Inquiry into Stolen Wages
SUBMISSION TO THE SENATE LEGAL AND CONSTITUTIONAL
REFERENCES COMMITTEE INQUIRY INTO STOLEN WAGES
1 August 2006
Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission
Level 8, 133 Castlereagh St
GPO Box 5218
Sydney NSW 2001
Ph. (02) 9284 9600
A. Introduction
- The
Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (‘the Commission’)
makes this submission to the Inquiry into Stolen Wages (‘the
Inquiry’) being conducted by the Senate Legal and Constitutional
References Committee (‘the
Committee’).
- The
Commission welcomes the Committee’s Inquiry. Many issues involving the
underpayment, withholding and misappropriation of wages earned by Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander people remain unresolved. The failure to adequately
compensate Indigenous people who were discriminated against in employment on the
basis of their race remains a significant human rights issue in Australia and a
matter of great concern to the
Commission.
B. Scope
of this submission
- The
Commission has been, and continues to be, involved in a number of cases
involving claims of racial discrimination in Queensland under the Racial
Discrimination Act 1975 (Cth)
(‘the RDA’), relating to the underpayment of wages to Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander people. As a result of its involvement in these matters,
the Commission has chosen to focus this submission on these cases and related
developments.
- This
submission highlights the following significant issues that the Commission urges
the Committee to take into account:
- The
importance of underpayment in any comprehensive examination of ‘stolen
wages’;
- The
limited coverage of the Queensland government’s Underpayment of Award
Wages scheme for Indigenous people whose wages were underpaid by the
State;
- The
exclusion from the Queensland government’s Underpayment of Award Wages
scheme of those Indigenous people who were employed by church organisations on
mission communities that were funded by government;
and
- The
difficulties faced by Indigenous people seeking a remedy under the RDA for
underpayment of wages.
- The
Commission is conscious of the important work done by other groups and
individuals concerning allegations of the failure to pay money held by
governments ostensibly on trust for Indigenous workers. The Commission also
regards these allegations as raising serious human rights issues and welcomes
the current Inquiry as a forum in which these issues can be further
examined.
- The
Commission supports the suggestion in the terms of reference that there is a
need to ‘set the record straight’ through a national forum to
publicly air the complexity and consequences of government control (direct and
indirect) over Indigenous labour and finances.
- The
focus of this submission on developments in Queensland should not be understood
as suggesting that the issue of stolen wages is exclusively, or even primarily,
one affecting Indigenous people in that State alone. This focus follows from the
fact that the cases brought under the RDA upon which the Commission’s
submission focuses have, to date, originated in
Queensland.
C. Underpayment
and the terms of reference
- The
terms of reference do not make specific reference to underpayment. However, the
Commission submits that underpayment of wages by government to Indigenous
workers clearly falls within paragraph (b) of the Inquiry’s terms of
reference: ‘all financial arrangements regarding their wages’.
- While
wages ‘stolen’ by means such as fraud and misappropriation form an
important part of the present Inquiry, the Commission submits that the issue of
underpayment should also form a significant component of it. As the information
presented in this submission demonstrates, it is an issue that affects many
Indigenous people.
D. Employment
on church-run missions and the terms of
reference
- The
terms of reference commence ‘With regard to Indigenous workers whose paid
labour was controlled by Government...’ (emphasis added). The Commission submits that the word
‘control’ should not be narrowly construed. It should include forms
of indirect control and the Committee should consider the employment of
Indigenous people by church organisations on ‘mission’ communities
that were funded by government and were regulated by State legislation, as
occurred in Queensland.
- As
will be seen from this submission, Indigenous people employed by church
organisations on missions, but not directly employed by the Queensland
government, are a group otherwise facing significant difficulties in obtaining
compensation for underpayment of their wages.
- In
the alternative, the Commission urges the Inquiry to seek an extension of its
terms of reference to explicitly include the position of all Indigenous people
employed on church-run ‘mission’
communities that
were funded by government.
E. Underpayment
of wages in Queensland
- This
section provides an overview of litigation and government responses to the issue
of underpayment of wages to Indigenous workers in Queensland. This is a
significant issue and many aspects of it remain
unresolved.
(i) The
Palm Island Wages Case
- In
1985 and 1986, a number of Aboriginal people from Queensland’s Palm Island
lodged a complaint of racial discrimination with the
Commission[1] alleging underpayment of wages by the State of Queensland. They claimed that they were discriminated against because of their Aboriginality in that they were
-
paid
wages at a rate less than that paid to people who were not Aboriginal;
and -
employed
on terms and conditions significantly less favourable than were provided to
people who were not Aboriginal.
- The
claims covered the period 31 October 1975 (the commencement date of the RDA) to
31 May 1984 (when the administration of Palm Island was transferred from the
government to an elected Aboriginal council under the Community
Services (Aborigines) Act
1984 (Qld)).
- A
decision was handed down by the Commission in 1996, finding that six of the
complainants had been discriminated against by the State: Bligh and
Ors v State of
Queensland[2] (‘Palm
Island WagesCase’).
Commissioner Carter concluded that the complainants were ‘demonstrably the
victims of racial discrimination’ by reason of the entrenched policy of
the Queensland government during the relevant time to pay Aboriginal workers
less than non-Aboriginal workers doing the same
work.[3]
- While
evidence received by the Commission suggested that the loss of income for
individual complainants ranged from $8,573.66 to
$20,982.97,[4] Commissioner Carter decided to award $7,000 to each of the successful
complainants. [5] This was due to difficulties in precisely and accurately assessing their loss,
including the lack of records and faulty recollection of
details.[6]
(ii) Responses
to Palm Island Wages
Case
Underpayment
of award wages process
- In
response to the decision in the Palm
Island Wages Case, the
Queensland government introduced the Underpayment of Award Wages Process
(‘UAW process’) on 31 May 1999. This process made a single payment
of $7,000 available to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people employed by
the government on Aboriginal reserves between 31 October 1975 (the commencement
date of the RDA) and 29 October 1986 (from which point Award wages were paid to
all workers).
- It
is understood that 5,729 claims were paid under the UAW process, totalling
approximately $40
million.[7]
- There
were, however, a number of features to the UAW process which limited its
capacity to compensate people for their
loss:
- The
amount of $7,000 was a flat sum, paid regardless of the total amount by which a
person was
underpaid.[8]
- The
period of 1975-1986 covered by the process, while reflecting the dates during
which the underpayment of wages was potentially discriminatory under the RDA,
excluded earlier periods of employment during which people were
underpaid.
- People
employed by church organisations on ‘mission’ communities (such as
Hopevale, Wujal Wujal, Doomadgee, Arukun and Mornington Island) were not
eligible for compensation as
they were not directly employed by the
State.
- People
accepting payment under the UAW process were required to sign a deed to waive
their rights to recover further
compensation.
- The
closing date for applications was 31 January
2003.
- The
UAW process only compensated those people alive as at 31 May 1999. The estates
of workers who had died before that time were therefore not eligible for
payment.
- The
Commission is also concerned that people eligible for payment under the UAW
process may not have been in a position to make an informed decision about
whether to accept payment under it. People considering accepting this one-off
capped payment were unlikely to have access to records that would have enabled
them to properly determine the extent of any liability that the government may
have had for underpayment. The problem of the unavailability of records and
incomplete recollections was recognised in the Palm
Island Wages
Case.
Indigenous
Wages and Savings Reparation Process
- The
Queensland Government also introduced the Indigenous Wages and Savings
Reparation Process in November 2002. This was not related to the issue of underpayment of wages. The process offered
limited payments to people whose wages and savings were controlled under
Queensland ‘Protection Acts’. People alive on 9 May 2002 who were
born before 1952 were eligible for payment of $4,000 and people born between
1952 and 1956 were eligible for
$2,000.[9]
- Many
of the concerns raised above in relation to the UAW process apply equally to the
Indigenous Wages and Savings Reparation Process. In particular, the Commission
is concerned about the limited availability of, and access to, information that
would have enabled those eligible under this scheme to make an informed decision
about whether to accept the payment offered. In circumstances where the offer
under the scheme was available only for a limited time and was made on the basis
that its acceptance would conclusively determine any rights to compensation, the
lack of access to information raises a particular potential for
unfairness.
- The
previous Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner, Dr
William Jonas AM, also expressed concern at the time that the Indigenous Wages
and Savings Reparation Process was announced that there had been inadequate
consultation with people potentially affected. Dr Jonas
stated:
Only
about 10% of people potentially affected took part in the consultation process;
it was presented as a once only 'take it or leave it' offer, placing
considerable stress on people often living in dire economic circumstances; there
was a lack of independent legal advice on the implications of accepting the
offer; and there was significant confusion as to the purpose of the
consultations...[10]
- Dr
Jonas was also critical of the compensation offered under the scheme, suggesting
that the amounts of $2,000 and $4,000 were arbitrarily chosen and
inadequate.[11]
(iii)
Baird v State of Queensland
- As
noted above, the Queensland UAW process did not extend to Indigenous people who
were employed on church-run mission communities. The decision in Baird v
State of
Queensland[12] (‘Baird’)
illustrates the difficulties that may be
faced by people seeking a remedy under the RDA in those circumstances.
The
applicants’ case
- The
Indigenous applicants in Baird claimed that between 1975 and
1986 they were employed on one or other of the Hope Vale and Wujal Wujal
missions by the Queensland Government (‘the Government’). They
alleged that during this period they were paid rates less than other
non-Indigenous persons employed by the Government to perform similar work and/or
below relevant levels established by applicable industrial awards.
- Wujal
Wujal and Hopevale were ‘reserves’ for the purposes of the Aborigines
Act 1971 (Qld). During the
period covered by the application, the Government had placed the reserves under
the management of the Lutheran Church of Australia (‘the Church’) in
accordance with that
Act.[13] These cases therefore differed from the Palm
Island Wages Case where the
management of the community was directly in the hands of the Government.
- The
Government provided funding to the Church for the running of the missions by way
of annual grant. The level of such funding was found to reflect, to some extent,
the cost to Government of managing reserves. Grants included amounts identified
as being for wages payable to Indigenous residents and these amounts reflected a
wage rate less than the relevant award rate. However, once the grants were made,
it was essentially for the Church to decide how the grant money was to be
spent.
- The
applicants claimed that the underpayment of their wages constituted race
discrimination for which the Government was ultimately responsible. The Church
was not a respondent to the
litigation.[14] The race discrimination was said to be contrary to two provisions of the
RDA:
-
section
9, the general prohibition against discrimination, and -
section
15, the specific prohibition on discrimination in
employment.
The
Court’s decision
- The
Court accepted that some of the applicants had proven economic loss of between
$8,000 and $37,000 as a result of underpayment of their
wages.[15] However, the underpayment was not the result of discrimination by the Government
contrary to the
RDA.
- The
Court rejected the application in relation to s 15 (discrimination in
employment) on the basis that the Government did not employ the applicants. The
Court
stated:
No
doubt the Government allowed and expected the Church to perform functions on the
missions, which functions the Government would, itself, have performed in the
absence of the Church. However, that does not lead to the conclusion that
persons apparently employed by the Church... were employed by the Government.
Nothing in [the relevant legislation] suggests that the Church or council was
authorised to employ staff on behalf of the
Government.[16]]
- The
Court also rejected the applicants’ argument that the calculation and
payment of grants by the Government involved discrimination contrary to s 9
which provides a general prohibition against discriminatory acts. The applicants
argued that use of pay rates in the calculation of grants which differed from
rates paid to non-Aboriginal Government employees and/or specified in awards
discriminated against them.
- The
Court found
that:
- There
could be no doubt that Indigenous people in Queensland were, for some or all of
the period in question, significantly disadvantaged and one such disadvantage
was that wage levels paid on reserves were lower than levels prescribed by
awards and therefore paid in the general community;
- It
is probable that the system of reserves established and maintained under
Queensland legislation was a cause of such disadvantage;
- The
Government’s apparent acceptance of the fact that the Church was not
paying award wages on the missions also contributed; and
- Such
acceptance was the natural consequence of the fact that the Government was
paying below-award wages to Indigenous workers on the reserves which it
administered.[17]
- The
Court nevertheless held that there was no discrimination in the payment of
grants by the
Government:
The
applicants have established that the grants were not sufficient, themselves, to
enable the Church to pay award wages, but there is no basis for asserting that
the calculation of the grants involved any discriminatory element. Any
discrimination arose from the discrepancy between the amounts paid to indigenous
workers (which amounts were derived from the grants) on the one hand, and
amounts paid to other workers (which amounts were unrelated to the grants) on
the other. That discrimination was the result of numerous factors, unrelated to
the acts upon which the applicants rely. For this reason
that discrimination
was not involved in those acts. In these proceedings the applicants complain of
discrimination against them as employees, not that they failed to receive a fair
share of public resources
generally.[18]]
- The
Court nevertheless expressed the following concern at the end of its
reasoning:
At
least after [29 May 1979] the Government was aware that indigenous workers on
reserves were entitled to award wages. It was also aware that the RDA might
require that indigenous workers be paid at equivalent rates to non-indigenous
workers. Notwithstanding my conclusion that the applicants cannot succeed in
this
action,
it is of grave concern that the Government should have chosen to ignore breaches
of both Queensland and Commonwealth legislation. This is particularly so when
it was at the expense of vulnerable citizens. However it
is fair to say that this attitude was the culmination of a long history of
neglect of indigenous people, based on a tacit assumption that they were
disadvantaged by choice. That assumption was false. In the 1970s and early
1980s our attitudes were changing, but such changes have only gradually been
reflected in our treatment of indigenous people. Thus the Government treated
its obligation to meet the basic entitlements and needs of these people as a
matter of relatively low priority, to some extent conditional upon further
funding from the Commonwealth.It
is no doubt an inevitable part of inter-governmental dealings in a federation
that there be haggling concerning funding and responsibilities. However
governments should not lose sight of the fact that hard bargaining can
disadvantage those whom they are obliged to
protect.[19] (emphasis added)
Appeal
- The
decision in Baird was appealed to the Full
Court of the Federal Court. The appeal was heard in February 2006 and a decision
is, at the time of writing, reserved. The Commission was granted leave to appear
in that matter as an intervener and made written and oral submissions which
argued that the Court at first instance had erred in its approach to a number of
issues.[20]
- Although
the outcome of the matter is still unknown, the matter nevertheless highlights
the potential difficulties faced by people seeking a remedy for underpayment of
wages through litigation under the RDA.
(iv) Other
current litigation
- Indigenous
people from other former mission communities, namely Doomadgee, Mornington
Island and Aurukun, are also engaged in litigation seeking a remedy for alleged
racial discrimination in the underpayment of wages. The Commission’s
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner and Acting
Race Discrimination Commissioner has been granted leave to appear in three of
those
cases.[21]
- At
the time of writing, the State of Queensland has sought to have one set of
proceedings permanently stayed. The basis for the application is that the State
is unable to defend the application due to the time that has passed since the
events and the consequent unavailability of significant evidence including that
of witnesses who are deceased or unable to recall matters due to age and/or
ill-health.
- The
Court has, at the time of writing, reserved its decision on the application for
a permanent stay. However, the matter again highlights the difficulties faced by
people seeking a remedy for alleged underpayment of wages through litigation
under the RDA.
(v) Voluntary
work of community organisations and individuals
- The
Commission recognises the significant work done by community organisations,
lawyers and other individuals acting on a voluntary basis or with very limited
resources, to assist people to assert their rights under the RDA and make
decisions in relation to government compensation schemes,
- The
scale of the task involved in providing this assistance, given
- the
potential numbers of Indigenous workers involved, - the
difficulties in accessing relevant records, - the
necessary forensic/accounting exercises that follow from any such access, and - the
complexity of litigation
makes
this task a difficult one. The Commission therefore welcomes the intervention of
this Inquiry and the opportunity for detailed scrutiny it will bring to these
issues.
F. Conclusion
- The
issue of underpayment of wages to Indigenous workers in Queensland employed by
government and on government-funded missions is one that is yet to be resolved
satisfactorily. The Commission urges the Committee to recognise in its report
the importance of this issue with a view to achieving just outcomes for those
who have suffered loss as a result of this
discrimination.
- The
Commission supports the suggestion in the terms of reference that there is a
need to ‘set the record straight’ through a national forum to
publicly air the complexity and consequences of government control (direct and
indirect) over Indigenous labour and finances.
- The
Commission has sought to focus these submissions on a particular issue of
relevance to the Committee about which it has special knowledge. The Commission
would, however, be pleased to provide the Inquiry with further assistance in
relation to human rights issues that arise in the course of the Inquiry,
particularly once more of the facts relating to the issue of ‘stolen
wages’ become clear.
1
August
2006
Human
Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission
[1] At that time, the Human Rights Commission, the forerunner of the current Human
Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission.
[2] [1996] HREOCA
28.
[3] Ibid part 11.
[4] Ibid part
9.
[5] Ibid part
15.
[6] This calculation of damages has been strongly criticised: see Scott McDougall
‘“A Certain Commonality”: Discriminating Against the
Discriminated in the Compensation of Queensland’s Underpaid
Workers’, [2002] ILB 5, available at
http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ILB/2002/5.html.
[7] Communication with Department of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Policy,
25 July 2006.
[8] Of course, one result of this is that the process potentially overpaid some people.
[9] See ‘Indigenous Wages and Savings (1890s-1980s) Reparation Process
Information Sheet:
http://www.datsip.qld.gov.au/pdf/reparations/final_infosheet.pdf.
[10] See Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner, Media
Release 8 November 2002,
http://www.humanrights.gov.au/media_releases/2002/81_02.html.
[11] Ibid. See also Media Release 22 November 2002,
http://www.humanrights.gov.au/media_releases/2002/84_02.html.
[12] [2005] FCA 495.
[13] Ibid
[115]-[116].
[14] Initially the Church was named as a respondent but the applicant discontinued
the proceedings against it. It can be noted that it was not suggested in Baird that the Church had profited from the underpayment of wages – it had paid
out in wages amounts equivalent to the grants received. However, those grants
anticipated payment at under-award rates.
[15] Ibid [148]-[163].
[16] Ibid
[119].
[17] Ibid [135].
[18] Ibid [138].
[19] Ibid [167]-[168].
[20] The Commission’s submissions are available at:
http://www.humanrights.gov.au/legal/intervention/baird.html
[21] Douglas and Others v State of Queensland QUD389/2005; Chong and Others v State
of Queensland and Uniting Church in Australia Property Trust QUD301/2005; Giblet
and Others v State of Queensland and Uniting Church in Australia Property Trust
QUD2000/2005.