Kuwait Times

Australia gives workers ‘right to disconnect’

Law allows people to ignore unreasonab­le out-of-hours contact from employers

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SYDNEY: Australia gave millions of workers the legal right to “disconnect” on Monday, allowing them to ignore unreasonab­le out-of-hours contact from employers, to the distress of big industry. People can now “refuse to monitor, read, or respond to” their employers’ attempts to contact them outside work hours — unless that refusal is deemed “unreasonab­le”.

The law is similar to legislatio­n in some European and Latin American countries. Unions welcomed the legislatio­n, saying it gave workers a way to reclaim a level of work-life balance. “Today is a historic day for working people,” said Michele O’Neil, president of the Australian Council of Trade Unions. “The union movement has won the legal right for Australian­s to spend quality time with their loved ones without the stress of being forced to constantly answer unreasonab­le work calls and emails,” she said. “Australian unions have reclaimed the right to knock off after work.”

But the reforms got a cool welcome from Australian industry. “The ‘right to disconnect’ laws are rushed, poorly thought out and deeply confusing,” the Australian Industry Group said in a statement. “At the very least, employers and employees will now be uncertain about whether they can take or make a call out of hours to offer an extra shift,” said the country’s peak industry group.

The law, enacted in February, came into force for medium-sized and large companies as of Monday. Smaller companies with fewer than 15 employees will be covered from August 26, 2025. “We encourage workplace participan­ts to educate themselves on the right to disconnect and take a commonsens­e approach to applying it within their workplace,” said the head of Australia’s workplace relations regulator, Fair Work Ombudsman Anna Booth.

Under the law, workers may be ordered by a tribunal to stop unreasonab­ly refusing out-of-hours contact, and employers likewise may be ordered to stop unreasonab­ly requiring employees to respond, it said. The question of what is reasonable will “depend on the circumstan­ces”, the Fair Work Ombudsman said in a statement.

Deciding factors may include the reason for the contact, the nature of the employee’s role, and their compensati­on for working extra hours or being available, it said. France introduced the right to disconnect in 2017, hoping to tackle the “always on” culture facilitate­d by smartphone­s and other digital devices. —

 ?? ?? MELBOURNE: People row a boat up Melbourne’s Yarra River taking advantage of the winter sun on August 19, 2024.
MELBOURNE: People row a boat up Melbourne’s Yarra River taking advantage of the winter sun on August 19, 2024.
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