[2015] FWC 7309 |
FAIR WORK COMMISSION |
DECISION |
Fair Work Act 2009
s.789FC - Application for an order to stop bullying
Ms Marie Pasalskyj
(AB2015/407)
COMMISSIONER HAMPTON |
ADELAIDE, 13 NOVEMBER 2015 |
Application for an order to stop bullying – whether workplace conducted by a constitutionally covered business – incorporated association providing services to prisoners - whether trading corporation – extensive government funding – whether funded activities and income should be treated as trading – many activities not in the nature of the government purchasing commercial services – whether other income producing activities trading in nature and significant – some trading activities found – trading activities significant and sufficient to impact upon the character of the association – trading corporation – jurisdiction to deal with alleged conduct found – application to be listed for hearing.
1. Background and case outline
[1] Ms Marie Pasalskyj has made an application under s.789FC of the Fair Work Act 2009 (the FW Act) for an order to stop bullying conduct she alleges has taken, and may in the future take place, within her workplace. The workplace concerned is conducted by Outcare Inc T/A Outcare (Outcare or the employer).
[2] Outcare is a community services organisation that provides a range of services to offenders and former prisoners and their families in Western Australia. Ms Pasalskyi is the Manager of the employer’s Family Care Centres that are operated in the prisons for the Department of Corrective Services (WA) (DoCS).
[3] Having conducted preliminary proceedings, arrangements were made for the determination of the application. In the course of that preparation, Outcare raised a jurisdictional objection concerning its status as an organisation.
[4] It is common ground that for Ms Pasalskyj’s application to proceed, the behaviour must have taken place in a workplace that is conducted by a constitutionally-covered business. This arises from s.789FD of the FW Act, which is in the following terms:
“789FD When is a worker bullied at work?
(1) A worker is bullied at work if:
(a) while the worker is at work in a constitutionally-covered business:
(i) an individual; or
(ii) a group of individuals;
repeatedly behaves unreasonably towards the worker, or a group of workers of which the worker is a member; and
(b) that behaviour creates a risk to health and safety.
(2) To avoid doubt, subsection (1) does not apply to reasonable management action carried out in a reasonable manner.
(3) If a person conducts a business or undertaking (within the meaning of the Work Health and Safety Act 2011) and either:
(a) the person is:
(i) a constitutional corporation; or
(ii) the Commonwealth; or
(iii) a Commonwealth authority; or
(iv) a body corporate incorporated in a Territory; or
(b) the business or undertaking is conducted principally in a Territory or Commonwealth place;
then the business or undertaking is a constitutionally-covered business.
[5] Outcare is located in Western Australia and does not fall within the scope of s.789FD(3)(a)(ii), (iii), (iv) or (b). Accordingly, in order to fall within the scope of s.789FD(3) of the FW Act, Outcare must be a constitutional corporation.
[6] The term “constitutional corporation” is defined in s.12 of the FW Act in the following terms:
“constitutional corporation means a corporation to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.”
[7] The Constitution, in effect, defines “constitutional corporations” as follows:
“Foreign corporations, and trading or financial corporations formed within the limits of the Commonwealth.” 1
[8] It is also common ground that of these, only the concept of a trading corporation is potentially relevant to Outcare. It is apparent that Outcare is incorporated within the limits of the Commonwealth.
[9] Outcare contends that it is not a trading corporation within the meaning of the FW Act due to its activities and nature, and as a result, the workplace is not conducted by a constitutionally-covered business. In support of that proposition, it relies upon the evidence of Mr Justin Clarke, its Finance Manager.
[10] Ms Pasalskyj contends that the activities of the employer include significant government funded programs and that these, and other activities, are trading in nature and mean that it should be considered to be a trading corporation. Ms Pasalskyi provided a sworn statement and also relies upon other publicly available information.
[11] In addition to the provision of comprehensive written submissions, a hearing was conducted given certain factual disputes.
2. The broad operations of Outcare
[12] Before dealing with the detailed positions of the parties it is appropriate to initially consider the nature and operations of the employer in broad terms. I leave aside for the moment the characterisation of the various activities and the limited factual disputes that exist.
[13] Outcare has been operating since the mid-1960s as a provider of rehabilitation services in Western Australia. Originally, Outcare was established as the Civil Rehabilitation Committee of WA, which was formed at the same time as the then Probation and Parole Service.
[14] Outcare is engaged in the community services sector and is funded primarily by the State and Federal Governments to provide services to offenders in the prison setting and when they are released from prison to help the offenders reintegrate back into the community. It is generally regarded as being a “not-for-profit” organisation.
[15] Outcare is an incorporated association pursuant to the Associations Incorporation Act (1987) (WA) and is registered with an Australian Business Number (ABN). The incorporation provides its corporate status for present purposes.
[16] Outcare is classed as a public benevolent institution and is eligible to accept tax deductible gifts. It is governed by a board comprising a President, two Vice Presidents, a Treasurer and a combination of elected and co-opted board members.
[17] Outcare’s current Constitution 2 establishes its basic purpose in the following terms at clause 3:3
a. to prevent crime and improve community safety;
b. to maximise the successful reintegration of defendants, offenders, ex� offenders and their families into the community and to reduce re-offending behaviours;
c. to identify and provide the necessary support and services for defendants, Offenders, ex-offenders and their families. The support and services may be in the areas of accommodation, career development, training, employment, health, clothing, household goods and financial relief and counselling;
d. to identify and provide the necessary support and services for families, youth, special needs groups and others identified from time to time who are in need of assistance through offending influences;
e. to develop partnerships and strategic alliances with government, non� government and crime prevention organisations whose work affects or supports the successful rehabilitation of defendants, offenders and ex� offenders;
f. to generate and increase community and government awareness of the causes of crime and the need for community and government acceptance of, and participation in, processes which support the successful reintegration of defendants, offenders, ex-offenders, and their families, into the community; and
g. to reduce the risk of persons of any age becoming involved in the criminal justice system and being put at risk of incarceration.”
[18] Clause 3.8 of the Constitution provides that the property and income of Outcare is to be applied solely towards the promotion of the objects or purposes of Outcare and no part of that property or income may be paid or otherwise distributed, directly or indirectly, to its members except as bona fide compensation for services rendered or expenses incurred on behalf of Outcare. I note that this constraint is consistent with associations that may be incorporated under the Associations Incorporation Act (1987) (WA). 4
[19] Outcare is a major non-government provider of crime prevention in Western Australia and it works closely with offenders, ex-offenders and their families, as well as the broader community, government and non-government organisations.
[20] Outcare provides services to clients during the six months prior to their release from prison and also during the twelve months subsequent to their release. The main services that Outcare provides are designed to deal with the issues that contributed to the original offending behaviour in an effort to reduce the likelihood that the client will re-offend. These services include offering support in finding accommodation, providing training and education, assistance in finding employment and referrals to other service providers.
[21] Outcare also offers a broad range of education, intervention and reform programs aimed at reducing the re-offending rate of people in conflict with the justice system and supporting their successful reintegration into the community.
[22] During the 2014/2015 financial year, Outcare delivered sixteen programs or services focusing on specific groups including adult males, youth males, and individuals with complex needs, Aboriginal clients, adult females and family members of clients.
[23] In order for Outcare to operate, it is dependent on funding received through the DoCS, the Mental Health Commission (MHC), the Disability Services Commission (DSC), the Commonwealth Department of Social Services (DSS) and the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet (PMC).
[24] The property and income of Outcare for the Financial Year 2014/2015 includes the following:
Income from funders |
$11.2m |
Funds carried forward from funders from the previous year |
$1.8m |
Interest on term deposits |
$220k |
Cash at bank |
$171k |
[25] The net assets of Outcare for the Financial Year 2014/2015 are set out in the provisional (unaudited) Balance Sheet for Financial Year 2014/2015:
Closing 30/06/2015 | ||
CURRENT ASSETS |
||
Cash at Bank |
170,747 | |
Receivables & Prepayments |
58,754 | |
Term Deposits |
6,295,978 | |
Total Current Assets |
6,525,479 | |
NON CURRENT ASSETS |
||
Property, Plant & Equipment |
2,381,644 | |
Total Non-Current Assets |
2,381,644 | |
TOTAL ASSETS |
8,907,123 | |
CURRENT LIABILITIES |
||
Trade and Other Payables |
636,639 | |
Deferred Income |
492,217 | |
Provisions |
527,111 | |
Undelivery of DSC Contract |
908,598 | |
Carry Forward Grants |
680,989 | |
TOTAL CURRENT LIABILITIES |
3,245,555 | |
Non-Current Liabilities |
||
Long Service Leave |
175,123 | |
NET ASSETS |
5,486,445 | |
ACCUMULATED FUNDS |
||
Retained Earnings |
5,428,746 | |
Scott Scholarship Fund |
57,700 | |
TOTAL ACCUMULATED FUNDS |
5,486,445 |
[26] The total current assets identified in the above table have accumulated since Outcare’s inception in the mid-1960s and the evidence does not reveal where all of these assets have derived from. It is however clear that the funding has included donations from LotteryWest and individuals, and the accumulated product of its activities over time.
[27] In the Financial Year 2014/2015, Outcare retained a provisional surplus which was comprised of the following:
TOTAL | |
Workforce Development |
$26,587 |
Special Needs/Justice Funding |
$25,575 |
Administration |
$212,233 |
[28] Five operational programs ran at a loss of $89,888 bringing the overall surplus to $174,507. The total of the Operational Programs for the Financial Year 2014/2015 created a net loss of $37,727. That is, the funded programs required additional financial support from Outcare's reserves in order to maintain the services.
[29] The total income of Outcare was derived from the following sources to deliver a range of services to the various target groups:
● approximately 7.7% (being $877,295) from PMC to deliver services targeted at Indigenous adult prisoners and Indigenous male youth in the Perth metropolitan area;
● approximately 2.4% (being $271,000) maintenance/rental contribution from accommodation clients offenders newly released from prison who are assessed as having a high risk of returning to custody due to a lack of suitable accommodation;
● approximately 4.5% (being $511,892) from DoCS to deliver the Crisis Accommodation Program which provides short term and emergency accommodation and support services to a number of clients (and, in some instances, their families) who have a high risk of returning to custody due to a lack of suitable accommodation;
● approximately 3.8% (being $430,500) from DoCS to provide an Accommodation Transition Program in the metropolitan area to support dangerous sexual offenders;
● approximately 5.6% (being $644,466) from MHC to provide non-clinical community support services as part of the “Adult Mental Health Court Diversion Support Program”;
● approximately 4.5% (being $516,200) from MHC to provide support services to young people who have mental health needs and are part of the Perth Children's Court system;
● approximately 0.9% (being $106,039) from Lotterywest to provide emergency relief services to clients in immediate financial crisis to assist ex�offenders reintegrate into the community;
● approximately 12.6% (being $1,435,811) from DoCS to provide Family Support Services to public prisons to encourage offenders to maintain family contact by implementing and maintaining a supportive and positive environment;
● approximately 18.5% (being $2,118,066) from DoCS to provide a Live Works Program which provides traineeships, apprenticeships and other employment to young Indigenous men who have had contact with the justice criminal system;
● approximately 2% (being $226,756) from the Commonwealth Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs to provide a housing and homelessness prevention program called “Re-Connect” which provides rental subsidies for low and moderate-income households, and to fund homelessness prevention initiatives to reduce the impact of homelessness;
● approximately 22% (being $2,511,949) from DoCS to provide a support program called “The Re-Entry Link Program” that is targeted at ex-offenders re-entering the community;
● approximately 2% (being $223,886) from The Congregation of the Sisters of St John of God to provide support and services specifically to women offenders to provide them with through care services to assist in their rehabilitation and reintegration back into society;
● approximately 1.8% (being $210,633) from the Western Australian Department of Training and Workforce Development to deliver workforce development services to ex-offenders in Western Australia including supporting young people on their employment and career prospects and providing incentives to stay in, or return to, an education or training pathway;
● approximately 7.7% (being $877,412) from DSC to provide individually funded services to ex-offenders with intellectual disabilities living in Western Australia for a period of two (2) years and nine (9) months from 1 October 2013 to 30 June 2016;
● less than 2% (being $189,000) from bank interest;
● approximately 1.3% (being $154,000) from the Youth Housing Renovation program in which clients on the Live Works program renovate Department of Housing properties as the practical learning component of their Certificate II in Construction; and
● approximately 0.5% (being $60,000) from various one off grants received from a number of sources, including, for example, the City of Bayswater. These grants are usually tied to specific deliverable such as art programs for youth in the criminal justice system; and
● approximately 0.2% (being $15,000) from sponsorships for the charity “Nighthoops” which runs a basketball program for high risk youth in the metropolitan area.
[30] The Administration surplus achieved in the 2014/15 year was comprised of $331,000.00 of internal company cost recovery charges matched with $348,000 of expenses, $189,000 in interest from term deposits, and approximately $40,000 other income.
[31] In 2015, Outcare directly employed in the order of 125 staff.
[32] Outcare does not engage in specific fundraising activities.
3. The contentions of the parties
3.1 Outcare
[33] Outcare contends that it is not a trading corporation on the following grounds: 5
● Outcare is an Incorporated Association and does not engage in trading;
● Outcare is registered with an ABN, however this and the fact it is an incorporated association does not determine whether they are a constitutionally-covered business;
● Outcare is funded by the State and Federal Governments to provide services to offenders in the prison setting and to reintegrate offenders back into the community;
● Outcare is engaged in the community services sector and is constituted by a Board who is responsible for the co-ordination and conduct of the affairs of Outcare;
● Outcare heavily relies on State Government funding through DoCS and other departments whereby the majority of its activities or services are carried out subject to government grants which subsidises the services provided by Outcare;
● The grants are typically in the form of bulk grants which might be linked to performance requirements and benchmarks but do not involve a fee for service in the conventional sense;
● The services provided lack the character of buying and selling between Outcare and the funding agency, and are often provided gratuitously to the public and are considered to be an end in themselves. That is, the purpose of the service is not to generate income but rather, to provide the service itself;
● Outcare’s main services include a ‘thoroughcare service’ offering supports in finding accommodation, providing training and education, assistance in finding employment and referrals to other service providers;
● Approximately 82% of Outcare’s programs or services are “block funded”, which means that under the contract the surplus funds left over from the program delivery must be refunded to the department if requested or carried forward to the following year to be spent on the same program;
● Cash reserves are held by Outcare but this has resulted from the compounding effect of interest;
● The remaining funding is paid according to contracts that fall into the following three categories:
● Outcare does not make a profit out of any of the activities because it must remit to the relevant Government department any unexpended funds.
[34] Furthermore, Outcare contends that:
● Service delivery in the programs and services cannot be characterised as “business activities carried on with a view to earning revenue” as all surpluses are either carried forward to the following year for service delivery in the same program or paid back to the funder;
● Its greatest source of revenue is through the provision of State funding through DoCS. Furthermore, the manner in which the employer has come into receipt of funding from DoCS cannot be categorised as a trading activity. Primarily, the Constitution of the employer makes it clear that its primary purpose is not directed at trading functions;
● There exists a limited capacity for the employer to generate income through the operation of the services it provides, primarily because if fees are in fact charged, they may be characterised as nominal at best;
● As was the case in Lawrence 6, the funding the employer receives from the government under contract for the provision of (mostly) free of charge services to community members should be removed from the ordinary concepts of trade or trading. To that end, the employer submits that it is not a trading corporation on the basis that it is engaged in the gratuitous provision of a public welfare service substantially at government expense which is not the conduct of a ‘trade’;
The provision of government funding through DoCS to the employer is completely regulated in terms of the purpose the funding must serve. For the majority of programs, no fee is charged and little if no surplus is generated;
Consequently, the objectives of Outcare show that the very purpose for which the organisation exists is to provide assistance and guidance to individuals with disabilities. It is not to engage in commercial activities predominantly;
● Where income is derived, for example, by sub-leasing premises to other entities that deliver services for the employer, that income is directed to the further delivery of the employer’s services and is, in any event, only peripheral to the employer's activities;
● Therefore, the percentage of the employer’s operations which can be classified as pure trade are insubstantial and in reality, peripheral to its main non-trading functions; and
● Having regard to the above matters, it is clear that the assessment of the nature of the corporation is one of fact and degree. The income from activities that might be considered to be trading activities is not significant in either relative or absolute terms. Rather, those activities in the overall circumstances of the employer’s organisation can be categorised as being insignificant, peripheral and incidental in the sense contemplated by the authorities.
3.2 Ms Pasalskyj
[35] Ms Pasalskyj contends that Outcare is a constitutionally-covered business on the basis that it is a trading corporation. The basis of that contention is as follows: 7
● Outcare is a corporation which has been incorporated under Western Australian legislation, is registered as a business and has an ABN;
● The contracts that Outcare has entered into with DoCS and the MHC are the main contracts for the provision of services by Outcare to those respective departments of Government. These contracts do not represent grants and are contracts for the sale of services, which the respective departments purchase and pay for pursuant to the provision of a tax invoice. The respective department acquits this expenditure as a commercial expense (contract) and not a grant or donation;
● The provision of accommodation to newly released prisoners through its housing stock of 40 properties is a commercial undertaking and is not open to any alternative interpretation. Written “tenancy” agreements are entered into, commercial rent is payable, and local tenancy laws apply. Furthermore, Outcare has entered into detailed and binding leases for the properties and is therefore responsible to the Housing Authority for the proper management of those properties;
● The commercial nature of the contracts with the Government Departments and the commercial nature of the provisions of accommodation by Outcare is not trivial whether viewed from the generation of revenue or from the work carried out by Outcare in providing the service or the accommodation;
● Outcare has now established a commercial enterprise with substantial assets including plant, equipment and buildings. This positions it in the commercial world to provide services to the Government, which on the employer’s own admission it regards as a major funding partner. Further, Outcare has formed a specialist management team to prepare for tendering and procurement in a bid to compete effectively with the emerging corporations;
● It is not relevant whether or not Outcare is involved in the welfare sector of the economy and this has been described by the Federal Court as a distraction; 8
The activities of Outcare are in reality a commercial enterprise with a solid capital foundation with 126 staff selling its services to the Government, which the Government is prepared to purchase on certain terms and conditions. Additionally, Outcare runs a significant accommodation service for its clients which operates on the basis of normal tenancy provisions and the receipt of commercial rent for the properties. The accommodation activity is not trivial; and
● The position of Outcare is not different to that of Bankstown Handicapped Children’s Centre v Hillman 9 (Bankstown).
[36] Ms Pasalskyj further submits that based on Outcare’s activities, the following arises:
● The current balance sheet of the employer and the Treasurer’s annual report in 2014 reads like that of any small or medium size enterprise operating in the commercial world. The balance sheet has grown from the 1990’s when the nett assets were $132,305 and total income was $648,687 to 2015 where nett assets are $5.5million (of which $2.417 million represents property plant and equipment) and total income revenue of $11,379,145 of which $10,840,626 is from contracts and grants;
● Various detailed commercial contracts have been entered into with the DoCS and the MHC on behalf of the Government of Western Australia. These contracts have detailed and explicit key performance indicators and reporting obligations and in the main require the presentation of a Tax Invoice to secure payment. The expenditure by DoCS in obtaining the services provided by Outcare is reported by that Department in its annual report as being for contracts with the employer; and
● Outcare operates in an increasingly competitive environment where a range of other not for profit (NFP) businesses are operating in the same field as Outcare and some if not all are regarded as a threat to the respondent’s financial viability.
[37] Furthermore, Ms Pasalskyj submits that Outcare has grown significantly since it began and enacted the charitable aims and objects that are set out in the Outcare Constitution. Outcare is well positioned to provide services to Government to achieve its objects both with its capital depth and staff resources, which underpin its activities that are commercial in nature. If the term trading corporation is given a wide and liberal interpretation, the employer should be found to be a trading corporation for the purposes of the FW Act.
4. What is a trading corporation?
[38] The following discussion is taken from my decision in McInnes, 10 which was comprehensively referred to by both parties. I have also extended the discussion based upon the submissions of the parties in this matter.
[39] The approach of the Courts and Tribunals to the meaning of a trading corporation has been conveniently summarised by Steytler P in Aboriginal Legal Service (WA) Inc v Lawrence (No 2.)11 (Lawrence). Having reviewed the developments in the approach of the High Court to arrive at what might be described as the activities test, His Honour found as follows (footnotes and references omitted):
“68 The more relevant (for present purposes) principles that might be drawn from these and other cases are as follows:
(1) A corporation may be a trading corporation even though trading is not its predominant activity: Adamson (239); State Superannuation Board (303 - 304); Tasmanian Dam case (156, 240, 293); Quickenden [49] - [51], [101]; Hardeman [18].
(2) However, trading must be a substantial and not merely a peripheral activity: Adamson (208, 234, 239); State Superannuation Board (303 - 304); Hughes v Western Australian Cricket Association Inc [1986] FCA 357; (1986) 19 FCR 10, 20; Fencott (622); Tasmanian Dam case (156, 240, 293); Mid Density (584); Hardeman [22].
(3) In this context, 'trading' is not given a narrow construction. It extends beyond buying and selling to business activities carried on with a view to earning revenue and includes trade in services: Ku-ring-gai (139, 159 - 160); Adamson (235); Actors and Announcers Equity Association of Australia v Fontana Films Pty Ltd [1982] HCA 23; (1982) 150 CLR 169, 184 - 185, 203; Bevanere Pty Ltd v Lubidineuse [1985] FCA 134; (1985) 7 FCR 325, 330; Quickenden [101].
(4) The making of a profit is not an essential prerequisite to trade, but it is a usual concomitant: St George County Council (539, 563, 569); Ku-ring-gai (140, 167); Adamson (219); E (343, 345); Pellow [28].
(5) The ends which a corporation seeks to serve by trading are irrelevant to its description: St George County Council (543, 569); Ku-ring-gai (160); State Superannuation Board (304 - 306); E (343). Consequently, the fact that the trading activities are conducted is the public interest or for a public purpose will not necessarily exclude the categorisation of those activities as ‘trade’: St George County Council (543) (Barwick CJ); Tasmanian Dam case (156) (Mason J).
(6) Whether the trading activities of an incorporated body are sufficient to justify its categorisations as a ‘trading corporation’ is a question of fact and degree: Adamson (234) (Mason J); State Superannuation Board (304); Fencott (589); Quickenden [52], [101]; Mid Density (584).
(7) The current activities of the corporation, while an important criterion for determining its characterisation, are not the only criterion. Regard must also be had to the intended purpose of the corporation, although a corporation that carries on trading activities can be found to be a trading corporation even if it was not originally established to trade: State Superannuation Board (294 - 295, 304 - 305); Fencott (588 - 589, 602, 611, 622 - 624); Hughes (20); Quickenden [101]; E (344); Hardeman [18].
(8) The commercial nature of an activity is an element in deciding whether the activity is in trade or trading: Adamson (209, 211); Ku-ring-gai (139, 142, 160, 167); Bevanere (330); Hughes (19 - 20); E (343); Fowler; Hardeman [26].”
[40] This summary was adopted by the Full Court of the Federal Court in Bankstown.
[41] Given the facts of this matter, it is also appropriate to further consider how government funding and related activities have been treated by Courts and Tribunals in terms of the characterisation of those activities for present purposes.
[42] In Lawrence, the Western Australian Court of Appeal held by majority that the legal service involved was not a trading corporation. It found that the funding it received from the Commonwealth Government under contract for the provision of (mostly) free of charge legal services to indigenous Australians was removed from the ordinary concepts of trade or trading. 12 The minority held that the legal service had entered into a trading arrangement because its services were provided after a competitive tendering process.13
[43] In Fowler v Syd West Personnel Ltd 14 the Australian Industrial Relations Commission was dealing with a corporation established to create and operate a long term employment program for people with intellectual disabilities and to place other workers in employment. Much of its income came from Commonwealth Government grants under contract. The Commission concluded that the respondent was not a trading corporation on the basis that it was engaged in the gratuitous provision of a public welfare service substantially at government expense which was not the conduct of a ‘trade’.
[44] In an earlier case of Pellow v Umoona Community Council Inc 15 the Australian Industrial Relations Commission distinguished between grant funded social service activities and agency arrangements involving a charge on a government department for the provision of a designated service.16
[45] These decisions must also be considered in the context of the later decisions of the Federal Court.
[46] In Bankstown, the Full Court was also dealing with an incorporated association that received most of its funding from government. The Court posed the question in the following manner:
“51 Many activities and services which have historically been provided mainly or exclusively by government are now carried on by companies which undertake those activities or provide those services with the objective of making a profit. Examples are legion and included prison services, electricity generation and distribution, potable water collection or production and distribution and the construction and maintenance of roadways. There can be little doubt that, at least in the ordinary course, companies which undertake those activities or provide those services can be characterised as trading corporations. Does the fact that a corporation likewise provides such services but on effectively a cost recovery basis only, render it inappropriate to characterise that corporation as a trading corporation?”
[47] The Full Court focused in particular on the funding and services provided in relation to the ‘Out-of-Home Care’ (OOHC) programs under which the Centre was paid for services provided to the relevant government agency (DOCS) on a fee for service basis. It concluded:
“54 If those substantial activities can be characterised as trading, then the Association can likewise be characterised as a trading corporation. So much is apparent from the authorities including, in this Court, the judgment of the Full Court in Quickenden (at [51]). The Association undoubtedly provided services to the State and was remunerated for doing so. It is, in our opinion, a proper characterisation of the Association's activities to describe them as selling those services to the State and, correspondingly, the State purchasing them. Indeed that was the language used in the header agreement which governed the contractual arrangements between the Association and DOCS. The provision of a given service under the header agreement resulted in an invoice from the Association to DOCS which it then paid. The prices at which the services were provided were negotiated between the parties having regard to the price at which others provide similar services. The Association employed personnel and acquired rental property to equip it for the task of providing those services. At least in its then manifestation (entailing its size, activities, property and personnel), its continued existence depended on its success in placing itself in a position in which it would continue to be remunerated by continuing to provide those services.
55 All these matters appear to us to point to a relationship between the Association and DOCS as having been a commercial one involving trade in services. It is, of course, true that it is possible to characterise, as the Industrial Court did, the Association's activities as the provision of public welfare services. However the fact that the acquisition of these services by DOCS was for this purpose does not appear to us to detract from the essentially commercial nature of the relationship. It is properly so described. There may be many incorporated charitable bodies in Australia which are nevertheless trading corporations for the purposes of paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution. As we have noted above, the terms of the header agreements were negotiated, as were the terms of the renewal header agreement. Ultimately by that process, further negotiation as to price was not then undertaken. Thereafter, DOCS did not have to use the services of the Association at all, and the Association for its part did not have to accept any offer or request by DOCS to provide such services. On the evidence, DOCS selected those entities which it wished to provide services, once the header agreements were negotiated, on the basis of the quality of the service to be provided, but the Association (or others) did not have to agree to provide them. It is distracting to note that the services which the Association and others contracted with DOCS to provide were in the "welfare sector" of the economy, to use an expression used by the Solicitor-General.”
[48] In an earlier case of E v Australian Red Cross Society, 17 Wilcox J considered whether the Australian Red Cross Society and the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital were trading corporations. The Society supplied blood and blood products, generally free to the community, but received substantial government funding. The Court, in considering the more than $44m received in respect of its blood transfusion services, said:
“These were, of course, substantial sums. They were earned only because the respondents are prepared to carry on blood transfusion services at a scale, in terms of labour and resources, greater than that of many organisations which are undoubtedly 'trading corporations'. But I do not think that it is appropriate to describe the gratuitous provision of a public welfare service, substantially at government expense, as the conduct of a 'trade'. It is pertinent to recall the words of Stephen J in St George County Council: 'It is the acts of buying and selling that are at the very heart of trade', and also to remember the distinction he made in respect of the distribution of electricity free of charge. In relation to the supply of blood, it seems to me that the first and second respondents do not engage in trading activities. They engage in a major public welfare activity pursuant to agreements with the Commonwealth and the various State governments under which they will be reimbursed most of their costs.” 18
[49] I note that when considering the position of the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Wilcox J found that the scale of the hospital's trading activities were “substantial enough” to require that the hospital should be regarded as a trading corporation. 19 The details of this aspect are explained in more detail in a decision outlined below.
[50] In terms of the assessment of trading activities as substantial and not merely peripheral, the approaches do vary to a degree.
[51] In Bankstown, the Full Court observed that “there is no bright line that determines what proportion of trading activities is “substantial”. 20 In the recent decision of the Federal Court in United Firefighters Union of Australia v Country Fire Authority,21 (UFU v CFA) Murphy J observed:
“[92] The term “substantial” is imprecise but it at least encompasses trading amounts that are “not so small as to be trivial”: Quickenden at [51]. In that case the majority treated substantial and nontrivial as synonymous. In the present case the CFA contends that their trading activities are peripheral, insignificant or otherwise incidental. These terms are drawn from the various cases: see for “peripheral” Adamson at 208 per Barwick CJ; State Superannuation Board at 304 per Mason, Murphy and Deane JJ; for “incidental” Adamson at 234 per Mason J; for “significant” see Adamson at 233 per Mason J; E v Australian Red Cross Society and Ors [1991] FCA 20; (1991) 27 FCR 310 (“E v Red Cross”) at 345 per Wilcox J; Quickenden at [47] per Black CJ and French J.
[93] The ordinary meaning of these words is straightforward. The Shorter Oxford Dictionary defines them to include the following:
(a) “peripheral” means marginal, superficial, of minor importance, not essential or relevant to but subordinate to;
(b) “insignificant” means lacking significance, meaningless, devoid of weight or force, ineffective, ineffectual, of no importance, trivial, trifling, or contemptible; and
(c) “incidental” means occurring as something casual or of secondary importance; not directly relevant to; following up on as a subordinate circumstance.”
[52] Having found that six of the County Fire Authority’s (CFA’s) non-fire fighting activities were trading activities, Murphy J found:
“96 The scope of these activities is broad. While they are secondary to the CFA’s primary purpose I would not describe any of them as insignificant, incidental, trivial or unimportant. For example, the road accident rescue service is a specialised emergency service that the CFA has agreed to provide in country areas, which has required special training of CFA employees beyond the usual fire training, and which the CFA recognises as an important part of the range of services it provides. The CFA has no statutory obligation to provide this service and it does so at a cost to road users and the State through the Traffic Accident Commission. I would not describe the provision of this service as incidental to the CFA’s activities nor as a fortuitous or casual occurrence of subordinate importance. Nor should its provision, viewed in the context of all of its services, be described as trifling, ineffective, superficial or marginal.
97 For essentially the same reasons the provision of fire equipment maintenance services, consultancy on matters related to fire safety, the provision of advice related to the storage of dangerous goods and the sale of goods related to fire safety should not be seen as insignificant, incidental, trivial or unimportant activities considered against the range of services the CFA provides. I infer from the evidence that these activities are seen as important by the CFA, although they are not its central or predominant focus.
98 Nor do I consider that the revenue from these trading activities is incidental in the sense of arising fortuitously or as a result of some other activity. The income is earned deliberately by the CFA from these six specific sources and on the basis that the CFA have special expertise or products of value which they provide in exchange. Taken together the income from these activities is substantial.
99 While the quantum of income from the CFA’s trading activities relative to its non trading activities is small, I am disinclined to treat almost $13 million of revenue as minimal, trivial or insignificant. It should be seen for what it is, a significant volume of trading revenue albeit dwarfed by the money received from non-trading sources. The CFA put on no cogent evidence that $12.93 million was insignificant to its operations, and no evidence was given that it could be easily foregone by the organisation. Put another way, it is likely that the CFA would be impaired in its capacity to provide services in road accident rescue, fire equipment maintenance, fire safety consultancy or sale of fire safety related goods, which it regards as important in the range of services offered, if it was not able to charge fees for doing so.
100 Although the $12.93 million of trading income is plainly a substantial amount in absolute terms, it is only a small percentage relative to the CFA’s total income. Even so, I do not consider it is trivial or minimal in relative terms.
101 In E v Red Cross the Australian Red Cross Society was one of the respondents. Wilcox J held that its supply of blood and blood products was the gratuitous provision of a public welfare service, substantially at government expense, and was not a trading activity. The Red Cross received a total of $44.9 million from the government in respect of its non-trading blood supply services, and about $2 million from trading activities. Another respondent, a major hospital, made approximately $18 million from trading activities and, in the words of Wilcox J, that sum was dwarfed by a State government subsidy of $112 million. His Honour concluded that the disparity between the money earned through trading and the money received by way of government subsidy was unimportant explaining at 345:
Trading activities yielding some $18 million per year can only be described as substantial. It seems to me that the scale of the hospital’s trading activities in 1984-1985 was such that it should be regarded as then being a trading corporation.
See also United Firefighters’ Union of Australia v Metropolitan Fire and Emergency Services Board (1998) 83 FCR 346 (“UFU v MFB”) at 354 to 356 per Marshall J.
102 The CFA contends that both E v Red Cross and UFU v MFB were wrongly decided in that they incorrectly applied an absolute test. While I consider that the CFA’s trading revenue is plainly significant if considered in absolute terms, I do not approach the issue that way. Considering its trading revenue relative to its non-trading activities, the question is not without difficulty and is one of fact and degree. In my opinion the CFA undertakes sufficient trading for it to be seen as “not insubstantial”, not trivial, insignificant, marginal, minor or incidental, and I find that it is a trading corporation.”
[53] In Edmonds v Telethon Speech and Hearing Centre for Children [2014] FWC 1037, Cloghan C helpfully observed that:
“[55] Not-for-profit organisations have generally been distinguished from profit entities due to their pursuit of "social" rather than "economic" aims. However, in my view, increasingly not-for-profit organisations have taken upon themselves many characteristics of "for profit" entities. The fact is that despite their historical origins (with some key differences such as profits not going to the shareholders) not-for-profit and for profit organisations are becoming indistinguishable - no more so than when it comes to generating income.
[56] Managerial professionalism, information and communication technology and client expectations, have led to the continuing commercialisation of many not-for-profit organisations. Gone is the reliance on "chook" raffles, lamington drives and car boot sales to be replaced by discrete and dedicated resources to generate income from a variety of sources. Much of the traditional community raising of monies from clients, family and friends has been replaced by targeted cost benefit marketing analysis and action. Many of these activities to raise money, is now outsourced to specialised organisations.”
[54] The fact that an ABN is used by the employer cannot by itself mean that it is a corporation. Amongst other reasons, non-corporations can apply and be granted an ABN. 22
[55] The provision of services, largely or wholly, free of charge, and whether they are provided for altruistic purposes not shared by commercial enterprises, are also relevant, but not determinative, considerations. 23
5. Is PSS a trading corporation?
[56] This matter primarily rests upon the characterisation of the activities associated with the government payments received by Outcare. These activities are in the nature of community welfare and services, however this is not of itself relevant. The services are also significant in both relative and absolute terms and if the whole, or a reasonable part, of those activities were considered to be trading activities, this would inevitably lead to the conclusion that Outcare was a trading corporation.
[57] The decisions discussed earlier in this decision suggest that there is a dichotomy between activities that are undertaken by organisations similar to Outcare where the government pays for a service to be provided. Typically, these involve the delivery of services to government (often in the form of services available to the community) that result from competitive tendering processes where the Government is seeking specific services at competitive rates, and where payment is made for the actual services provided. That is, the “State” effectively purchases the services. In most cases, these activities are either undertaken for profit, or at least to generate revenue to support other activities or the organisation as a whole. The OOHC service in Bankstown is an example of this form of trading activity. Activities of this nature are considered to be trading activities for present purposes.
[58] Alternatively, there are activities that are undertaken by organisations similar to Outcare that are the subject of government payments whereby governments subsidise the services provided by the organisation. Typically, these involve the provision of bulk grants that might be linked to performance requirements and benchmarks, but do not involve fee for service in the conventional sense. These services lack the character of buying and selling between the organisation and the funding agency, and are often provided gratuitously to the public and are considered to be an end in themselves. That is, the purpose of the service is not to generate income but rather, to provide the service itself. The provision of blood products by the Red Cross in E v Red Cross is an example of this form of non-trading activity. Activities of this nature are not considered to be trading activities for present purposes.
[59] These two characterisations represent points on a spectrum, and the real world, as in this case, often involves a mix of such indicia. It is also important to consider the entire context in which the activities are undertaken.
[60] Against that background I turn to consider the various forms of government payments provided to Outcare and the associated activities conducted by the employer.
5.1 Block Funding Contracts
[61] The essential immediate issue is how the so called block funding activities should be treated. If all or some of these are considered to be trading in nature, they are significant enough in their own right to effect the characterisation of the organisation for present purposes.
[62] The combined block funding activities amounted to over 80% of the programs provided by Outcare in the 2013/14 financial year. These activities include the following:
● Aboriginal Through Care – support services for indigenous prisoner and male youth in the Perth area - funded by the Commonwealth Attorney General’s Department (now PMC);
● Mental Health Court Diversion and Support Programs – non-clinical community support services and support for young people with mental health issues as part of the Perth Children’s Court - funded by the Mental Health Commission;
● Emergency Relief DSS – emergency relief for clients in the form of food and other necessities - funded by the Department of Social Services;
● Emergency Relief Lotterywest– emergency relief assistance for clients in immediate financial crisis - funded by Lotterywest;
● Family Support Centres – support services to public prisons to assist prisoners to maintain family contacts - funded by DoCS;
● Live works – traineeships and other employment to young indigenous men having contact with the justice system - funded by DoCS;
● Reconnect – housing assistance and homelessness prevention - funded by DSS;
● Re-Entry and Lifeskills Program – transition for male prisoners back into the community - funded by DoCS; and
● Women Services – support and services to women prisoners – funded by St John of God.
[63] I will deal separately with the accommodation and related services which are facilitated to a significant degree by block funding contracts.
[64] Each of the block funding contracts operate under a service agreement, or contract, which specifies the services and standards required, the funding arrangements, and the audit and acquittal conditions. In general terms, these contracts provide a “block” of funding to provide a particular service and the payment is not linked to a particular number of clients or individuals services. This includes, for example, a target for the provision of services without any link between the actual number and the amount of the payment made by the relevant Department. 24 The funding agreements do, however, normally have KPI’s that often include the required achievement of some or all of the nominated targets. This includes, for example, the number of clients and referrals.25
[65] Payments are made quarterly in advance, or on some other regular basis, and involve a Recipient Created Tax Invoices (RCTI) being issued by the funding body in accordance with the agreed funding amount. A RCTI is, as the name suggests, an invoice issued by the recipient of the supply rather than by the supplier as would normally be the case. In some limited cases, additional fees may be payable for additional services, such as the brokerage funds that are made available to “purchase” services under one of the mental health programs. 26
[66] In most cases, the block funding contracts have been in place for many years and have been continued without any form of competitive tendering processes.
[67] In each case, the block funding contracts require that the funding be spent exclusively on the services outlined in the contract with any surplus or unspent money being returned to the funding agency, allocated to another project with the specific approval of the funding agency, or in some cases, rolled over into the next year for use on the original funded program. The services are also generally provided free of charge to the clients.
[68] As a result, in general terms the block funding contracts are not intended, or able to be used, by Outcare to fund other activities of the organisation. In each case, the funding must be used for the particular programs concerned and these are undertaken to meet the fundamental objectives of the organisation.
[69] I consider that in general terms these block funding contracts are more consistent with the concept of non-trading activities. That is, they do not generally have the character of commercial trade in services or elements of exchange or other commercial indicia in the payment so as to be considered as trading activities for present purposes. The activities resulting from these arrangements are also generally provided to the community without charge. They are more akin to the non-trading services described by Wilcox J in E v Red Cross.
5.2 Accommodation and related support services
[70] Outcare runs an accommodation program which utilises around 40 properties to provide short term and emergency accommodation and support services to a number of clients (ex-offenders newly released from prison who are assessed as having a high risk of returning to custody due to a lack of suitable accommodation) and in some instances, their families.
[71] The 40 properties are provided to Outcare by the Department of Housing under a funding/lease agreement. The Department leases the premises to Outcare at a peppercorn rent. Outcare is obliged under the arrangements to charge its clients a market value fee or rental cost. The Guidelines attaching to one of the lease agreements encourages the agency to maximise their rental charges and returns in a manner that reduces the financial disadvantage to the “tenants”. 27
[72] Outcare provides a transitional accommodation program and does so by treating the clients as boarders rather than tenants due to the nature of the arrangements and the need for flexibility. 28 In that context, it enters into a licence to occupy with its clients rather than a tenancy agreement.
[73] Outcare generally charges $100 per week to its clients. This is variously described as being a “maintenance contribution”, and in most contexts, as a “rental payment”. Outcare does not charge or receive additional payments from clients in relation to utilities such as phone, electricity, gas and water.
[74] The licence to occupy is a formal contract and requires that the first fortnight rent payment will be $200 combined with a key deposit and a welcome pack. The rent is to be paid two weeks in advance and arrangements are made to deduct payments via income provided from Centrelink.
[75] The description of the client contribution as “rent” and the associated arrangements are also designed to acquaint the clients with some of the normal terms and obligations that would apply in the private rental market. This is part of the client transition process, and although it may fall short of being a full market rate, it is the case that the rental payments are commercial transactions and operate in the context of formal contractual arrangements. These have a trading character.
[76] Some of the housing is suitable for multiple clients to occupy, and if that occurs, each client is charged the “rental” fee. The housing stock is in high demand and Outcare applies considerable staff and other resources to provide this service.
[77] In the last financial year, Outcare received, in addition to the government funding, approximately 2.4% or $271,000 of its total funding for the provision of this service, in the form of “rental” fees. These rental fees are a significant source of funds for the accommodation program and this outcome is intended as part of the government funding arrangements.
[78] Any surplus from the accommodation services may be retained by Outcare for use in the program; however, the program as a whole is normally loss making, with a loss of approximately $6,000 in the financial year 2014/15.
[79] The Crisis Accommodation Program (CAP) is a further service run by staff of Outcare and funded under an agreement with the DCS. There is also a variation to this agreement which provided funding for the Dangerous Sex Offender program. The Accommodation Service Agreement is supplemented by an agreement; namely, the General Provisions for the Purchase of Community Services by Government Agencies.
[80] Funding under the Accommodation Service Agreement comprising a fixed annual fee. In the last financial year, this funding comprised approximately 4.5% of Outcare's total funding.
[81] Invoices for services are to be submitted quarterly in advance to the Department of Justice and payment is made to Outcare subject to the provision and/or receipt of reports in accordance with the terms of the Accommodation Service Agreement.
[82] The service payment is to be used for the sole purpose of providing the services and is not to be used for “prohibited purposes” such as costs relating to any industrial or legal action, payment of existing debts or those debts not related to the service and purchase of capital items.
[83] Any surplus from the Accommodation Service Agreement may be retained by Outcare to use in the program the following year.
[84] Although much of the accommodation and related services may not be considered to be a trading activity, the direct provision of the housing to clients and the associated licence to occupy and rental arrangements have the character of commercial trade in services or elements of exchange or other commercial indicia in the payment so as to be considered as trading activities for present purposes.
[85] As a result, I find that some of the accommodation and related services represent trading activities. I will return to the measurement of that extent later in this decision.
5.3 Funding contracts
[86] The terms “Funding contracts” is used by the employer in this context to refer to the fact that Outcare derives income from contacts that arise from a tender process and it offers services at a nominated price. Income is received in advance based upon the contract price provided the necessary Key Performance Indicators are met.
[87] Unlike the block funding contracts, any surplus funds may be retained by Outcare. The only present funding contract is subject to a service agreement with the WA Department of Training and Workforce Development and involves the provision of support services including employment placement and vocational training.
[88] Approximately 1.8% of its total funding was derived from funding contracts in the last financial year.
[89] I consider that these activities are more consistent with the nature of the OOHC service in Bankstown and should be considered to be trading activities for present purposes.
5.4 Individual contrasts
[90] In September 2013, Outcare entered into a service agreement with the Disability Services Commission (DSC) for the provision of individually funded services to ex�offenders with intellectual disabilities living in Western Australia for a period extending until 30 June 2016 (Special Needs Service Agreement).
[91] The Special Needs Service Agreement consists of a request for individually funded services (including the basis of referrals), an advice of acceptance from the DSC, and general provisions for the purchase of community services by public authorities.
[92] Prior to accepting a client referral, the Outcare Special Needs support worker is required to undertake a risk assessment that analyses, among other things, the client's primary offence, additional offences, sentence, expected date of release, and age at first conviction.
[93] The support services provided include mentoring, assistance with finding accommodation, development of employment skills, domestic assistance, emergency relief and assistance with personal care.
[94] Once funding has been acquired for the client, DSC complete the details required in the contract regarding the individual funding and services and an estimate of the requirement for staff support. These are based on interactions with the client and other relevant stakeholders. This establishes the funding and deliverable hours for each client.
[95] Pursuant to the Services Agreement, Outcare must undertake and comply with certain reporting requirements regarding details of the activities and agreed outcomes that are to be funded and delivered, provision of an annual report stating whether they have delivered the contracted services and, where required, provision of an annual financial report.
[96] The Special Needs Service Agreement arose from a tendering exercise which involved a panel of providers. This was, in part, preparation for the roll-out of the NDIS in Western Australia.
[97] In the last financial year, Outcare received approximately 7.7% of its total funding from the State Department for the provision of this service, being $877,412.
[98] Approximately $17,396 (equivalent to 0.02% of the total Income) is classed by Outcare as ‘Fee for Service’. This is where the Public Trustee holds the client funds and is invoiced for service hours, rather than funding coming from the Commission.
[99] I consider that the activities subject to the funding contracts are more consistent with the concept of trading activities. That is, they do have the character of commercial trade in services or elements of exchange or other commercial indicia in the payment so as to be considered as trading activities for present purposes.
5.5 Other funding and income
[100] Approximately 4% of Outcare's income is derived from other funding or income accrued across the financial year. This included just less than 2% ($189,000) of interest derived from term deposits in the last financial year.
[101] Approximately 1.3% of Outcare's income is derived from the Youth Housing Renovation program in which clients on the Live Works program renovate Department of Housing properties as the practical learning component of their Certificate II in Construction. In the last financial year, Outcare invoiced approximately $154,000 to the government for this service.
[102] Approximately 0.5% of Outcare's income is derived from various one-off grants received from a number of sources. These grants are generally tied to specific deliverables such as art programs for youth in the criminal justice system. In the last financial year, Outcare received approximately $60,000 in income from these sources.
[103] Outcare receives approximately $15,000 or 0.2% of its income for the charity Nighthoops which runs a basketball program for high risk youth in the metropolitan area. Outcare derives no profit from this “auspicing” arrangement and donates $5,000.00 in kind.
[104] There are a series of intercompany charges allocated in the accounts of Outcare. These include a cost recovery charge of $4,500 per annum per employee to each program using facilities in the building owned and occupied by Outcare in East Perth. This is to enable employees to each program to be co-located with other programs. This is charged on an estimated cost-recovery basis.
[105] In the last financial year, Outcare leased 52 vehicles and owned 6 vehicles. These vehicles are leased to employees of Outcare's programs operating from East Perth for the purposes of various trades and transporting clients. The six vehicles owned by Outcare are charged to the programs at the same cost as the leasing company from which Outcare leases its vehicles.
[106] In terms of interests on deposits, these would appear to be a natural consequence of any incorporated association having cash investments. Activities in that regard may be considered to be indicative of a financial corporation, 29 however this has not been suggested in this case and the level is such as to be insignificant for present purposes. I do not consider this to be a trading activity in the context of Outcare’s operations.
[107] I consider that the Youth Housing Renovation program is a trading activity. Despite its altruistic purpose, this activity involves the provision of a service to the Western Australian government which is invoiced based upon the performance of specific services.
[108] However, I am inclined to the view that the process of generating “profit” from the charging out of the motor vehicles and other overheads on a cost-recovery basis to each of the activities is not, by itself, a trading activity in the context of Outcare.
5.6 The process for gaining funding
[109] I have set out above the basis under which the major activities have been funded. In general terms, most of the activities have been gained by direct discussions with the funding bodies rather than an open tendering process. There are exceptions to this rule and these are also set out above.
[110] Various departments and agencies of the Western Australian government are amongst the major funders of the employer. The WA government is moving to a more competitive model for the provision of community services. This is known as the Delivering Community Services and Partnership Procurement Model and this is being progressively implemented. The Special Needs Service Agreement was organised and gained in a manner consistent with this model and it is anticipated that many of the major activities of Outcare will be subject to the full application of this model in 2016. This will involve a competitive tendering process and a more commercial basis of assessment and operation of the contracts.
[111] To that end, Outcare had established a Tender Process Management Team, made up of existing management staff, but focused on positioning the organisation to contest upcoming tender exercises.
[112] There would be little doubt that the full application of this new model to the major activities of Outcare would impact upon the characterisation of those activities for present purposes. However, the approach adopted by the Federal Court in Bankstown 30 was that the time to evaluate whether a corporation is a constitutional (trading) corporation is when the application is made. On that basis, other than where an activity has been obtained under the revised funding model, I have not had regard to that development. This means that although most of the services are being provided in what will be an increasingly competitive and commercial context, that is not the contractual environment in which they presently operate.
5.7 Is there sufficient trading activity to impact upon the characterisation of Outcare?
[113] As outlined earlier in this decision, the assessment of trading activities as substantial and not merely peripheral, insignificant or otherwise incidental is a matter of fact and degree.
[114] I consider that activities conducted under the following funding arrangements bear the necessary hallmarks of trading so as to be treated as being trading activities for present purposes include:
● Funding contracts - 1.8% of its total funding, being approximately $210,600 per annum;
● Individual contracts – comprising 7.7% of its total funding being $877,412 and approximately $17,396 (equivalent to 0.02% of the total Income) – a total of 7.72% of total funding or $894,808 per annum; and
● Youth Housing Renovation program - 1.3% of income amounting to approximately $154,000 per annum.
[115] This amounts to, in the order of, 11% of Outcare’s income and approximately $1.20m per annum. 31
[116] In addition, I consider that activities associated with the direct provision of accommodation services are also trading activities. If only the rental payments were taken into account to measure the extent of this activity, that would amount to an additional 2.4% of income and approximately $271,000 per annum. However, this is approach is too narrow in that significantly more resources and funding is applied to this service than is measured in the rental payments. Regrettably, it is not possible to derive that amount with any precision based upon the information presently before the Commission.
[117] Despite this, it is reasonable to deal with this matter on the basis that the total of the trading activities would be something well beyond $2.5m per annum and what would have to be in excess of 15% of the income of Outcare. This is based upon a conservative estimate of the additional value of the accommodation trading activities. This combined level of trading activities is in my view substantial in the sense contemplated by the authorities. Further, Outcare’s trading activities are not insubstantial, not trivial, insignificant, marginal, minor or incidental.
6. Conclusions and order
[118] In all of the circumstances I am satisfied that Outcare is a trading corporation.
[119] The workplace in which the alleged conduct took place is conducted by a constitutionally-covered business and this means that there is a basis for the Commission to deal with the application under the relevant provisions of the FW Act.
[120] Accordingly, this application will be assigned so that it can be listed for a hearing to deal with the substance of the matter.
COMMISSIONER
Appearances:
P Mullally, of Workclaims Australia, with permission for Ms Pasalskyj.
M Airey with M Lalli, of HWL Ebsworth, with permission for Outcare Inc.
Hearing details:
2015
Adelaide and Perth (video hearing):
October 6.
1 Australian Constitution s.52(i).
2 Dated 9 October 2013.
3 Summary taken from the evidence of Mr Clarke.
4 Associations Incorporation Act 1987 (WA) – s.33. See also Bankstown at [43] and [44].
5 Taken from written and oral submission made on behalf of Outcare.
6 Aboriginal Legal Service (WA) Inc v Lawrence (No 2.) (2008) 252 ALR 136 at par [68].
7 Taken largely from written submissions made on behalf of Ms Pasalskyj.
8 Bankstown Handicapped Children’s Centre at [54].
9 (2010) 182 FCR 483 at par [48].
11 (2008) 252 ALR 136 at par [68].
12 Per Steytler P at pars [72] to [74].
13 Per Le Miere J at pars [133] to [139].
14 [1998] AIRComm 904 per McIntyre VP.
15 [2006] AIRComm 426 per O’Callaghan SDP.
16 Ibid at par [29].
17 (1991) 27 FCR 310.
18 Ibid at 343.
19 Ibid at 345.
20 (2010) 182 FCR 483 at par [52].
21 [2014] FCA 17.
22 See Ms S.W. [2014] FWC 3288.
23 See R v Trade Practices Tribunal Ex parte St George County Council (1974) 130 CLR 533 at 569 and Re: Ku-ring-gai Co-operative Building Society (No. 12 ) Ltd (1978) 36 FLR 134 at 160. These authorities must also be considered in light of the more recent decisions of the Federal Court outlined in this decision.
24 Service Agreement Amendment operating with respect to Accommodation Transition Program – part of attachment G to exhibit R1.
25 Community Support Services Pilot for Youth Mental Health Court Diversion Program - part of attachment I to exhibit R1.
26 Ibid.
27 Guidelines for the Community Disability Housing Program – attachment D to the statement of Mr Clark – exhibit R1.
28 Boarders are excluded from the relevant tenancy laws in Western Australia.
29 See: Re Mid Density Development Pty Limited v Rockdale Municipal Council [1992] FCA 634 at 25.
30 Bankstown at [45] to [47].
31 Using the income from funders and interest on term deposits from the 2014/15 year as the basis of the income estimates.
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