Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
What is this?
Less
More

Owned by Fiona

Experts Coaching Academy

Private โ€ข 1 โ€ข Free

We transform lives through the power of personal coaching. If you're ready to embark on a journey of growth and true purpose, you are welcome.

Memberships

Just Grow:Magnetic Manifesting

Private โ€ข 899 โ€ข Free

HR Help Hub

Public โ€ข 32 โ€ข Free

ADHD Money & Business

Private โ€ข 85 โ€ข Free

Faceless Films (Free)

Private โ€ข 4k โ€ข Free

STA (Course Only)

Private โ€ข 2.1k โ€ข Free

Business Skool

Private โ€ข 349 โ€ข Free

Skool Community

Public โ€ข 183k โ€ข Paid

The Skool Games

Private โ€ข 22.8k โ€ข Free

Synthesizer

Private โ€ข 14.1k โ€ข Free

1 contribution to HR Help Hub
๐Ÿ“ข The New Right to Disconnect: What Business Owners and Managers Need to Know
The right to disconnect starts from the 26th August 2024 for most employers*. This new legislation is raising important questions about its implications for both employees and employers, particular how to navigate this right whilst still running an responsive operation. *For employees of small businesses, it will start on 26 August 2025. So What is the Right to Disconnect? The right to disconnect grants employees the ability to refuse monitoring, reading, or responding to work-related contact outside their designated working hours. This includes any attempted contact from their employer or third parties related to their work, such as clients or customers.. For some, this may cause some serious disruption! Key points to note: - This right does not impose a general obligation on employers to refrain from contacting employees outside of work hours. Such restrictions would only apply if an employee applies to the Fair Work Commission, which can make an order preventing contact. - It is a workplace right under the general protections provisions of the Fair Work Act, meaning employers are prohibited from taking adverse action against employees for exercising this right. When can employees say no? Employees can refuse work-related contact outside working hours unless itโ€™s unreasonable to do so. So how do you determine what factors make the contact reasonable? - The reason for the contact: Is it urgent or critical? - How the contact is made: What level of disruption does it cause? - Compensation: Is the employee compensated for availability or for additional hours worked? - Role and responsibility: What is the nature and level of the employeeโ€™s role? - Personal circumstances: Considerations such as family or caring responsibilities. NOTE - Employees canโ€™t refuse contact if itโ€™s required by law. Handling Disputes If thereโ€™s a disagreement about the right to disconnect, try to solve it within the workplace first. If that doesnโ€™t work, the Fair Work Commission can help by:
4
9
New comment Aug 12
๐Ÿ“ข The New Right to Disconnect: What Business Owners and Managers Need to Know
0 likes โ€ข Jul 29
Wow! Great piece.
0 likes โ€ข Jul 29
@Phil Hamilton I am getting my business into a position of beginning to hire. A lifetime ago I was in HR and Iโ€™m building a product to be used by HR Managers, hence my involvement in your group. It has changed so rapidly and continues to evolve and this new legislation is a great example. It certainly raises questions around my expectations of new staff and their availability, and for what I offer my clients too.
1-1 of 1
Fiona Stuart
1
5points to level up
@fiona-stuart-1879
Changing the world view of breakups and divorce; not as something lost, but life lessons gained and appreciated. We train others to do the same too!

Active 15h ago
Joined Jul 26, 2024
INFP
Australia/USA/Europe
powered by