For example, imagine an employee is away for several months taking personal leave as they recover from an injury sustained away from work. Once their personal leave is exhausted, the employee’s income protection insurance will take effect.

In this case, does the employee continue to accrue annual leave, personal/carer’s leave and long service leave during the part of the absence covered by income protection insurance payments?

Accruing leave while on income protection payments

This is an area of some conjecture. While the question of service and absence on workers compensation appears settled based on decisions which considered the relevant terms of the Fair Work Act (s130), the interpretation of what constitutes paid leave for the purposes of the meaning of ‘service’ and ‘continuous service’ in the Fair Work Act (s22) is less clear. 

The question in this circumstance appears to be: What differentiates between an employee who is absent and paid compensation by reason of a statute and a worker who receives payment because of a private insurance arrangement?

The answer appears based on the interpretation that if the employer has an obligation to pay the employee while absent, then whether the employer pays the employee, or another does on the employer’s behalf does not matter.

In the above circumstance, it would seem there is no statutory obligation on the employer to pay the employee. Rather, the employee is being paid by a third party independent of any employer obligation to pay the employee during the absence. Consequently, the absence during which the employee is receiving income protection insurance payments would be considered unpaid leave and would not be regarded as service for the purposes of the National Employment Standards.

Income protection - superannuation fund

In a matter considered by (then) Fair Work Australia, it determined that the period where the applicant was absent due to illness during which she was not entitled to paid leave must be regarded as a period of unpaid leave or unpaid authorised absence (and not counted as service), even though the employee was receiving income protection insurance payments from their superannuation fund.

The determining factor was whether the payments were made pursuant to a legal obligation upon the employer. See L.M. v Standard & Poor’s (Australia) Pty Ltd [2012] FWA 9634.

In another matter before Fair Work Australia, the employee had been on authorised leave during his employment due to a motor accident injury.

The employee did not receive any payment from his employer during this period but was in receipt of payments from the Transport Accident Commission (Vic). It was held that this period was an excluded period because it was unpaid leave.

See Webster v Toni and Guy Port Melbourne Pty Ltd t/a Toni and Guy Port Melbourne [2010] FWA 4540.

It should be noted that while both these cases were determining a jurisdictional point on whether the absence counted as service for the purpose of reaching the minimum employment period under unfair dismissal law, both cases required an interpretation of the relevant section of the Fair Work Act (s 22), which refers to the meaning of service and continuous service.

Queensland long service leave

While the accrual of paid annual leave, personal/carer’s leave and unpaid parental leave is determined by the provisions of the Fair Work Act, the accrual of long service leave is usually determined by the relevant state or territory long service leave legislation.

In the case of the Industrial Relations Act 1999 [Qld], the only absences from work which count as service to determine long service leave entitlement are periods of paid leave. Periods of absence on WorkCover may also count as service. This means the period of absence when the employee is receiving income protections payments would not be included in any accrual of long service leave in that state.

Other state or territory long service leave statutes differ on this point. For example, under Victorian legislation, the first 48 weeks of an absence due to illness or injury are counted as service whereas under ACT legislation only the first two weeks’ absence due to illness or injury in any year are counted as service.

Reference should be made to the relevant state or territory long service leave legislation to determine the accrual of leave when an employee is absent from work due to illness or injury.

The bottom line: Generally, an employee does not accrue leave under the National Employment Standards when absent on unpaid leave even if the employee is receiving payments from an insurer which relate to income protection. Whether an employee accrues long service leave will depend on the relevant state or territory long service leave legislation.