
workers.22
[47] Having regard to these fundamental characteristics of the Employees and their work,
we do not consider that either of the two conditions for the operation of the exclusion in
clause 4.2 is satisfied. First, it cannot be said that work of the class of employees to which the
Employees may be characterised as belonging has traditionally not been covered by awards. If
that class is characterised in the way proposed by AAA Pet Resorts, namely “animal
attendants, their assistants and supervisors in pet boarding establishments”, it is clear that the
Victorian Award, the NSW Award and the NT Award all covered the class. The Victorian
Award applied, relevantly, to establishments which accommodated pets, and contained
classifications for Animal Attendants whose primary functions were feeding animals and
cleaning their enclosures or kennels. This award operated on a common rule basis from 2005.
The common rule NSW Award applied, relevantly, to establishments or businesses which
accommodated animals and household pets, and included classifications of “Food Preparer
or Kennel Cleaner” and Animal Attendant. The former classification is not distinguishable
from the work of the lower level classifications in the Agreement. As earlier set out, the
Animal Attendant under the NSW Award might be required to give injections and take the
temperature of animals, but as earlier set out the duties of Level 1-3 employees under the
Agreement include the administration of medication. The NT Award, somewhat ambiguously,
had coverage of animal welfare establishments, but the specific reference in the award to
kennelhands and the respondency of two identified kennels makes it reasonably clear that the
NT Award covered pet boarding businesses.
22 See Annual Wage Review 2016-17 [2017] FWCFB 3500 at [369]-[370]
[2018] FWCFB 128
20
[48] If the relevant class of employees is more widely characterised as that of animal
attendants performing basic animal care functions, then the NSW Institutional Award, the
WA Award and the Queensland Award also provided relevant coverage in veterinary
practices and/or animal welfare institutions. We note that there is comity in the qualification
requirements for a Level 3 employee under the WA Award and a Level 3 employee under the
Agreement.
[49] Second, however the class of employees is characterised, there is no discernible reason
based on the nature or seniority of their role why such employees should not traditionally
have been covered by the relevant awards. It is plain that the latter consideration of seniority
has no relevance, and AAA Pet Resort was unable to identify anything about the nature of
their roles which would cause them to be excluded from award coverage. Animal attendants
of the type to which the Agreement would apply are, as earlier discussed, lower skilled and
modestly or low-paid employees of the type which ordinarily would be most suited to award
coverage. There is nothing otherwise unusual about their employment which would render
them unsuited to award coverage.
[50] We note the apparent reliance by AAA Pet Resort (and other Queensland pet boarding
businesses) upon the correspondence from the Fair Work Ombudsman dated 8 September
2010 to which we have earlier referred. One reading of the passage from that correspondence
which we have quoted is that the exclusion in clause 4.2 of the Miscellaneous Award operated
specifically in relation to pet boarding businesses in Queensland because such businesses had
traditionally been award-free in Queensland. We reject the proposition that clause 4.2 could
be interpreted or applied on the basis that it had a differential operation as between the various
States dependent on the history of award coverage in each State. Nothing in the language of
clause 4.2 suggests that it could be read as capable of operation in this fashion. The purpose of
the establishment of modern awards was to set a nationally consistent minimum safety net for
terms and conditions of employment throughout Australia. Section 154(1), which prohibits
State-based differences in modern awards (subject to a transitional period provided for in s
154(2) which expired on 31 December 2014), militates against clause 4.2 being read in a way
which would provide for State-based differences in the coverage of the Miscellaneous Award.
[51] The reliance by AAA Pet Resort on earlier decisions of the Commission approving
enterprise agreements made by pet boarding businesses does not assist in determining whether
the exclusion in clause 4.2 of the Miscellaneous Award applies here. As submitted by United
Voice, the decision in GL Elin & CM Elin t/a Animal World Pet Motel23 found that the
Miscellaneous Award did not apply to the employer in that case on an entirely different basis
than clause 4.2 which has no present relevance. AAA Pet Resort referred to the decision in
Young Family Trust t/a Castalan Boarding Kennels and Cattery24, in which the Castelan
Boarding Kennels and Cattery Enterprise Agreement 2010 was approved. In that decision, the
Commissioner who determined the matter said:
“[2] In applying the BOOT I have had regard to the fact that there is no industry or
occupational modern award that covers the employer. Nor is there any applicable
award based transitional instrument.”
23 [2010] FWAA 2851
24 [2011] FWAA 1997
[2018] FWCFB 128
21
[52] The above passage does not disclose that any consideration was given to the possible
coverage of the Miscellaneous Award (as distinct from an “industry or occupational modern
award”) or clause 4.2 of that award specifically. No other decision to which we were taken by
AAA Pet Resort in its submissions contains any specific consideration or conclusion with
respect to the coverage of the Miscellaneous Award, nor do the two decisions referred to in
the footnote to the Decision under appeal. To the extent that any earlier decision of a single
member of the Commission can be read as implicitly concluding that the Miscellaneous
Award did not cover animal attendants, their assistants and supervisors employed by pet
boarding businesses, we consider for the reasons stated that it was wrongly decided.
[53] We reject the alternative submission advanced by AAA Pet Resort that the Employees
were not captured by clause 4.1 of the Miscellaneous Award because they did not fall within
any of the classifications. As earlier discussed, those classifications were drawn in a broad
and generic way in order to capture a miscellaneous range of employees not covered by any
other modern awards. They do not refer in terms to any specific industry, occupation or work
function, but that does not mean they were not intended to cover anybody. We consider that,
on their ordinary meaning, the classification descriptors cover the Employees.
Conclusion and orders
[54] We consider that the Commissioner erred in finding that the Miscellaneous Award did
not cover the Employees and in not assessing satisfaction of the BOOT approval requirement
by reference to the Miscellaneous Award. It is therefore necessary to quash the Decision and
remit for re-determination the application for approval of the Agreement. We see no
difficultly in the matter being returned to the Commissioner for this purpose. The
Commissioner will also need to consider the difficulty with the identification of the employer
in the Agreement to which we have earlier referred.
[55] We order as follows:
(1) Permission to appeal is granted.
(2) The appeal is upheld.
(3) The Decision ([2017] FWCA 4238) is quashed.
(4) The application for approval of the AAA Pet Resort Enterprise Agreement
2017 (AG2017/1963) is remitted to Commissioner Wilson for re-determination
in accordance with the above reasons for decision.
VICE PRESIDENT
OF THE FAIR WORK MISSION THE
[2018] FWCFB 128
22
Appearances:
R. Reed of counsel with S. Ong on behalf of United Voice.
J. Murdoch QC with E. Furlong on behalf of Gold Coast Kennels Discretionary Trust t/a
AAA Pet Resort.
Hearing details:
2017.
Brisbane:
17 October.
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PR599331