ABCC commissioner Stephen McBurney says lawlessness could thrive if the construction industry is left unregulated.Credit:Dominic Lorrimer
Labor has promised to scrap both the ABCC and the Registered Organisations Commission (ROC) if it wins government,with Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese previously calling them “discredited and politicised”. The ABCC was created under former prime minister John Howard in 2005,scrapped under Julia Gillard in 2012,then revived under Tony Abbott in 2016.
“This industry needs a regulator,in whatever shape or form it is. Unregulated,we will see a continuation of unlawful conduct at the level we’ve seen over a sustained period,” Mr McBurney said in an interview withThe Sydney Morning Herald andThe Age. He said it was “correct” that lawlessness would flourish if the commission were to cease.
Mr McBurney said 87 of the 106 court cases resolved in the past five years had been against the Construction,Forestry,Maritime,Mining and Energy Union,79 of which were decided in the watchdog’s favour. These resulted in $14.7 million in fines for the union and its officials.
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But the union’s construction division national secretary,Dave Noonan,said Mr McBurney was “clearly ... making a political intervention in the run-up to the election” and called for the commission to be abolished.
“The ABCC’s there to protect corrupt employers from being held to account by a strong union,that’s why John Howard set it up,” Mr Noonan said.
Mr McBurney said,as a statutory officer,he was bound to discharge his role “apolitically and impartially” and the lifespan of the body was beyond his control,however,it was vital the industry be regulated because it had some “underlying problems with observance of the law”.