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mrssphinx
Guest
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Hi there I have been following this for a little while now, and have a look at whats been going on.
As the HR person in a company, I am passionate about improving all of the above. At present in our state we have been working on this issue for quite a while now, have been in discussions with workplace services and will be having a working group with some other companies/small businesses in the private sector, should be interesting.
What we are trying to do is put together several options that stanadise pay and conditions (for our state only at this stage). As it seems to be all over the place, in every state. This will not be through an award, this being that they are very expensive to formulate and are very '80s. It still seems that even if you do have an award, some people just don't follow them, i.e. the diving instructor award.
We are working on something called an awa, more up to date, easy to understand and has some flexibility. Australian workplace agreement. Several options that employees and the employers can chose from. This will be put through as an industry standard, that if proffessional bodies want to comply, for insurance reasons they will have to comply with the pay and conditions with their instructors. I believe most companies have good intentions and are trying to improve, or should be. But there is only so much you can do as one company otherwise you can outprice yourself out of the market and lose it to another.
One of my goals is not only to improve pay and conditions but also to improve the security for instructors.
Out of interest, if you are a freelance instructor, how many get asked to be independent contractors (no super, workcover, insurance cover). Do people pay more than usual in this case, to compensate, or just do it dodgey??
Just so you know as well we sometimes just get asked to organise some qualified instructors, not the whole package. Add on their pay and allowances, super etc.. and pretty much about half of them, turn around and say it is too expensive. So someone must be taking on the work and getting paid poorly. I believe that experienced instructors need to educate the uni and tafe students (or the one that just come out) about lifting the professional standards. You could say that we as a company are competing with young instructors willing to take anything for the experience.
This ultimately affects you guys as the under experienced, underqualified people are reducing your work and your pay.
All people that use our industry are going to have to get used to paying a little bit more for our professional services. Companies aren't against you, there with you guys, I hope. If you want to do something educate the young people that are coming out that its a great field to work in, it is a career and not a hobby. And to get some guts when clarifying the money and responsibilities (the hours and workload expected) before they take on the work.
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