It?s been two years since the public release of the Respect@Work report, a national inquiry into sexual harassment in the workplace conducted by the Australian Human Rights Commission. The report?s findings were that sexual harassment in Australian workplaces is both prevalent and pervasive and in its current state, the legal and regulatory system is insufficient to effectively resolve these matters.
The report went on to highlight the costs to the economy and the negative long-term health and wellbeing implications for people (predominantly women) who experience such harassment. The report provided 55 recommendations that outlined how reform could be made and how moving forward, Australia responds to and prevents sexual harassment in the workplace. The recommendations were comprehensive, covering areas from primary prevention services, more support for survivors, and changes to legal and regulatory frameworks that would have changed workplace laws to ban sexual harassment and protect victims from astronomical legal bills.
Central to the recommendations was for the imposition of a ?positive duty? upon employers to take steps to prevent sexual harassment and discrimination from occurring in their organisations. As of last week, the Morrison government voted down attempts by the Labor and Greens parties to implement this key recommendation, meaning that the Sex Discrimination Act can only be invoked when someone makes a complaint. This maintains the responsibility of taking action against the perpetrators of sexual harassment and violence on victims and distances the obligation of preventative action from employers and organisations.
Despite the limited actions taken by the Government to action the recommendations from the Respect@Work report, organisations can demonstrate their commitment to building safe workplaces that are free from sexual harassment by proactively implementing some of the recommendations themselves. For an organisation, this might look like:
Time will tell whether the Morrison government is going to commit further to implementing the recommendations put forward by the Respect@Work report, but in the meantime, Australian businesses can step up and take actions to ensure their organisational culture is one of respect and care for women and all employees.
If your organisation needs assistance in developing strategies to prevent or address sexual harassment in the workplace, the team at Karen Ansen Consulting is able to provide you with solutions informed by HR and Legal best practices.