With substantial changes to Queensland’s anti-discrimination laws, the rising importance of psychosocial safety, and whistleblower protections, get ready to tackle this year’s most pressing employment law issues. Avoid being blindsided by emerging risks and gain practical strategies to navigate the legal shifts in workplace rights and responsibilities. Don’t risk exposing your client to unexpected claims and liabilities- ensure your practice is across the latest know-how.
- Overview of the principles of the duty of care in employment
- Looking at the duty of care in the context of workplace health and safety
- How far does the duty extend?
- Tips for employers
Presented by Rachel Drew, Managing Partner, Holding Redlich, AFR Lawyer of the Year, Recommended & Leading Lawyer, Doyle’s Guide 2022 and Keisha Currie, Special Counsel, Holding Redlich
- What they are
- Who do they apply to?
- How the protections operate
- Obligations on employers
Presented by Madeleine Stone, Barrister, George Street Chambers, Sessional academic at QUT and USQ
Recently, a number of significant decisions have clarified the operation of the adverse action provisions. Consider important recent authorities that illuminate key concepts, including:
- The proper pleading of an adverse action claim
- Who relevantly contributes in cases of corporate decision-making
- When action does, or doesn’t, constitute a prejudicial alteration or injury to employment
Presented by Edward Shorten, Barrister, Inns of Court; Recommended Employment Law Junior Counsel, Doyle’s Guide 2024: Preeminent Employment & WHS Junior Counsel, Doyle’s Guide 2023
Attend and earn 7 CPD units in Substantive Law
This program is applicable to practitioners from all States & Territories
Chair: Mitchell Devine, Principal, Devine Legal
Changes to the Anti-Discrimination Regime in Queensland from 1 July 2025
- Examination of the new positive duty to prevent discrimination
- Explore the shift in the onus on the employer to disprove conduct amounts to discrimination
- Challenges with new protected attributes, including criminal records, physical appearance and victim-survivors of domestic and family violence
- The new ability for complaints to be advanced on “a combination of grounds”
Presented by Mitch Rawlings, Barrister, Holmes Chambers
Discover the latest High Court and intermediate appellate court decisions that are shaping the future of employment law. Stay informed on the critical legal trends and rulings every employment lawyer should know to effectively advise clients and manage workplace disputes.
Presented by Pawel Zielinski, Barrister, Callinan Chambers; Recommended Employment & WHS Barrister. Doyle’s Guide 2023
Chair: Danny Clifford, Director, Clifford Gouldson Lawyers
- Disputes about the right to disconnect
- Challenges with the new definition of ‘casual employee’ and independent contractor
- Balancing ‘unfair contracts’ regulation with independent contracting
- Navigating the new regulated labour hire arrangement orders from November 2024
Presented by Emma Treherne, Senior Legal & Compliance Manager, Isuzu UTE Australia Pty Ltd
- Understanding the legal frameworks around mitigating the risk of psychosocial hazards
- Unpacking the 'right to disconnect' and how this can be used to minimise risk
- Managing psychosocial hazards for office-based workers
- Practical tips to navigate the 'right to disconnect' and other psychosocial hazards
Presented by Alanna Fitzpatrick, Partner, K&L Gates; Recommended Workplace Health & Safety Lawyer, Doyle’s Guide 2023
Presenters
Mitchell Devine, Principal, Devine Legal
Mitchell Devine is the Principal, Devine Legal and a dual Accredited Specialist in Personal Injury Law and Workplace Relations. He holds a Bachelor of Laws and Masters of Laws and is a member of the Industrial Relations Society of Queensland, Australian Lawyers Alliance and Australian Labour Law Association. Mitchell was previously a member and chair of the Queensland Law Society Workplace Relations Advisory Committee. Mitchell lectures in employment law at the University of the Sunshine Coast and practises exclusively in areas of personal injuries and workplace relations. He is a recommended employment lawyer in the Doyle’s Guide from 2017 to date for both employer and employee representation.
Mitch Rawlings, Barrister, Holmes Chambers
Mitch was called to the bar after serving as a legal officer in the Royal Australian Navy. Since then, he has represented employers, government agencies and individuals in employment, discrimination, disciplinary and WHS proceedings. Mitch has developed a practice in WHS defendant proceedings, representing businesses in the meat processing, amusement and construction industries on a regular basis. As well as advocacy in the Federal Courts, Mitch regularly appears the Commonwealth and State employment tribunals, developing an appellate practice in these jurisdictions. He also teaches at the Queensland University of Technology in evidence and administrative law.
Rachel Drew, Managing Partner, Holding Redlich
Keisha Currie, Special Counsel, Holding Redlich
Keisha is an experienced work health and safety lawyer and is passionate about helping clients take a preventative approach to safety. Keisha has experience advising clients within both the public and private sector and has particular experience within the resources industry having previously worked at a mine in Central Queensland. Keisha previously worked at the Department of Justice and Attorney-General for Crown Law performing public sector employment and safety work. Keisha’s practice involves advising on all facets of safety legislation including duties, incident response, assisting with reviews of safety health management systems, legislative compliance and responding to regulatory enforcement action as well as providing and facilitating incident response training. Keisha’s practice also involves advising on various legal aspects across employment and workplace relations matter. This includes advising and assisting with workplace disputes, Fair Work Commission complaints, workplace investigations, managing discipline and dismissal processes.
Pawel Zielinski, Barrister, Callinan Chambers
Pawel (Pav) Zielinski focuses on complex and contentious industrial disputes. He advises clients on change management, whether brought on as a result of localised or whole-of-industry factors. He has worked with Australia's largest construction companies in managing and responding to industrial disputes and stoppages. Pav also advises clients on the pitfalls of enterprise agreement making processes (and substantive matters relating to bargaining). He has also managed an extensive number of individual employee grievances, unfair dismissal and general protections claims and has acted as an independent investigator in a number of difficult workplace disputes, including where allegations of sexual harassment and bullying have been raised.
Emma Treherne, Senior Legal & Compliance Manager, Isuzu UTE Australia Pty Ltd
Emma Treherne was admitted as a solicitor to the Supreme Court of Queensland in 2011 but has been working in the field of employment law since 2007. Emma has diverse experience across many areas of employment law both in Australia and a short stint in the Republic of Ireland and has worked in private practice, a community organisation, the government, employer associations, and in-house. For approximately 2.5 years, Emma has been working as an in-house counsel for Isuzu UTE Australia Pty Ltd, an Australian vehicle distributor. In this position, Emma’s principal practice areas are employment law, data privacy law and commercial law and any other practice areas which aid improvements in corporate governance and compliance of the Company. Working in the field of compliance has required Emma to not just advise on legal matters but also to educate the Company and build compliance systems and programs consider legal risk along with factoring in reputational and commercial risks.
Alanna Fitzpatrick, Partner, K&L Gates
Alanna is an experienced workplace health and safety lawyer. She is a responsive, pragmatic and empathetic lawyer who assists her clients to navigate the serious safety incidents and accidents. She assists clients respond to and engage with regulators undertaking investigations following safety incidents in a manner that is designed to ensure that the risk of reputational damage and personal/corporate prosecution is minimised. Alanna is also an experienced front end safety lawyer, providing compliance advice to a range of organisations to understand and discharge their obligations under safety legislation and for officers, developing a suite of material to enable those officers to discharge their duty to exercise due diligence. Alanna delivers engaging and informative presentations on safety related topics include crisis management, due diligence and managing the risk of psychosocial harm. She is experienced in dealing with a wide range of employment matters including executive employment issues, performance management, grievances, disciplinary matters, discrimination and termination of employment. Alanna has a particular focus on assisting employers to manage ill and injured employees and restraint of trade matters. Alanna is a commercially focussed and pragmatic litigator. She has assisted clients to litigate individual and collective disputes in the Fair Work Commission as well as disputes and regulatory prosecutions in the Federal Court and Supreme Court of Queensland. Alanna has advised her clients on all types of workplace investigations and undertakes workplace investigations, particularly those relating to bullying allegations and sexual harassment. Alanna has advised companies in various industries including agriculture, aviation, construction, energy and resources, medical and pharmaceutical, retail, higher education, government departments and government owned corporations.
Madeleine Stone, Barrister, George Street Chambers
Madeleine maintains a broad civil practice with a particular interest in commercial litigation, insolvency and restructuring and employment law. She regularly appears in state and federal courts and tribunals throughout Queensland and interstate as required. Early in her career, Madeleine was the Associate to the Honourable JE Reeves of the Federal Court of Australia and later Industrial Commissioner ML Knight of the Queensland Industrial Relations Commission. In addition to her practice, Madeleine is a sessional academic at QUT and USQ, and lectures in Insolvency and Restructuring Law. Madeleine holds a Bachelor of Laws (First Class Honours) from QUT and a Bachelor of Arts (majoring in English Literature and Art History) from UQ. She has also completed the ARITA Advanced Certification in Insolvency Law through UTS.
Danny Clifford, Director, Clifford Gouldson Lawyers
Danny Clifford is a Director of Clifford Gouldson Lawyers - one of Toowoomba's leading business focussed law firms. Clifford Gouldson advise businesses on workplace, litigation, property & commercial, construction, intellectual property and tax, structures and planning. In recent years Danny has worked closely with leading private schools in the Toowoomba region to manage individual staff issues, develop enterprise agreements and ensure risk minimisation strategies are in place to help schools deal with employee issues both at school and involving external use of social media. With his team, Danny helps clients manage the challenges of large workforces, deal with unfair dismissal issues and maintain compliance with the complex Fair Work requirements. Many large employers come to Danny for both advice on strategic direction and day to day workplace challenges. Working from CGLaw offices across Toowoomba, Brisbane and the Sunshine Coast, Danny and his team provide solutions across the full spectrum of workplace issues including employee management, discrimination, health & safety, agreements & awards, policy implementation and training.
Edward Shorten, Barrister, Inns of Court
Edward is a barrister specialising in industrial and employment law, discrimination and human rights law, and appeals. He was called to the bar in 2015 after seven years as a solicitor at a leading law firm. He has appeared (led and unled) in applications, trials and appeals in the Queensland and Commonwealth Courts. He also acts as a mediator. Edward is recognised in Doyle’s Guide as a leading Junior Counsel in Queensland (Pre-eminent, Leading Employment & WHS Barristers) and Australia (Recommended, Leading Employment Law Junior Counsel). He is a member of the Industrial Law Committee of the Bar Association of Queensland.