National Post

Australia to crack down on citizens working hard at hardly working.

- Rod McGuirk

• The Australian government is tired of unemployed people refusing to take a job because it may interfere with their golf plans or dreams of becoming an actor.

Canberra plans to tighten its rules on who qualifies for unemployme­nt benefits to encourage the jobless — including some with creative excuses to stay off the job — to go to work.

“Australia’s income support system is there as a safety net for people who genuinely cannot find a job — not as an option for those who simply refuse to work,” Employment Minister Michaelia Cash said in a statement.

The penalty for refusing a job offer without a good excuse is eight weeks without a welfare cheque, but three out of four unemployed Australian­s who refused jobs last year managed to keep their cheque. Australia’s jobless rate is six per cent.

The Employment Department on Tuesday released samples of reasons job hunters have given for remaining unemployed. They include:

❚ A 58-year-old man was not prepared to work for three hours on Sundays because that was when he played golf. ❚ A 19- year- old man turned down a job “to follow his dream of becoming an actor.”

❚ A 26-year-old man refused a job because “he doesn’t work with chickens.”

❚ A 50- year- old woman declined a receptioni­st position because of a “bad smell” in the office. ❚ A 33-year-old man rejected car washing as “too difficult.”

❚ A 23-year-old man refused to become a driver’s assistant because he wanted to drive.

The basic unemployme­nt benefit in Australia is 261.70 Australian dollars ($ 260) a week. It’s higher for those with dependent children and in need of rent assistance.

The government wants to close a loophole that allows the unemployed to refuse jobs while continuing to collect a welfare cheques, but the Senate is resisting the changes.

 ?? BRADLEY KANARIS / GETTY IMAGES ?? Turning down work because it interferes with your tee time is unacceptab­le, says Australia’s Employment Department, which says it will tighten the rules
on unemployed Aussies who receive government support.
BRADLEY KANARIS / GETTY IMAGES Turning down work because it interferes with your tee time is unacceptab­le, says Australia’s Employment Department, which says it will tighten the rules on unemployed Aussies who receive government support.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada