The policy – a workplace right in France and Germany – was one of the recommendations backed by Labor members of a Senate inquiry into the care economy in October,while Labor’s Tony Sheldon,one of the government’s loudest voices on industrial issues,is also a supporter.
Bandt said Australians were under increasing pressure to balance work and their caring responsibilities,“but also their life generally”.
“One of the big pressures is the requirement many employers have that people be available out of hours to check phones,respond to emails,answer text messages. It’s bleeding into people’s lives,and it’s time to stop,” he said.
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Members of the Queensland Teachers’ Union recently voted in favour of an enterprise agreement incorporating a right not to answer calls or emails from parents or colleagues outside work hours and the National Tertiary Education Union sealed a similar deal for academic staff hired by the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners.
The Finance Sector Union is also negotiating over such a condition with Westpac and National Australia Bank in its new enterprise agreements.
Sheldon said during a press conference last month that the right to disconnect “should be part of the mix in the conversation” for legislation to come forward next year.