MUMBAI: The BJP-ruled Haryana government is confident about getting major labour reforms cleared in the next assembly session in March, including changes in the Centre's Industrial Disputes Act 1947, to allow units with less than 300 workers to close down or lay off workers without seeking government permission.Currently, the waiver applies to units with less than 100 workers. "Labour reforms are a major priority . I am confident the reforms will be cleared by the assembly," Haryana chief minister Manohar Lal Khattar said on Sunday .The state is also hoping to push through a reform of the Centre's Contract Labour Act 1970 which will require only units with more than 100 workers to register with the government. Currently, units with 20 or more workers are required to do so.If cleared by the assembly the changes in these Centra laws will still need presidential al assent.Haryana is known for violent labour unrest in the past most famously at the Maruti plant in Manesar. When as ked whether trade unions would block reforms, Khattar said, "Labour unrest in Haryana is in the past. Trade unions and industry now have cordial relations. The government has also undertaken many pro-labour policies, including raising the minimum wage."When asked when the report of the Dhingra Commission which is probing alleged irregularities in the grant of licenses to develop land in Gurgaon, including to Congress President Sonia Gandhi's son-in-law Robert Vadra, Khattar said, "The report is expected in June. We do not expect the commission to ask for an extension."He said the government would act on the findings of the commission. "We will act on the report once it comes out. That is our duty as a government," he said.