Workers in Australia will soon enjoy more work-life balance.
Australian lawmakers legislated a "right to disconnect" law that grants all Australian workers the right to ignore their calls from their bosses after work, among others.
What is the right to disconnect
The right to disconnect is part of the "closing loopholes" bill which was passed on Feb. 8, 2024, The Guardian, Reuters and The Sydney Morning Herald reported.
you were today years old when you won the right to screen calls from your boss outside of ya contracted hours
thx @barbarapocock @jennifercoolidge pic.twitter.com/d1mWYgU0fi
— Australian Greens (@Greens) February 8, 2024
The new law protects all employees in Australia from being punished for ignoring their bosses' "unreasonable" attempts to contact them outside of paid work hours.
Employees who are contacted outside work hours or expected to answer after work can also raise a complaint with their employer.
If the issue persists, they can apply to Australia's Fair Work Commission for a "stop" order on the employer to stop unreasonable out-of-hours contact.
Employers found breaching the order may be fined.
Unreasonable vs reasonable
However, the line between what counts as reasonable and unreasonable may not be so clear.
Factors in deciding what is reasonable include how often a worker is contacted, how they are contacted, what they are being contacted about, the nature of their job description, if they are being paid or not, and the nature of their family responsibilities.
Barbara Pocock, workplace relations spokesperson for The Greens, the party responsible for the reform, said contact during an emergency or to change work conditions such as location or hours are reasonable.
Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations Tony Burke echoed Pocock, saying it was reasonable for employers to send emails or contact people for shifts.
However, Burke said it was "unreasonable" to expect workers to work out of office hours.
S$80.6 billion lost due to unpaid overtime
Greens leader Adam Bandt said on X, formerly Twitter, that Australians work an average of six weeks unpaid overtime each year.
He said this equated to over AUD 92 billion (S$80.6 billion) in unpaid wages across the country's economy.
Australians work an average of 6 weeks unpaid overtime each year, equal to over $92 billion in unpaid wages across the economy.
That time is yours. Not your boss’.
— Adam Bandt (@AdamBandt) February 7, 2024
Closing loopholes bill
The closing loopholes bill also includes other provisions like minimum standards for temporary gig workers, such as pay, payment terms, penalty rates, superannuation and insurance, creating a single system to convert from casual full-time work, among others.
Pocock said the changes would be phased in over six months, to give employers time to "adapt, listen and learn", with a longer phase-in for small businesses.
Top image by Alvin Philemon