H Metro

Australia to allow workers to ignore after-hours calls from bosses

-

Australia will introduce laws giving workers the right to ignore unreasonab­le calls and messages from their bosses outside of work hours without penalty, with potential fines for employers that breach the rule.

The “right to disconnect” is part of a raft of changes to industrial relations laws proposed by the federal government under a parliament­ary bill, which it says would protect workers’ rights and help restore work-life balance.

Similar laws giving employees a right to switch off their devices are already in place in France, Spain and other countries in the European Union. A majority of senators have now declared support for the legislatio­n, Employment Minister Tony Burke from the ruling centre-left Labor party said in a statement on Wednesday. The provision stops employees from working unpaid overtime through a right to disconnect from unreasonab­le contact out of hours, Burke said.

“What we are simply saying is that someone who isn’t being paid 24 hours a day shouldn’t be penalised if they’re not online and available 24 hours a day,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told reporters earlier on Wednesday.

The bill is expected to be introduced in parliament later this week. The bill also includes other provisions like a clearer pathway from temporary to permanent work and minimum standards for temporary workers and truck driver. Some politician­s, employer groups and corporate leaders warned the right to disconnect provision was an overreach and would undermine the move towards flexible working and impact competitiv­eness.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe