Public servants at the federal Agriculture Department have made history by rejecting a proposed new deal on pay and conditions for the fourth time.
The result means most of the department's workers will face their third Christmas without a pay rise rather than accept a proposal their unions say strips away hard won workplace rights and conditions.
Public servants at the Administrative Appeals Tribunal and the National Museum of Australia have also voted to reject proposed enterprise agreements offered under the Coalition's tough public sector IR stance. Both ballots returned a no vote of 55 per cent.
The result brings to 73 the number of rejections by public sector workforces of proposals put forward under the industrial relations policy and about 97,000 public servants still without agreements to replace the ones that expired in mid-2014.
Bosses at the 4600-strong Agriculture Department had been hoping to get the proposal, developed under the Coalition's tough public sector bargaining framework, over the line after coming close in previous votes.
This time the proposal fell short by 304 votes, or 54 per cent no to 46 per cent yes, with a turnout of 87 per cent of the department's eligible public servants.
The department has tried a variety of approaches in trying to get its workforce to agree to a deal, including an unorthodox intervention by Agriculture boss Daryl Quinlivan before a vote in March, with the Departmental Secretary telling workers that a yes-vote was a vote against sickie rorts in the department.
The main workplace union, the CPSU said the latest no-vote showed the government's approach to bargaining with its own public servants was "ridiculous".
"Workers in Agriculture and Water Resources have now been forced to vote no four times, while the government's bargaining policy means management's hands remain tied so they can't make the simple and reasonable changes that would result in an acceptable offer," the CPSU said.
"Just in the past few weeks we've seen ... similar rejections for the Administrative Appeals Tribunal and National Museum, while workers in two of the Commonwealth's largest agencies, Human Services and Immigration and Border Force, have voted down agreements by large margins for a third time each.
"It's just nuts."
Another workplace union, Professionals Australia, said the department had only itself to blame for the latest rejection after its "appalling" approach to elements of its workforce.
"They should drop their egregious proposals for the veterinary profession," Mr Smith said.
"Members were appalled by the approach to this critical profession and realised that if they were treated this way they would be next.
"They should consider moving to arbitration by agreement.
"Four votes and they are further away from an agreement than before. It's time to get an independent third party in to help the parties reach a resolution."
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