Review of the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988
Review of the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988
Australian Human Rights Commission Submission to the Review Comittee, Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations
October 2012
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Table of contents
1 Introduction
- The Australian Human Rights Commission welcomes the opportunity to make a
submission into the Review of the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act
1988 (SRC Act). The Commission commends the Australian Government commitment
to ensure that the SRC Act provides ‘fair and appropriate workers’
compensation arrangements for all workers covered by that
legislation.’[1] - The Review Terms of Reference frame the Government’s intention
to ensure that the Comcare scheme will be ‘be exemplary in its
scheme-design as well as in its service
delivery.’[2] The Government
also makes explicit that the federal scheme should ‘reflect contemporary
social models and best
practice’.[3] - In view of the Australian Government’s intention to provide an
exemplary workers’ compensation scheme, and in keeping with its policy
agenda to keep people in the workforce for as long as they are willing and able,
the Commission recommends that all age limits on the payment of workers’
compensation provisions be removed from the federal Comcare scheme. - If the Government intends to provide an exemplary scheme, it should look to
models of practice that do not discriminate on the basis of age, such as the
workers’ compensation schemes in Western Australia and Queensland. - As it currently stands, the Comcare scheme (s 23(1) of the SRC Act) removes
the entitlement to weekly incapacity benefits for injured employees once they
reach the age of 65. For employees who are injured at the age of 63 or over,
s 23(1A) provides for the payment of weekly incapacity benefits for a
maximum period of 104 weeks. - The Issues Paper for this Review asks the following questions:
‘Should the weekly benefit cut-off age of 65 be increased to 67? If so,
should that increase mirror the changes in the age pension age?’ [4] The Commission argues that this
question should be extended to also ask whether the age cap should be removed
completely. Workers’ compensation schemes that are considered
‘contemporary best practice’ in terms of non-discrimination are
those that have been adopted by Queensland and Western Australia where the age
limits have been removed completely.
2 Australian
workers’ compensation schemes
- Australia has 11 different workers compensation schemes, one operating in
each State and Territory and three Commonwealth schemes. Most of
Australia’s workers compensation schemes contain an age limit at which
workers are no longer covered by the income replacement component of the scheme.
In most jurisdictions, the age at which income replacement is cut off or limited
is 65. While workers are covered for medical expenses if they are injured over
the age of 65, without income replacement provision, workers without independent
means would be forced to retire. - However, in Queensland and Western Australia, the workers’
compensation schemes do not impose an age limit on income replacement. Instead
they impose capped limits on the period of payment or on the amount that the
schemes will pay to all workers. For example, WorkCover Queensland has a five
year limit on payments or a capped amount of up to $265,485 regardless of age. - Western Australia imposes a capped limit of $190,701 or a capped weekly
amount of up to $2,156 for the period until the prescribed limit is reached.
While there are limits to the Queensland and Western Australia schemes, the
workers compensation provisions do not discriminate on the basis of age.
2.1 Are older workers
more prone to injury?
- It is difficult to know whether the workers compensation age limits are
predicated on information that older people are more prone to workplace
accidents or illness. In fact, there is little conclusive evidence to suggest
older workers are a greater accident or injury risk in the workplace. - The ABS Work Related Injuries report found that people aged 65 years
and over recorded the lowest rate of work-related injuries and illnesses of all
age groups with 30 per 1,000 people (28 per 1,000 men and 34 per 1,000
women).[5] The highest rates of
work-related injury or illness were experienced in the 45 to 49 year age group
(74 per 1,000 men and 70 per 1,000
women).[6] - The Australian Public Service Commission posits some theories as to why
workers aged 65 years and older have lower rates of injuries and
illness.... older workers are more likely to be aware of safety in
the workplace and, therefore, less likely to have an accident... older workers tend to develop their own coping strategies (such as
pacing, anticipation, planning and organisation) as they age, and these
strategies may help them to reduce their injury risk... selection factors may be important. That is, older employees may seek to
move out of occupations or industries where their risk of injury or illness
would otherwise tend to increase with age and into other forms of employment,
phased retirement or early retirement. Older workers may also withdraw from the
workforce prematurely and involuntarily due to ill health or
disability.[7] - WorkCover SA finds that there are lower injury rates amongst older workers.
In keeping with the ABS Work Related Injuries report, it finds that in
South Australia:It is not necessarily the person’s
chronological age that predisposes them to injury at work but their prolonged
exposure to health and safety risk factors over time...International research findings indicate that older workers may take longer
to recover from their injuries but WorkCover SA claims data do not show any
increased duration times for older injured
workers.[8]
2.2 Workers’
compensation coverage beyond pension age
- The Review Term of Reference 1.5 requires that ‘any legislative
anomalies and updates that need to be addressed’ ... [do] ‘not
disadvantage workers over the age of 65 and there is no gap between the
workers’ compensation age limit and the foreshadowed increase to the age
pension eligibility age to 67 by
2023.’[9] - In order to not disadvantage any worker over the age of 65, the SRC
Act must be amended to accommodate the increase in the eligibility for the Age
Pension to 67 and extended beyond age 67 to people who remain in the workforce.
While the gap between the new pension age and the Comcare workers’
compensation scheme must be rectified, there is a broader requirement for
coverage of workers aged 67 and older. - Any worker over 67 who is undertaking paid work in the same way as younger
workers should have the right to fair and equitable treatment. It is
discriminatory in action to provide differential treatment in coverage and
entitlements to workers simply because they have reached a certain age. - The Commission would like to see a nationally consistent workers’
compensation framework that provides coherence and fairness in the income
insurance provisions for people who work beyond pension age for as long as they
remain in the workforce. - While the Australian Government has an intention to harmonise some aspects
of Australia’s workers compensation schemes under its National Workers
Compensation Action Plan, the terms of reference are limited to:- the assessment of permanent impairment, and
- definitions of retirement age and the definition of a
worker.[10
- The Commission would now like to see all jurisdictions review the age limits
on their workers compensation schemes with the view to removing them. - In this Review of the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act
1988 (SRC Act) the Australian Government should consider the recent
amendments to workers’ compensation in Western Australia. - The WA Minister for Finance, Commerce and Small Business announced that the
changes in 2011 were to have ‘a positive economic and social impact’
for Western Australia where there is ‘record low unemployment and a need
to maintain experienced and skilled
people’.[11] - The Australian Government is making significant investments to keep people
in the workforce for as long as they are fit and
able.[12] The current limits to the
Comcare workers’ compensation provisions are at cross purposes with many
Australian Government policies and initiatives aimed at retaining an experienced
mature-age workforce.
3 Recommendation
- The Australian Human Rights Commission recommends
the following amendments to s 23(1) of the SRC Act:- The removal of all age limits on weekly incapacity payments for workers
covered by the Comcare scheme; and - The inclusion of non-discriminatory weekly incapacity payment provisions,
similar to those adopted for the Western Australia’s workers’
compensation scheme.
- The removal of all age limits on weekly incapacity payments for workers
[1] Department of Education,
Employment and Workplace Relations. Terms of Reference for Safety,
Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988 (SRC Act) 2012. At http://www.deewr.gov.au/WorkplaceRelations/Policies/Pages/SRCActReview.aspx (viewed 15 October 2012.
[2] Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations. Terms of Reference
for Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988 (SRC Act) 2012. At http://www.deewr.gov.au/WorkplaceRelations/Policies/Pages/SRCActReview.aspx (viewed 15 October 2012.
[3] Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations. Terms of Reference
for Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988 (SRC Act) 2012. At http://www.deewr.gov.au/WorkplaceRelations/Policies/Pages/SRCActReview.aspx (viewed 15 October 2012.
[4] Peter
Hanks QC, Review of the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988 – Issues Paper, September 2012. At http://www.deewr.gov.au/WorkplaceRelations/Policies/Pages/SRCActReview.aspx (viewed 15 October 2012.
[5] Australian Bureau of Statistics, 6324.0 - Work-Related Injuries, Australia,
2009-10, 2010. At http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/Latestproducts/6324.0Main
per
cent20Features32009-10?opendocument&tabname=Summary&prodno=6324.0&issue=2009-10&num=&view=
(viewed 1 November 2010).
[6] Australian Bureau of Statistics, Work-related injury or illness down, men
still at most risk, 6324.0 - Work-Related Injuries, Australia, 2009-10.
(Media Release, 13 December 2010). At http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/Latestproducts/6324.0Media
per
cent20Release12009-10?opendocument&tabname=Summary&prodno=6324.0&issue=2009-10&num=&view=
(viewed 1 November 2011).
[7] Australian Public Service Commission, Productive and safe workplaces for an
ageing workforce, 2003. At http://www.apsc.gov.au/publications03/maturecomcare3.htm (viewed 1 November 2011).
[8]K.
Barnett, J. Spoehr, E. Parnis, Exploring the Impact of an Ageing Workforce on
the South Australian Workers’ Compensation Scheme, Key findings, The
Australian Institute for Social Research, 2008. p.4.
[9] Department of Education,
Employment and Workplace Relations. Terms of Reference for Safety,
Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988 (SRC Act) 2012. At http://www.deewr.gov.au/WorkplaceRelations/Policies/Pages/SRCActReview.aspx (viewed 15 October 2012.
[10] Safe Work Australia, National Workers’ Compensation Action Plan
2010–2013, Commonwealth Government Australia, pp. 4-5. At http://safeworkaustralia.gov.au/AboutSafeWorkAustralia/WhatWeDo/Publications/Pages/WCPlan2010-2013.aspx (viewed 18 October 2011).
[11] Western Australian Minister for Finance, Commerce and Small Business, Better
Workers’ compensation for over 65s, (Media Release 18 August 2011). At http://www.mediastatements.wa.gov.au/Pages/default.aspx?ItemId=143293 (viewed 19 October 2011).
[12] Australian Government department of Employment, Education and Workplace
Relations, Experience+ New incentives and support for mature age job
seekers. At http://www.deewr.gov.au/Employment/Programs/ExpPlus/Pages/supportformatureagejobseekers.aspx (viewed 18 October 2012).