The Fair Work Commission has made a landmark decision which will give casual employees covered by an additional 85 workplace awards the right to request permanent work after being employed for 12 months.
While these provisions have been present in awards such as the Building and Construction for years, the changes that spring from the commission’s recent decision willย bring into another 85, in a move experts say will most affect the retail and hospitality industries.
The initial proposals from various workers’ unions on this issue angledย to have employees able to make a request for permanent work after six months rather than 12, but the commission rejected that proposal.
In its decision, the Fair Work Commission (FWC) said as long as the casual employment was โlong-term in nature, and to be of sufficient regularityโ, it considered it to be โfair and necessary for the employee to have access to a mechanism by which the casual employment may be converted to an appropriate form of permanent employmentโ.
Union groups and retail bodies have taken different positions on theย decision, but business leaders in the Australian SME space have viewed the ruling moderately favourably, with Small Business Ombudsman Kate Carnell saying on Twitter the ruling was โbalancedโ.
โCasuals are meant to be casual. If they want permanency after 12 months, that’s fair,โ she said.
Speaking to SmartCompany, Council of Small Business Australia chief executive Peter Strong said he was โnot greatly perturbedโ by the decision, but acknowledges some businesses may find it โannoyingโ.
The main worry for Strong is the decision will increase the already significant amount of paperwork and red tape Australian businesses have to wade through.
โThis decision will create unnecessary red tape for businesses. Instead of concentrating on your business and keeping someone in a job, you have to stop actually running your business and run the workplace relations system instead,โ he says.
โI donโt think the decision really reflects the modern world or the reality of a modern workplace.โ
What businesses need to know
Managing director of Workplace Law Athena Koelmeyer tellsย SmartCompanyย while the decision will affect businesses both big and small, the aim was to make any business โwho has made a practise of relying on casual labourโ rethink their staff employment.
The commission is still taking submissions on the decision until August 2 and the clauses won’t be inserted into awards tomorrow, Koelmeyer says businesses should know the provisions will be retroactive.
โThe principle of it will be if you have a casual who has worked with you for twelve months in a regular and systematic pattern of work, then they will have the right to ask for permanent employment,โ she says.
โThe crux of the provision is that the employee could relatively easily be converted to part time employment, so this doesnโt apply to truly casual employees, as truly casual work is random and ad hoc.โ
In its decision the FWC outlines the provisions apply to employees who worked โa pattern of hours on an ongoing basis which, without significant adjustment, could continue to be performed in accordance with the full-time or part-time employmentโ.
The Commission has also outlined a series of provisions for employers in which they can refuse the request of a casual employee, the main provision being if the switch would require a โsignificant adjustmentโ to the staff members working hours.
Koelmeyer says businesses can also refuse an employee’s request if they know they will not need the role in the next 12 months, where it is โknown or reasonably foreseeable that the casual employeeโs position will cease to existโ, says the FWC.
Finally, businesses can also refuse the requests on โreasonably foreseeableโ grounds. Koelmeyer uses the example of a business employing call centre operators, who would have grounds to refuse a casual employeeโs request if it were โreasonably knownโ the call centre would be being outsourced overseas.
Koelmeyer advises businesses to begin to take a โcareful lookโ at employee arrangements to get ahead of the curve before the FWCโs decision is legislated.
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