From 26 August 2024 non-government schools will need to adapt to each employee’s new right to refuse to read, monitor, or respond to work-related calls, emails, texts or other types of contact, from the school or from third parties, outside of the employee’s normal working hours. The refusal must be reasonable in the circumstances.
The “right to disconnect” is a new workplace entitlement introduced as part of the “Closing the Loopholes” amendments to the federal Fair Work Act designed to protect an employee’s work-life balance. The right commences on 26 August 2024 for most schools and on 26 August 2025 for non-government schools with fewer than 15 employees*.
This entitlement means an employee may refuse to read, monitor, or respond to work-related calls, emails, texts or other means of communication outside of their working hours. This includes contact or attempted contact from the school as well as contact from parents/carers, contractors, volunteers, and students.
Of course, this right is not without conditions: the employee’s refusal must be “reasonable”. Whether the refusal is reasonable will depend on a number of factors, which include:
The Fair Work Act explicitly states that if the contact or attempted contact with the employee is required by law, then the employee cannot refuse the contact. Contact relating to an investigation arising from a mandatory report may be an example.
Where an employee is covered by an enterprise agreement, if the enterprise agreement provides a more favourable right to disconnect clause than the legislation, then the enterprise agreement clause will apply.
If an employee has refused the contact or attempted contact, the matter will turn on whether the refusal is reasonable in the circumstances. The starting point is that the employee has the right to refuse, and the school must determine whether what they are expecting is itself reasonable in each employee’s case. Obtaining enough information regarding the circumstances will greatly assist in finding the best solution, which will balance the needs of the school and the right of employees to have a private life.
If the matter cannot be resolved through discussions at the school, an employee or the school can ask the Fair Work Commission to treat it as a dispute. The Commission has been given quite broad powers to make orders to stop an employee refusing contact or to stop the school requiring the employee to respond, as well as any other order it considers appropriate.
If the employee believes that they have suffered disadvantage at work (“adverse action”) as a result of having refused after-hours contact, then taking action in the Federal Court can result in fines against the school as well as compensation (uncapped) for the employee. A further risk for the school is that action can also be taken against the school and senior staff under workplace health and safety laws if it can be shown that the school’s policies or conduct presented an unacceptable risk of harm, or caused actual harm.
The key consideration is that any requirement or request for employees to respond to after-hours contact should in itself be reasonable. To that end, the school should:
1. Identify when, who, why and how often employees are being contacted outside of working hours – whether before or after school, on weekends, or while on leave. Take into account regular and irregular contact from the school and from third parties including parents/carers, students, school council members, contractors, and neighbours.5. Brief all staff with supervisory responsibilities on the right to disconnect and their obligation to ensure that after-hours contact is reasonable and respects employees’ right to a private life. Senior staff should be monitoring the extent of after-hours contact, for both their staff and themselves, and taking action where this is not reasonable, appears to be causing concern or where it presents a risk to the health of individuals. Remember that, even if there is requirement in a contract of employment that an employee is to be available, the volume or timing of contacts may still be capable of causing a risk of harm, which the school has a duty to minimise as far as practicable.
*When counting employees, this includes casuals who have regular and systematic work schedules.