Benutzer:Reinhard Kraasch/Public holidays in Australia
Public holidays in Australia are declared on a state and territory basis, though several holidays are observed in all states and territories, and are therefore de facto national holidays.
Traditionally, workers, public or private, were entitled to take off a public holiday with regular pay. In recent years this tradition has changed somewhat. For example, businesses that are normally open on a public holiday may require employees to work on the day. Traditionally, in this case, the workers were paid at a penalty rate - usually 1½ (known as "time and a half") or 2 times (known as "double time") the regular pay. But the entitlement to penalty rates of pay has been reduced or entirely eliminated in many work places.
Besides designating days as public holidays, some of these days are also designated as restricted trading days.
In addition, many workers are entitled to penalty rates of pay if they are required to work on Easter Sunday, which is not a designated public holiday because it always falls on a Sunday which is in itself a designated rest day. Shop trading restrictions may also apply to Easter Sunday.
Public holidays are determined by a combination of:
- Statutes, with specific gazetting of public holidays; and
- Industrial awards and agreements.
If a standard public holiday falls on a weekend, a substitute public holiday will sometimes be observed on the first non-weekend day (usually Monday) after the weekend, whether by virtue of the public holiday legislation or by ad hoc proclamation. If a worker is required to work on a public holiday or substituted public holiday, they will usually be entitled to be paid at a holiday penalty rate.
All states have their own public holidays in addition to national public holidays, and in some states public holidays are provided on a local basis, such as Melbourne Cup Day.
Alcohol licenses in many states prevent sale of alcohol on certain public holidays, such as Good Friday.
Public holidays
Name | Date | ACT | NSW | NT | QLD | SA | TAS | VIC | WA |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
New Year | 1 January | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * |
Australia Day | 26 January | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * |
Royal Hobart Regatta | 2nd Monday in February | H | |||||||
Labour Day | 1st Monday in March | * | |||||||
Adelaide Cup | 2nd Monday in March | * | |||||||
Canberra Day | * | ||||||||
Eight Hours Day | * | ||||||||
Labour Day | * | ||||||||
Good Friday | variable date | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * |
Easter Saturday | variable date[1][2] | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * |
Easter Sunday | variable date | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * |
Easter Monday | variable date | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * |
Easter Tuesday | variable date | * | |||||||
Anzac Day | 25 April | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * |
Labour Day | 1st Monday in May | * | |||||||
May Day | * | ||||||||
Foundation Day | 1st Monday in June | * | |||||||
Queen's Birthday | 2nd Monday in June | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | |
Picnic Day | 1st Monday in August | * | |||||||
holiday in lieu of Queen's Birthday | As proclaimed by the Governor of Western Australia (September/October) | * | |||||||
Labour Day | 1st Monday in October | * | * | * | |||||
Recreation Day | 1st Monday in November | NH | |||||||
Family & Community Day | 1st Tuesday in November | * | |||||||
Melbourne Cup | * | ||||||||
Christmas Day | 25 December | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * |
Boxing Day | 26 December | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | |
Proclamation Day | * | ||||||||
Total Holidays | 12 | 10 | 11 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 11 | 11 |
H=Hobart area only NH=Not Hobart area
Substitute holidays for holidays falling on a weekend
When a public holiday falls on a weekend, the following work day may be considered a public holiday depending on the state/territory and the holiday in question.
Name | WA [1] | Tas [2] | Vic [3] | ACT [4] | NSW [5] | SA [6] | Qld [7] | NT [8] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
New Year | Yes | Sunday only | Yes | Sunday only | Yes | Sunday only | Yes | ||
Australia Day | Yes | Sunday only | Yes | ||||||
Good Friday | Not applicable (always on a Friday) | ||||||||
Easter Saturday | No | ||||||||
Easter Monday | Not applicable (always on a Monday) | ||||||||
Easter Sunday | Not applicable (always on a Sunday) | ||||||||
Labour Day | Not applicable (always on a Monday) | ||||||||
Anzac Day | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | |||||
Queen's Birthday | Not applicable (always on a Monday) | ||||||||
Christmas | Yes | Sunday only | Yes | Sunday only | Yes | ||||
Boxing Day/Proclamation Day | Yes | Sunday only | Yes | Sunday only | Yes |
NOTE: Prior to 2008, Victorian law only specified substitute holidays for New Year and Boxing Day, and only if they fell on a Sunday.[9] From 2008, Victorian law specifies the substitute holidays in the table above.[3]
Since Easter Monday can occur as late as 26 April (see Date of Easter) it is possible for the Easter Monday holiday to coincide with Anzac Day, as will occur in 2011. State Acts do not give a provision to separate the days when this occurs, so no additional public holiday is given by law. However an extra day is usually proclaimed by the minister, so as to have a steady number of public holidays each year.[10] [11] [12] In the year 2038, Anzac Day will coincide with Easter Sunday.
New Year
New Year's Day is celebrated on 1 January each year in all states and territories.
Australia Day
Australia Day is Australia's national day celebrated on 26 January annually in all states and territories. 26 January was chosen because it is the day of the establishment of the first English settlement at Port Jackson by Captain Arthur Phillip in 1788.[13]
Since 1960, the winner of the Australian of the Year award is announced by the Prime Minister on Australia Day.
Recorded celebrations date back to 1808 in Australia, and in 1818, Governor Lachlan Macquarie held the first official celebration of Australia Day.[14] It was made a public holiday in New South Wales in 1836, and Victoria adopted the day as a public holiday in 1931. It commenced to be celebrated by all states and territories in 1946, but began to be actually celebrated on 26 January from 1994.
Labour Day
Labour Day commemorates the achievements of the Australian labour movement. The celebration of Labour Day has its origins in the eight hour day movement, which advocated eight hours for work, eight hours for recreation, and eight hours for rest. On 21 April 1856 Stonemasons and building workers on building sites around Melbourne, Australia, stopped work and marched from the University of Melbourne to Parliament House to achieve an eight hour day. Their direct action protest was a success, and they are noted as the first organized workers in the world to achieve an eight hour day with no loss of pay, which subsequently inspired the celebration of Labour Day and May Day.
The Labour Day public holiday varies considerably between the various states and territories. It is the first Monday in October in the Australian Capital Territory, New South Wales and South Australia. In both Victoria and Tasmania, it is the second Monday in March. In Western Australia, Labour Day is the first Monday in March. In both Queensland and the Northern Territory, it is the first Monday in May.
Easter
The days of Easter vary each year depending on the day determined by the Western Christian religious calendar. For the basis of how the days are determined see Easter. Queensland only refers to "The day after Good Friday (Easter Saturday)".
Anzac Day
Anzac Day is a day on which the country remembers those citizens who fell fighting or who served the country in wars. Anzac Day is commemorated on 25 April every year. The tradition began to remember the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) soldiers who landed at Gallipoli in Turkey during World War I.
Anzac Day commemoration features marches by veterans and by solemn "Dawn Services", a tradition started in Albany, Western Australia on 25 April 1923 and now held at war memorials around the country, accompanied by thoughts of those lost at war to the ceremonial sounds of The Last Post on the bugle. The fourth stanza of Laurence Binyon's poem For the Fallen (known as the "Ode of Remembrance") is often recited.
Queen's Birthday
In all states and territories except Western Australia, Queen's Birthday is observed on the second Monday in June. Because Western Australia celebrates its Foundation Day on the first Monday in June, the Governor of Western Australia proclaims the day on which the state will observe the Queen's Birthday, based on school terms and the Perth Royal Show.[15] There is no firm rule to determine this date before it is proclaimed, though it is typically the last Monday of September or the first Monday of October.
The day has been celebrated since 1788, when Governor Arthur Phillip declared a holiday to mark the birthday of King George III. Until 1936 it was held on the actual birthday of the Monarch, but after the death of King George V it was decided to keep the date at mid-year.
On that day the "Queen's Birthday honours list" is released naming new members of the Order of Australia and other Australian honours. This occurs on the date observed in the Eastern States, not the date observed in Western Australia.
The Queen's Birthday weekend and Empire Day, 24 May, were long the traditional times for public fireworks displays in Australia. Although they still occur, the tradition has recently been overshadowed by larger New Year's Eve fireworks, as the sale of fireworks to the public was progressively banned by the states in the 1980s. The sale of fireworks in the Australian Capital Territory was also banned on 24 August 2009.[16]
Christmas
Christmas is observed on 25 December each year to commemorate the birth of Jesus. In Australia it was brought over as a matter of course with white English settlement in 1788. Though a Christian religious festival it does not breach the constitution's separation of Church and State provision, because it is declared under State law, which is not subject to the provision.
Boxing Day
Boxing Day is on the day after Christmas, ie. 26 December each year, except in South Australia. In South Australia, the first otherwise working day after Christmas is a public holiday called Proclamation Day.
Boxing Day is noted for the start of the post-Christmas sale season. The day has also become a significant sporting day. Melbourne hosts the Boxing Day Test Match and the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race which also starts on this day.
Other holidays
- Proclamation Day is in December in South Australia only.
- Canberra Day is held on the 3rd Monday in March in the ACT. From 2008, this holiday will be celebrated on the 2nd Monday of March (10 March 2008)
- Melbourne Cup Day is held on the first Tuesday of November - the day of the Melbourne Cup. It was originally observed only in the Melbourne metropolitan area. From 2007 in ACT Melbourne Cup day is also a holiday called "Family and Community day". In Victoria, the Public Holidays Act 1993 (Vic) was amended from 24 September 2008 and made the Melbourne Cup Day holiday applicable in all parts of the state (unless another day is observed in substitute). It also made the holiday applicable to employees covered by federal awards.
- Recreation Day is the first Monday of November, and celebrated in Northern Tasmania where Regatta Day is not a holiday.
- Regatta Day/Hobart Cup Day is the second Monday in February, and is celebrated in Southern Tasmania. Previously it was held on the second Tuesday in February.
- Geelong Cup Day is held on the fourth Wednesday of October in the city of Geelong, Victoria
- Queensland Day is celebrated on 6 June each year, but not with a public holiday.
- Adelaide Cup Day is held on the second Monday in March in South Australia (held in May before 2006)[17]
- Foundation Day in Western Australia in June
- Picnic Day in the Northern Territory in August, and also May Day
- Tasmania has Easter Tuesday as a bank holiday (for bank and government employees only).
- Many cities and towns observe local public holidays for their local Agricultural Show. For example:
- Darwin Show Day in Darwin area in late July
- Royal Queensland Show Day in Brisbane area in August
- Gold Coast Show in Gold Coast area in October
Long weekends
Australia is sometimes nicknamed the "land of the long weekend".[18][19] However, Australians have "fewer public holidays than workers in most other industrialised countries." [20]
Public holidays by state
Queensland
The days are set in the "Holidays Act 1983" as:
- Good Friday
- Day after Good Friday (Easter Saturday)
- Easter Monday
- Second Monday in June (Birthday of the Sovereign)
- 1 January (new Year's Day) if on Sunday, the next Monday is substituted.
- 25 April (Anzac Day) if on Sunday, the next Monday is substituted.
- 25 December (Christmas Day) if on Sunday, the next Monday is substituted.
- 26 December (Boxing Day) if this day falls on a Monday, the following day is substituted.
- 1 May (Labour Day) if not a Monday, the next Monday is substituted.
- 26 January (Australia Day) if on a Saturday or Sunday, the next Monday is substituted.
The minister of the state may proclaim and adjustments or additions, such as the date of the Brisbane Ekka Show day holiday. Because of the variable days of Easter, Anzac day could fall on an Easter holiday.
New South Wales
Public holidays generally follow the national pattern, but special cases (for example, in 2011 Easter & Anzac Day fall on the same weekend) are resolved by the state government a couple of years in advance and advised by proclamation. Details of future holidays can be found on the NSW Government's Industrial Relations website and the NSW Board of Studies website, which also details NSW school holidays. Bank holidays in New South Wales are regulated by the New South Wales Banks and Bank Holidays Act 1912.
Victoria
Public holidays in Victoria are regulated by the Victorian Public Holidays Act 1993.
Victorian employees fall under the Workchoices system either as coming within the Commonwealth constitutional power (called "constitutional corporation employees") or because of Victoria's referral of its legislative powers to the Commonwealth for particular workplace relations matters.
Employee entitlements to public holidays and additional pay depend on whether they are covered by a federal award or agreement.
Employees not covered by a federal award or agreement are entitled to public holidays under the Victorian Public Holidays Act 1993. Also, all permanent employees not covered by a federal award or agreement who would normally work on a public holiday (or a substitute public holiday) are entitled to the holiday without loss of pay. Their employers are not required to provide additional payment if they work on a public holiday, but this doesn't exclude the possibility of employees and employers negotiating for additional pay.
Employees who are covered by a federal award or agreement are entitled to public holidays as provided by the relevant federal award or agreement and the Public Holidays Act 1993. Many federal awards and agreements also provide for additional penalty rates for work performed on a public holiday.
Restricted shop trading laws apply to Good Friday, Easter Sunday, Christmas Day and before 1 pm on Anzac Day. On these days only exempted businesses are permitted to open for trading.[21] All public holidays and substitute public holidays are bank holidays. [22]
The Victorian public holidays are as follows [23]:
Name | Date |
---|---|
New Year | 1 January |
Australia Day | 26 January |
Labour Day | 2nd Monday in March |
Good Friday | Friday before Easter |
Saturday before Easter Sunday | Day before Easter |
Easter Monday | Day after Easter |
Anzac Day | 25 April |
Queen's Birthday | 2nd Monday in June |
Melbourne Cup Day | 1st Tuesday of November |
Christmas | 25 December |
Boxing Day | 26 December |
Melbourne Show Day used to be observed on the Thursday in the last full week of September as a public holiday until 1994.[24] Easter Tuesday was also observed as a public holiday in Victoria until 1994.
References
- Australian Government - Public Holidays - Public holidays for each Australian state
- Australian Council of Trades Unions - Library: Public Holidays
Vorlage:Oceania topic Vorlage:Australia topics Vorlage:Australia Holidays
- ↑ a b Public And Bank Holidays Act 1972. Western Australia
- ↑ a b Statutory Holidays Act 2000. Tasmania Referenzfehler: Ungültiges
<ref>
-Tag. Der Name „tas-law“ wurde mehrere Male mit einem unterschiedlichen Inhalt definiert. - ↑ a b Public Holidays Amendment Bill 2008. Victoria
- ↑ Holidays Act 1958. Australian Capital Territory
- ↑ Banks and Bank Holidays Act 1912 No. 43. New South Wales
- ↑ Holidays Act 1910. South Australia
- ↑ Holidays Act 1983. Queensland
- ↑ Public Holidays Act. Northern Territory
- ↑ Public Holidays Act 2003. Victoria
- ↑ Public Holidays 2011. Northern Territory
- ↑ Public Holidays 2011. South Australia
- ↑ Public Holidays 2011. Tasmania
- ↑ National Australia Day Council - History. Abgerufen am 20. Februar 2008.
- ↑ Australia Day History. Australia Day Council of New South Wales, abgerufen am 29. Oktober 2007.
- ↑ Department of Consumer and Employment Protection, Labour Relations division
- ↑ Cracker down: ACT bans fireworks. Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 24. August 2009, abgerufen am 24. August 2009.
- ↑ Holidays: Adelaide Cup in Australia
- ↑ Competing With ASian Clothing Tigers
- ↑ Australia - the land of the long weekend
- ↑ Whoever said this was the land of the long weekend?
- ↑ Business Victoria - Can I open my shop on a public holiday?
- ↑ Public Holidays Act 1993 - (sec 9 Bank Holidays)
- ↑ Business Vicoria - Victorian Public Holidays & Shop Trading Hours - 2009
- ↑ A Historical Summaryof the RASV