The Guardian • Issue #1972

Morrison must adopt all respect@work recommendations

Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) Statement

  • The Guardian
  • Issue #1972

The ACTU will appear at the Senate inquiry into the Morrison government’s proposed changes to the Fair Work and Sex Discrimination Acts in response to the Respect@Work report. They call on the Prime Minister to act on all fifty-five  recommendations rather than ignoring key elements of the report which would create safer workplaces for women.

The Morrison government has so far refused to accept the following recommendations:

Recommendation 28: a clear prohibition on sexual harassment in the Fair Work Act and a new complaints mechanism – instead the government has proposed a “stop sexual harassment” order that is a weaker mechanism that does not provide compensation to complainants.

Recommendations 17 and 18: positive duties to be placed on employers to eliminate sexual harassment to be included in the Sex Discrimination Act. Women will not be safe at work if employers only react to sexual harassment and do not prevent it.

Recommendation 19: powers for the Sex Discrimination Commissioner to initiate their own inquiries. This must be with enforcement powers to stop sexual discrimination and harassment.

Recommendation 16a: The Sex Discrimination Act should be amended to ensure the objects include “to achieve substantive equality between women and men”. The government is currently proposing a weaker formulation.

Recommendations 23 and 25: To promote access to justice for victims, the Parliament should amend the Australian Human Rights Commission Act to allow unions and other representative groups to bring representative claims to court; and, to limit cost orders to complainants who act without reasonable cause.

The ACTU is also calling on the federal government to use this opportunity to grant access to ten days paid Family and Domestic Violence Leave for all workers through the National Employment Standards. Escaping a violent relationship takes time and money, and unions representing frontline family and domestic violence workers estimate that moving to find a new, safe place for yourself and your family costs can cost up to $20,000 and take more than 140 hours.

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