Workplace Relations Minister Tony Burke is willing to compromise on the better off overall test.Credit:Alex Ellinghausen
“Up until the summit I’ve been pretty hardline on the better off overall test,and I took the view that if I was expecting everybody else to come forward with compromises and to try to find a way together at the summit,that I should be willing to do the same,” Burke told ABC Radio National on Monday morning.
“So,while I’m very careful and wary of changes to the better off overall test,I’m not ruling out that we might be able to find compromises that make the whole system work more effectively.”
Burke was hesitant to outline what the changes could be but hinted he was agreeable to seeing the ratification of enterprise agreements that had majority support of the workforce,a key ask of business groups.
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“There are tiny clauses,tiny specific rules,agreements that have had,you know,more than 90 per cent support from members,have sometimes been overturned on a technicality,” he said.
“Wherever we can make the system more practical then I’m interested.”
The better off overall test,or BOOT,is a legal threshold that ensures individual workers do not go backwards in enterprise bargaining. Employers want the test simplified by scrapping clauses to do with hypothetical scenarios and allowing the passage of agreements that have majority workforce backing.