Wage theft becomes a criminal offence

Wage theft becomes a criminal offence

Latest News & Events

Wage theft becomes a criminal offence

money changing hands

The next element of the Albanese Government’s Closing Loopholes changes to the Fair Work Act substantially up the penalties for underpayment of wages and entitlements with a new criminal offence of wage theft.

What’s changing?

From 1 January 2025, “wage theft” will become a criminal offence.

The penalties for a corporation found to have engaged in wage theft will be:

  • if the court can determine the underpayment, the greater of 3 times the amount of the underpayment and $7.825 million, or
  • if the court can’t determine the underpayment, $7.825 million. 

And for an individual, they will be:

  • up to 10 years’ imprisonment and
  • if the court can determine the underpayment, the greater of 3 times the amount of the underpayment and $$1.565 million, or
  • if the court can’t determine the underpayment, $$1.565 million. 

Cases of criminal prosecution for wage theft will be referred to the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions or the Australian Federal Police for consideration and prosecution where appropriate.

Why is this happening?

Over the past decade, there have been numerous high profile cases of organisations from multi-nationals to micro businesses underpaying wages and entitlements, in some cases deliberately and in some negligently and systematically.

Earlier this year, the Fair Work Ombudsman secured record penalties amounting to $10.34 million against the Commonwealth Bank of Australia.  The presiding judge, Justice Bromwich stated:

“The simple fact is that the obligations were readily able to be complied with, and proper checks to ensure that was taking place were not hard to implement. That did not happen, and the message needs to be loud and clear that this is not good enough and will not be tolerated, most significantly for other would-be contraveners, but also as an ongoing warning for CBA and therefore the CBA Group of which it is the dominant member.”

That probably says it all.

What constitutes wage theft?

According to the Fair Work Ombudsman, employers will commit an offence if:

  • they’re required to pay an amount to an employee (such as wages), or on behalf of or for the benefit of an employee (such as superannuation) under the Fair Work Act, or an industrial instrument
  • they intentionally engage in conduct that results in their failure to pay those amounts to or for the employee on or before the day they’re due to be paid.

They note that this only applies to intentional underpayments that occur after the new provisions take effect but include ones where they are part of a course of conduct that started before the provisions take effect.

What happens if underpayments are accidental or unintentional?

Firstly, employers are liable for rectifying underpayments of wages and other entitlements for up to 6 years retrospectively.

The Fair Work Ombudsman might also require your company to enter into an Enforceable Undertaking (EU).

Typically an EU contains additional obligations. These include:

  • an acknowledgement by the employer that the law has not been followed
  • an agreement by the employer to do certain actions to fix the breach (for example, remedying an underpayment, apologising, printing a public notice)
  • a commitment by the employer to future compliance measures (for example, regular internal audits, training for managers and staff, future reporting to the Fair Work Ombudsman).

Each EU is published on the Fair Work Ombudsman website as a matter of public record and so can be a source of ongoing embarrassment and damage to company brand and reputation.

If you do not comply with a Compliance Notice issued by the Fair Work Ombudsman requiring you to correct breaches and make good on underpayments, they can take you to court to get notices enforced and that can result in significant fines as follows:

  • $18,780 per contravention for an individual
  • $93,900 per contravention for a company with less than 15 employees
  • $469,500 per contravention for a company with 15 or more employees.

And for serious contraventions:

  • $187,800 per contravention for an individual
  • $939,000 per contravention for a company with less than 15 employees
  • $4,695,000 per contravention for a company with 15 or more employees.

Infringement Notices

These are essentially on the spot fines for minor record keeping breaches.

Inspectors can issue infringement notices to an employer for:

  • not making and keeping employee records for 7 years
  • not issuing pay slips within one working day of paying employees
  • not including the required information on a pay slip and/or in an employee record
  • advertising a job with pay rates that are less than an employee’s minimum entitlements, where there is no reasonable excuse for not complying.

The infringement amount (fine) is up to:

  • $1,980 per breach for an individual
  • $9,900 per breach for a company.

So, even a very minor offence can be very costly plus, if your business is found not to be complying with record keeping requirements, it might lead to the Fair Work Ombudsman investigating for other breaches and potential underpayment of wages.

How can we help?

At Ridgeline HR. we have a long history of assisting clients with navigating the intricacies of the Fair Work Act and Modern Awards and we can help businesses large and small and of any sector to assure their Fair Work compliance. We have been doing that since 2000.

When you look at the serious costs of getting this stuff wrong, the $1500 plus GST investment in our Workplace Relations Compliance Assessment is a really good investment.

If you need someone to audit your payroll to make sure that you have things set up properly or to calculate underpayments, we can help with that too.

Plus, if you have accidentally got yourself into strife with the Fair Work Ombudsman, we can help you with both getting your compliance sorted and working with the regulator to support you.

If any of that is or interest or you have some other HR issue that you need help with, give us on 0438 533 311 to arrange your free first consultation.

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ABN : 24 091 644 094

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Industry Specific Redundancy Schemes 1

Industry Specific Redundancy Schemes 1

Latest News & Events

Industry Specific Redundancy Schemes 1

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There are some unusual provisions in modern awards and these can deliver unexpected differences in entitlements for employees than what you might expect. For employers in the building and construction and plumbing and fire sprinkler industries, one such surprise is the industry specific redundancy schemes that apply in lieu of the National Employment Standard on redundancy. Here we unpack that.

Most employees in the country have their redundancy entitlements determined by the National Employment Standards which provides for up to 16 weeks of payment depending on how long the employee has been with the company for.

There are, however some exceptions to this – they are employees who receive their entitlements via an external fund that their employers make regular contributions to, like Incolink, or employees whose work is covered by an Industry Specific Redundancy Scheme provided for in a modern award. This is the first of a series of blogs about these exceptions and, in this one, we deal with those applying under the Building and Construction General On-site Award 2020 and the Plumbing and Fire Sprinklers Award 2020.

What is an Industry Specific Redundancy Scheme?

The Fair Work Act 2009 provides that the National Employment Standard on redundancy is displaced by an industry specific redundancy scheme where that is provided for in a modern award or an enterprise agreement. These schemes existed prior to creation of the relevant modern awards and have just been carried over into modern awards. They can have different rules and different levels of entitlement to those prescribed in the National Employment Standard.

What is different about the scheme in the building and plumbing awards?

The particular type of industry specific redundancy scheme that is in the building and plumbing awards was ostensibly created on the basis that employees in the industry typically worked from project to project and therefore were unlikely to accumulate sufficient continuous service with one employer to qualify for redundancy in the normal way. This is certainly not the case with the building and construction businesses which we service as they engage most employees on a continuing basis because they need them on that basis. 

There are three primary differences that apply under this industry specific redundancy scheme as compared to the National Employment Standard:

  • There is a different definition of redundancy and
  • There is a different set of entitlements to redundancy pay and
  • There is no small business exemption

The normal definition of a genuine redundancy is “when the employer or business no longer requires the job to be performed by anyone” as prescribed in the National Employment Standard which provides for up to 16 weeks redundancy pay based on length of continuous service. There is no entitlement in the first year of service.

In contrast, the definition of redundancy in the building and plumbing awards is “an employee who ceases to be employed by the employer for reasons other than those of misconduct or refusal of duty”. That industry specific redundancy scheme provides for a lesser maximum amount of redundancy pay (capped at 8 weeks after 4 years’ service) but also provides for pro rata payment in the first and subsequent years for each completed week of service.

There is also no small business exemption so that employers with less than 15 employees are also up for redundancy payments (unlike under the National Employment Standard).

On face value, you might think that employees covered under these awards are worse off than they would be under the National Employment Standard and, for an employee with more than 5 years service who is genuinely made redundant in the normal way, that would be true.

However, the different definition of redundancy in this industry specific redundancy scheme means that it is not just that genuine redundancy that attracts a redundancy payment.

The building and plumbing awards also state:“Provided that an employee employed for less than 12 months will be entitled to a redundancy/severance payment of 1.75 hours per week of service if, and only if, redundancy is occasioned otherwise than by the employee.”  

So what does all of that mean?

It means that any employee whose employment terminates for any reason other than “misconduct or refusal of duty”  is entitled to a redundancy payment:

  • In the first 12 months of employment and thereafter, if the employer initiates the termination eg if an employee is terminated due to genuine redundancy or on performance grounds or on incapacity grounds or due to loss of an essential qualification or any other reason except “misconduct or refusal of duty” plus
  • After the first 12 months of employment, if the employee initiates the termination eg if the employee resigns, retires or dies.

So, for example, if you have an employee who resigns after completing 4 or more years of service, you are up for 8 weeks in redundancy pay on top of their other final entitlements. 

What can employers do?

There are a few options.

The first is to make contributions to a redundancy fund like Incolink. The fund then manages any claims made by the employee for redundancy payments. The downside to this is that the costs can be quite high.

Another alternative is to have your own enterprise agreement. Through an enterprise agreement, you can alter or replace Award terms with ones that align more closely with how your company operates. This would allow you to replace the Industry Specific Redundancy Scheme with the NES term which has the normal meaning of redundancy.

It is also possible for employers who pay their employees significantly above the minimum rates specified in the Award to offset an employee’s entitlement to redundancy payments. Any attempt to do so should be spelt out in an employment contract and the employee affected should be made aware of what they are agreeing to in that contract. You, of course, also need to verify that you are actually paying sufficiently above award to set off the redundancy payment.

How can we help?

At Ridgeline HR we have a long history of assisting clients with navigating the intricacies of the Fair Work Act and Modern Awards and we can help businesses to manage their obligations to employees in any of the ways we have mentioned in this blog.

If you need assistance with understanding your obligations to your employees or changing how you meet your obligations to employees regarding the Industry Specific Redundancy Scheme or any other HR related matter please don’t hesitate to contact us on 0438 533 311 or at enquiries@ridgelinehr.com.au

In subsequent blogs, we will deal with other Industry Specific Redundancy Schemes applying in other industries, some of which provide for higher redundancy pay than the National Employment Standard and some that provide redundancy pay for small business employers who would otherwise be exempt under the National Employment Standard.

 

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enquiries@ridgelinehr.com.au

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Are your contracts current, compliant and complete?

Are your contracts current, compliant and complete?

Latest News & Events

Are your contracts current, compliant and complete?

example flexible working arrangement

As we go through the biggest era of change in employment laws and modern awards that we have ever seen, it is becoming increasingly important to have written contracts that clearly set out the pay and conditions applying to each individual employee or contractor. Do yours? And are they current, compliant and complete? 

Why do you need written contracts?

When you engage someone to work for you, whether as an employee or a contractor, it brings into play a host of legal obligations covered by the Fair Work Act and a variety of other legislation and, in the case of employees, modern awards and, where applicable, enterprise agreements. 

There are many purposes that contracts serve:

  1.  They educate you about your legal obligations and can be a source of information for decision-making on issues that arise in the relationship with the employee or contractor.
  2. They clearly set out the nature of the relationship between you and the employee (be it full-time, part-time, casual or fixed term) or contractor.
  3. They provide details on any duties or obligations that the employee or contractor is required to satisfy in the relationship with you.
  4. They provide evidence of the employee or contractor acceptance of the pay and conditions as set out in the contract and, assuming the fairness of the contract, can be used in defence of any claim that might be made against you or your business.
  5. There have been around 70 changes in employment law and modern awards and the rules around employment and contracting have undergone an overhaul recently.

The gap between employee and contractor is progressively becoming more blurred so you also want clarity, especially if the individual is not covered by a company (Pty Ltd) structure.

What are the changes that affect contracts? 

Some of the significant changes that need to be considered in contracts are:

  1. New definitions of employee, casual employee and contractor
  2. Prohibition of pay secrecy provisions
  3. A new jurisdiction at the Fair Work Commission for disputes in relation to unfair contract claims
  4. New jursidictions for road transport contractors and gig workers
  5. The “right to disconnect” and associated award provisions
  6. Changes to rules in relation to annual shutdowns
  7. Revised casual conversion provisions
  8. New jurisdictions for dispute resolution at the Fair Work Commission regarding sexual harassment, requests for flexible working arrangements, requests for extension of parental leave and complaints regarding the right to disconnect

These are just a few of the issues that need to be considered in constructing contracts and their relevance may well vary according to the industry, business setting, occupation and seniority of the role in question. 

Other considerations

While under the changes that we are currently seeing, we are moving back to multi-factorial assessment of the true nature of a relationship (eg contractor or employee), the contract is still an important piece of evidence in determining such questions.

Remember that one size does not fit all and don’t just adopt a template that you got from somewhere else or that is the standard on the HR compliance system that you use. It is imperative that the contract is a fit with your business arrangements and with the individual concerned – ie ensure that they reflect the reality.

We have also seen a number of prosecutions of corporations in recent years for underpayment of wages related to employees being put on contracts with fixed salaries which did not provide adequate remuneration for the hours that those employees actually worked.

So, if you do want to put people on salaries or you wish to set off any award entitlements that might apply to an employee, you need to both be very specific in the contract about exactly which award provisions are being set off and compensated for by the remuneration provided for in the contract and you have to make sure that the employee is actually better off than they would be if the award was literally applied to their employment, pay and conditions.

Also a heads up if you have restraint provisions that the ACCC is currently considering whether restraint provisions should be regulated or, in some cases, abolished – so watch this space.

How we can help

We have been helping clients with employment contracts for over 20 years.

We can advise you on award coverage, terms in awards that affect remuneration or impose certain conditions and help you in structuring remuneration and benefits so that your offer is compliant.

We can help you to navigate all of the changes that are coming in so that your contracts are current.

And we can help you to decide the style of contract that you want in each case and what needs to go into them to make them complete for that particular circumstance.

If you would like to explore how we can assist you with employment contracts, call us on 0438 533 311 or email enquiries@ridgelinehr.com.au to arrange your free first consultation.

CONTACT US

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ABN : 24 091 644 094

enquiries@ridgelinehr.com.au

0438 533 311

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How to manage the right to disconnect

How to manage the right to disconnect

Latest News & Events

How to manage the right to disconnect

example flexible working arrangement

From 26 August 2024, employers with 15 or more employees have to respect employees’ right to disconnect from work outside their contracted working hours. Smaller employers will have those obligations 12 months later. What does it mean for your business and what do you need to do?  

What is the right to disconnect?

Here is how it is described in the Fact Sheet published by the Department of Employment and Workplace Relations:

“The right to disconnect will inform how employers and employees interact outside  of working hours. The right does not prohibit employers from contacting their employees, nor does it prevent employees from contacting each other, including across time zones. Rather, the employee will be able to refuse to monitor, read or respond to contact, or attempted contact outside of working hours, when they are not expected to be working or paid to be working, so long as doing so is not unreasonable.” 

So it doesn’t prohibit making contact with employees outside their contracted working hours – it just provides that they don’t have to respond to such contact outside their contracted working hours other than in limited circumstances.

The real obligations on employers are to not unreasonably require someone to respond to contact after hours and not to penalise people for exercising their right to disconnect. 

Inclusion in modern awards

The Fair Work Commission has been tasked with inserting “right to disconnect” clauses in modern awards. 

The approach it is taking is to have a standard clause which is customised according to existing provisions in Awards which might have relevance to contact after hours such as standby or call back or roster change provisions. 

So you need to consider which awards cover your employees, what provisions they might have in regard to out of hours contact and how those provisions relate to your own operations.

It is also something that you will need to consider in enterprise agreements.

What do you need to do?

In our blog back in February on Managing disconnection from work, we noted that this really should not be that big an issue for most organisations so the first thing you should do is ignore all of the hype about it. 

Then you should undertake a constructive assessment of the effects for your organisation and your people by answering the following questions:

  • Are there any situations where employees in your organisations need to be responsive to contact outside their standard working hours for genuine operational reasons?
  • Are there provisions in a modern award or enterprise agreement which deal with the specific type or cause of contact eg someone being on standby or being called back or being contacted about a roster change or some other prescribed matter outside their standard working hours?
  • Are employees remunerated for making themselves available for contact outside working hours under the provisions of a modern award or enterprise agreement or otherwise under their contract of employment?
  • Do you have any employees who have flexibility in their hours and location of work and whose working hours might fall outside standard operating hours via a flexible working arrangement or agreement or by individual choice?
  • Do you have any protocols in place regarding out of hours contact for people who may be working outside standard working hours eg contact to other staff or external parties should only be via email with the scheduling function used to delay transmission until the start of the following working day?
  • Do you have any protocols in place with external parties in relation to their contact and their response expectations with your staff outside standard working hours?
  • Do any of your people have to operate across timezones which might cause communications to occur outside an employee’s standard working hours?
  • Do any of your managers unreasonably or unnecessarily send communications to their people outside their standard working hours, expecting them to respond outside those hours?
  • Do any external parties unreasonably and unnecessarily send communications to your people outside their standard working hours, expecting them to respond outside those hours?
  • Do you have people who you know will respond to out of hours contacts even if you don’t want them to?
  • Do you deal with out of hours contact requirements in your contracts of employment?
  • Do you verify adequacy of remuneration having regard to out of hours contact requirements where an employee is expected to respond to specified contacts?
  • Do you deal with out of hours contact happenings in your performance and development conversations?
  • Do you have a properly structured and communicated “Life balance policy” which includes details on the organisation’s expectations and processes for management of out of hours contact and the employee right to disconnect? 

Other tips

As with any matter around people and culture, we encourage you to look at these things on 3 levels – organisational, team and individual – and please do that by engaging with your people in determining what the realities for your business and people are and covering off all of the bases. 

Remember it is about your business and your people so don’t just borrow or buy a policy statement from someone else and remember our 4C compliance model because unless you do all 4Cs, you are not truly compliant:

  • Commitment – the fundamentals that deliver purpose and compliance
  • Capability – the tools and systems that enable good people practice
  • Competency – the skills and knowledge that deliver positive outcomes for businesses and people
  • Culture – the integration of all of that to deliver everyday employee engagement and high performance.

How we can help?

We can help you to get the right answers to all of the questions that we have said you need to be asking in determining how your business is going to responsibly manage your employees’ right to disconnect.

We can advise you on remuneration in line wth award provisions and we can be-you with policies and employment contracts as well as advices to ay “problem individuals” who might need to modify their habits so as not to interfere with other employees’ right to disconnect.

If you would like to learn more about ways that we help with this or any other HR issue, please call us on 0438 533 311 or email us at enquiries@ridgelinehr.com.au.

CONTACT US

Ridgeline Human Resources Pty Ltd
ABN : 24 091 644 094

enquiries@ridgelinehr.com.au

0438 533 311

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Annual Wage Review decision is in

Annual Wage Review decision is in

Latest News & Events

Annual Wage Review decision is in

example flexible working arrangement

The Fair Work Commission’s Expert Panel has handed down this year’s Annual Wage Review decision which will see the federal minimum wage and award rates increase by 3.75% from 1 July 2024.  

The decision notes that impending tax cuts and the increase in the superannuation guarantee charge were moderating factors but also acknowledged that:  “Modern award minimum wages remain, in real terms, lower than they were five years ago, notwithstanding last year’s increase of 5.75 per cent, and employee households reliant on award wages are undergoing financial stress as a result.”

Balancing that, the decision also noted that: we consider that it is not appropriate at this time to increase award wages by any amount significantly above the inflation rate, principally because labour productivity is no higher than it was four years ago and productivity growth has only recently returned to positive territory”.

More to come?

For some industries – those which predominantly employ women – there will be more to come.

We have already had significant wage increases of up to 28% in aged care and there is currently a review being undertaken in relation to nurses and midwives.

In today’s decision, there is a commitment to doing more in this space as per the following statement:

“Modern awards and classifications applicable to early childhood education and care workers, disability home care workers and other social and community services workers, dental assistants, medical technicians, psychologists, other health professionals and pharmacists will be the subject of Commission-initiated proceedings to examine and address gender undervaluation. These proceedings will commence shortly after the issue of this decision and we intend that they will be completed by the time of next year’s Review, which will then move on to the consideration of other gender undervaluation issues.”

So, if you are an employer in any of those industries, you can expect that there will be further “work value” wage decisions in the year ahead.

What do you need to do?

You need to review all employees’ wages to verify that they remain above award when the minimum and award wage increases take effect on 1 July 2024.

If employees are paid sufficiently above award, the increases can be fully absorbed against over-award payments unless there is an enterprise agreement or employment contract that says otherwise.

If you are paying people on an annualised salary or a flat weekly wage, you need to review that to verify that, when you take into account all of the payments that would apply to an employee under the relevant award and based on the hours that they work, the employee is still better off overall on the salary of wage than they would be under award conditions.

Some awards have specific rules ion annualising wages or default provisions which [provide for a certain margin above award offsetting other award conditions. Check the relevant award for your workers to see if any of these apply. 

Don’t forget that the superannuation guarantee charge is increasing by another 0.5% from 1 July 2024 taking it to 11.5% of ordinary time earnings.

Finally, it always an opportune time to review your employment contracts when these annual wage reviews occur. That is even more true this year with all of the changes to the Fair Work Act and modern awards that have been occurring of late.

We can assist you in all of these areas.

If you would like to learn more about ways that we can do this, please call us on 0438 533 311 or email us at enquiries@ridgelinehr.com.au.

CONTACT US

Ridgeline Human Resources Pty Ltd
ABN : 24 091 644 094

enquiries@ridgelinehr.com.au

0438 533 311

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Closing loopholes – casual employment

Closing loopholes – casual employment

Latest News & Events

Closing loopholes – casual employment

example flexible working arrangement

The Courts and Government have been jumping from one definition or interpretation of what casual employment is to another and then another over recent years and that is happening again under the Albanese Government’s Fair Work Legislation Amendment (Closing Loopholes) Act 2023.  Is it just the pendulum swinging back as happens on a change of government or is it more than that?  

S15A(1) of the Fair Work Act 2009 currently provides that an employee is a casual employee if the employer offers employment on the basis that “there is no firm advance commitment to continuing and indefinite work according to an agreed pattern of work for the person” and the person accepts the offer on that basis and becomes an employee as a result of that.

So the emphasis is on what is in the contract regardless of how the arrangement really works in practice.

Under the changes being introduced, the concept that a casual employee is one who has no firm advance commitment to continuing and indefinite work remains but the emphasis shifts to the practical reality of the relationship rather than just what is written in the contract.

The question of whether there is a firm advance commitment to continuing and indefinite work will be determined by a number of questions:

  • whether the employer can choose to offer (or not offer) work to the employee and whether the employee can choose to accept or reject an offer of work
  • whether continuing work is reasonably likely to be available given the nature of the business
  • whether part-time or full-time employees are undertaking similar roles in the workplace
  • whether the employee has a regular pattern of work.

We know that the vast majority of business owners try to do the right thing and want to be compliant with their obligations. 

Casual conversion

The ability for casual employees who serve a minimum period of engagement with a regular and systematic pattern of hours of work has been a feature of awards for decades and has been legislated for a few years now. So it isn’t a new concept.

Under the new rules, a casual employee of a small business employer (ie one with less than 15 employee) will be able to apply for conversion to full-time or part-time employment after 12 months service if they believe that they no longer fit the definition of a casual employee. For employees of larger employees, that opportunity comes after 6 months’ service.

Prior to these new provisions taking effect, employers with 15 or more employees have to offer casual conversion to casual employees engaged for 12 months or more and on a regular pattern of hours on an ongoing basis for at least the last 6 months provided that the employee could continue to work that regular pattern of hours without significant changes as a permanent employee.

Under the new rules, it is entirely up to the employee as to whether they request casual conversion. The employer has no obligation to offer it but will have to respond to any such request within 21 days.

If the employer refuses the request, the employee can make application to the Fair Work Commission for mediation, conciliation or arbitration of the matter as a dispute.

The employer will have to comply with whatever agreement is reached or decision is made in those proceedings.

Employees are under no obligation to convert – they have the option of remaining a casual employee if that is their preference.

There are transitional arrangements whereby the current rules on casual conversion will continue after 26 August 2024 in respect of existing casual employees for a period of 6 months in the case of employers with 15 or more employees or 12 months for employers with less than 15 employees.

Casual Employment Information Statement

All casual employees must be provided with the revised Casual Employment Information Statement on or before commencement or as soon as possible thereafter.

Additionally, under the new rules, they will also have to be provided with it again:

  •  in the case of a small business, after 12 months of employment
  •  in the case of a large business, after 6 months, 12 months and annually thereafter

When is this all happening?

These changes take effect from 26 August 2024.

What do you need to do?

If you employ casual employees, review your current working arrangements eg how long they have been working with you, what their patterns of hours of work are and whether there is a commitment to ongoing employment on a regular basis (whether or not that commitment is in writing).

Secondly, review your employment contracts or letters of offer to ensure that they are consistent with the new definition and rules on casual employment.

Thirdly, ensure that you obtain the new Casual Employment Information Statement when it becomes available and read it to ensure that you understand it.

Fourthly, get prepared to have conversations with your casual employees about their status against the revised definition and rules and to deal with any likely request for conversion.

We can assist you in all of these areas.

If you would like to learn more about ways that we can do this, please call us on 0438 533 311 or email us at enquiries@ridgelinehr.com.au.

CONTACT US

Ridgeline Human Resources Pty Ltd
ABN : 24 091 644 094

enquiries@ridgelinehr.com.au

0438 533 311

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TELL US WHAT YOU NEED HELP WITH