(1) The purpose of this procedure is to outline key principles in relation to out of hours contact with RMIT employees from RMIT or third parties, in line with the 'right to disconnect' introduced to the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) (FW Act). (2) RMIT recognises and respects that employees have a 'right to disconnect' from the workplace outside of the employee’s working hours. (3) RMIT supports employees to balance their work and personal life commitments. (4) This procedure addresses expectations in relation to contact outside of an employee’s ordinary working hours in a hybrid and flexible working environment. (5) RMIT acknowledges that employees are not expected to engage in unreasonable work-related communications outside of their working hours, and will not face any detrimental impact for choosing not to respond to out of hours communications, except where that refusal is unreasonable. (6) Authority for this document is established by the Employee Lifecycle Policy. (7) This procedure applies to all current employees of the RMIT Group, subject to relevant legislation and employment terms. (8) For the purpose of this procedure, ‘contact’ includes ‘attempted contact’, and the term ‘third party’ includes RMIT students. (9) Under the FW Act, employees have a 'right to disconnect'. This means that employees have the right to refuse to monitor, read or respond to contact (such as emails, phone calls or messages) from RMIT, a colleague or a third party outside of their working hours, unless the refusal is unreasonable. (10) It will be unreasonable to refuse contact if the contact is required under a law of the Commonwealth, State or Territory. Otherwise, whether a refusal is unreasonable will depend on a range of factors, as outlined further below. (11) The 'right to disconnect' does not prohibit RMIT from sending emails to employees outside of work hours. However, in accordance with the General Protections regime under the FW Act, an employee will not face any negative repercussions because they have reasonably exercised their 'right to disconnect'. (12) Where possible, all work-related communication should occur during an employee’s normal working hours. (13) An employee is not required to monitor, read or respond to contact from RMIT or a third party outside of the employee’s working hours, unless the refusal to do so is unreasonable, having regard to the following factors (although other factors may also be relevant): (14) Examples of when it may be reasonable for RMIT to expect an employee to respond to communication outside of their working hours may include: (15) RMIT expects all employees to: (16) RMIT expects managers to discuss with their direct reports: (17) An employee may have a concern or complaint about: (18) Any concerns or complaints in relation to this procedure or the 'right to disconnect' should be raised with the employee's manager in the first instance. (19) If the matter is not resolved, the parties should escalate to their next level manager to assist. (20) An employee may also submit a complaint through RMIT's Complaints Portal for investigation and resolution. (21) Employees can seek guidance on any aspect of this procedure from the People team.Right to Disconnect Procedure
Section 1 - Context
Section 2 - Authority
Section 3 - Scope
Section 4 - Procedure
Understanding the right to disconnect
Reasonable out of hours communication
Communication expectations
Concerns or complaints
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