Fair Work Centre — For Employers
Between complex shift patterns, enterprise agreements and safety-related disciplinary decisions, manufacturing carries distinct employment law risk. Get advice built for your plant.
The Problem
Shift work and penalty rate obligations under modern awards are enforced by the Fair Work Ombudsman, and many manufacturing sites operate under enterprise agreements registered with the Fair Work Commission rather than the underlying award.
Rotating shift patterns across a large workforce make it easy for a single classification error to become a significant underpayment liability.
Enterprise agreements need to be checked against the current award to confirm they still pass the ‘better off overall’ test — and against expiry dates that are easy to miss.
Dismissing a worker over a safety breach without a fair, documented process is one of the most common reasons manufacturing terminations are successfully challenged.
Restructuring around new equipment or reduced output still requires genuine redundancy consultation — skipping this step is a frequent source of claims.
How We Help
Fair Work Centre helps manufacturing employers manage shift and penalty rate compliance, EBA obligations and safe, defensible disciplinary processes.
We also advise on redundancy consultation obligations when automation or downturns reduce headcount.
How It Works
Call 1300 161 828 or book a free initial advice call about your business.
We review your specific classification, contracts and compliance risk.
Get a clear compliance plan built for your business and workforce.
A short advice call now can prevent a classification error compounding across your whole shift roster.
Membership
Common Questions
Generally yes for covered employees, but only while it remains approved and passes the ‘better off overall’ test against the current award — an expired or non-compliant EBA can expose you to award-based claims.
Serious breaches can justify a faster process, but the worker should generally still be given a chance to respond before a final decision, unless the conduct is extremely serious.
If the change is likely to have a significant effect on employees, consultation obligations under the award or EBA generally apply — skipping this step increases the risk of a successful claim.
The role must no longer be required, consultation obligations must be met, and redeployment elsewhere in the business must be considered before redundancy is finalised.
This depends on the specific award or EBA classification for each shift pattern — rotating rosters should be checked against the applicable instrument rather than assumed to follow a single standard rate.
Shift and penalty rate misclassification is the highest-volume risk, because a single error can apply across dozens or hundreds of shifts before it’s identified.
No. Fair Work Centre is an independent private advisory service for employers. We are not associated with or authorised by the Fair Work Ombudsman, the Fair Work Commission, or any government authority.
Fair Work Centre is an independent private organisation providing advisory services to employers only. It is not associated with or authorised by the Fair Work Ombudsman, the Fair Work Commission, or any government authority.