1 / 26

Understanding your Rights and Responsibilities as an Employer

Understanding your Rights and Responsibilities as an Employer. Date: Presented by:. Sources of Obligations. The National Employment Standards. Workshop Challenge: Leave. Workshop Challenge: Leave. Industrial instruments. Modern Awards cover most workplaces

pilar
Télécharger la présentation

Understanding your Rights and Responsibilities as an Employer

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Understanding your Rights and Responsibilities as an Employer Date: Presented by:

  2. Sources of Obligations

  3. The National Employment Standards

  4. Workshop Challenge: Leave

  5. Workshop Challenge: Leave

  6. Industrial instruments • Modern Awards • cover most workplaces • industry and/or occupation-based • contain minimum entitlements • Enterprise Agreements • apply to specified workplaces • negotiated with employees • must be approved by Fair Work Australia • override modern award (except base rate of pay)

  7. Other arrangements • Individual Flexibility Arrangements • can vary certain award / agreement terms • must be genuinely agreed between employer and employee • employee must be ‘better off overall’ • Employment Contracts • can provide equivalent or more generous conditions than NES and award / agreement • cannotundercut minimum entitlements.

  8. Wages

  9. Wages • Pay rates are set by the applicable modern award or enterprise agreement • Changes to pay rates generally take effect on 1 July each year. • Modern award wages are transitioning from the pre-modern award to the modern award

  10. Pay slips & record-keeping

  11. Record-keeping • You need to keep employee records for each employee relating to: • Their employment • Pay • Overtime • Hours of work • Leave • Superannuation contributions • Termination of employment • Other matters (IFAs and guarantees of annual earnings) • Records must be in English, accessible to employees and Fair Work Inspectors and kept for 7 years. • Record-keeping templates can be downloaded for free from the Fair Work Ombudsman website.

  12. Pay slips • Pay slips need to be issued within 1 working day of payment • Pay slips can be issued electronically or in hard copy • Pay slips must contain certain information – see the Employee records and pay slips fact sheet for details • Pay slip templates can be downloaded for free from the Fair Work Ombudsman website

  13. Workshop Exercise: Payslips

  14. Engaging, Managing & Terminating Staff

  15. Hiring Employees • Confirm: • the award/agreement that applies • the type of employment (full-time, part-time or casual) • any conditions re: type of employment/proposed hours • the employee’s classification (e.g. Level 1) • the correct rate of pay, loadings and allowances • Provide new employees with: • the Fair Work Information Statement • an engagement letter confirming their conditions of employment (optional)

  16. Engaging Contractors • Independent contractors are people who are self-employed and contract their services to clients. • Independent contractors are not employees and have different rights and obligations. • Misrepresenting or disguising an employee as an independent contractor is known as ‘sham contracting’ and is against the law.

  17. ‘Adverse Action’ • Adverse action is includes taking, threatening to take or organising to take actions that: • dismiss the employee • injure the employee in his or her employment • alter the position of the employee to the employee's prejudice • discriminate between the employee and other employees • Different forms of adverse action apply to prospective employees and independent contractors

  18. Protections from Adverse Action • It is unlawful for an employer to take adverse action in connection with the employee having: • workplace rights 2. freedom of association/union rights and/or engaging in lawful industrial activity 3. protected attributes / on discriminatory grounds

  19. Handling workplace disputes • Communicate - take time to understand and discuss the concerns. Keep detailed notes of discussions. • Check the applicable modern award/agreement to confirm the process for handling disputes. • If unresolved, refer to an independent third party or Fair Work Australia. • Download the Effective dispute resolution - Best Practice Guide from the Fair Work Ombudsman website

  20. Managing underperformance • Address underperformance promptly and appropriately • Follow any steps set out in the award / agreement or contractand consider applicable policies or procedures concerning performance management • Download the Managing Underperformance Best Practice Guide from the Fair Work Ombudsman website

  21. Terminating employment • Provide written notice of termination of employment • Ensure the dismissal is fair • Ensure the dismissal is lawful • Check if redundancy entitlements apply • Keep records • Pay outstanding entitlements

  22. Workshop Challenge: Notice

  23. Workshop Challenge: Notice

  24. Things to avoid… • Not paying penalties, allowances or overtime • Not paying for work trials, meetings or training • Offering goods or services instead of pay • Failing to provide pay slips • Unlawful discrimination • Sham contracting • Sham apprenticeships or trainee arrangements

  25. What to do if the FWO contacts you • Speak with your franchisor and seek advice if you need it • Cooperate with the Fair Work Inspector – produce requested documents and records; ask questions if you don’t understand • Seek to promptly resolve the complaint or any issues raised in an audit

  26. Where to get help • Speak with your franchisor or employer association • Visit www.fairwork.gov.au for: • Pay tools and Leave calculator • Fact Sheets and Best Practice Guides • Template Documents and Checklists • Industry Specific Web Pages • Live chat and email enquiries • Latest news and subscriptions services • Call the Fair Work Infoline – 1313 94

More Related