The Gold Coast Bulletin

A home run for workers’ rights

Office jobs facing chop

- Eleanor Campbell

Millions of Australian­s could have the right to work from home under major changes being considered by the nation’s employer watchdog, which could form the basis for new workplace laws.

The Fair Work Commission is looking into making flexible work arrangemen­ts a legal entitlemen­t just one month after new laws passed allowing workers to ignore calls and texts from bosses after hours.

About 2.2 million workers on award wages could be affected by the findings of its review, which is likely to infuriate business groups opposed to the federal government’s sweeping workplace reforms.

The review will make recommenda­tions to the federal government, which will then consider the findings and put changes to legislatio­n to parliament accordingl­y.

About 37 per cent of Australian­s currently work from home on a regular basis, according to the data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics, down slightly from 2022 levels.

Workers do not have a general right or entitlemen­t to work from home in Australia – but can request to work from home under certain conditions if they have been with their employer for at least 12 months.

Research from the Melbourne Institute shows that most Australian workers want the right to work from home at least partially, with 60 per cent happy with a hybrid work arrangemen­t where they work from home and in the office.

A discussion paper released by Fair Work in January pointed to evidence showing that remote work did not impede productivi­ty and gave carers and parents more time to juggle the demands of home and work.

The paper said remote working did raise many challenges for employers, however, including making it more difficult for bosses to facilitate onthe-job mentoring and initiate “spontaneou­s collaborat­ion”.

“Improved flexibilit­y as to when and where people work may also create ambiguity as to when workers can disconnect from work, which can impact on wellbeing,” it said.

Liberal Senator James Paterson argued that it should be up to workers and businesses to make arrangemen­ts.

“There are some types of work where working from home works really well for both the business and employees,” he said. “And really, that shouldn’t be up to the government to decide that.”

As Fair Work engages businesses and unions for their views on remote working as part of its awards review, the latest reforms passed in the second wave of the government’s workplace changes – including laws giving workers the “right to disconnect” – will begin to sink in.

The most recent changes passed in February include giving casuals working full-time the option to transition to permanent work and establishi­ng minimum pay rates and work standards for gig economy workers.

Wage theft will also be criminalis­ed in Australia from January 1, 2025.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia