A new report released today shows that Australian working families are under enormous pressure as a result of long, irregular working hours and a lack of job security.
The report clearly shows that the Federal Government is headed in the wrong direction for working families with IR laws that allow penalty rates, overtime, public holidays, shift penalties and weekend work rates to be cut without compensation.
Commenting on the report released today by Relationships Forum Australia, ACTU President Sharan Burrow said:
"This report shows that Australia is worse than any other high income nation when it comes to employees having time for their family relationships.
The report highlights the link between job insecurity, long hours, irregular hours and pressures within families.
It shows that large numbers of Australians are working very long hours, including on weekends and that many are in casual and insecure jobs that have no annual leave or paid personal leave.
The Federal Government's IR laws will make this situation even worse, with the loss of public holidays, weekend penalty rates, rest breaks and other job conditions removing the brake on long hours and unsocial working arrangements," said Ms Burrow.
Call for end to Govt cover-up on data showing impact of AWAs
The ACTU has today lodged a freedom of information application with the Federal Employment and Workplace Relations Minister, Joe Hockey, seeking documents, reports and correspondence relating to the job conditions being cut under the Government's AWA individual contracts.
Ms Burrow said: "Workplace Relations Minister Joe Hockey should end the cover-up about these contracts that are cutting the conditions and take-home pay of workers.
Working families are being ripped off by the Federal Government's IR laws through the loss of award conditions such as penalty rates and overtime in AWA individual contracts.
What we know from the figures that are currently available is, for example, 64 per cent of these AWAs are abolishing annual leave loadings, 63 per cent abolish penalty rates, and 51 per cent are getting rid of overtime.
Since the release of these figures the Government has put a ban on any more data being made public, that's why we've made this freedom of information application," said Ms Burrow.