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Queensland Fast Facts Live

Event start date: 26/04/2024
The 45-minute format is a great way to hear about a diverse range of things impacting and influencing our sector.

Right on Board – Practice Governance for Disability Service Providers: Governing and Managing for Human Rights, Quality and Safeguarding: Face-to-face Workshops

Event start date: 29/04/2024
Right on Board: Practice Governance for Disability Service Providers. Governing and Managing for Human Rights, Quality and Safeguarding, a program for Boards and Executive Teams of disability service...

Finance Representatives Network Meeting

Event start date: 30/04/2024
NDS, in partnership with Saward Dawson Chartered Accountants, is holding network meetings for finance representatives of disability service organisations to discuss current challenges and strategies...

Related events

NDS analyses DRC recommendations on employment

In our continuing analysis of key recommendations from the Disability Royal Commission report, NDS’s Policy Team looks at employment.

SIL provider contributions needed to co-design Active Support practice guide

The NDIS Commission invites SIL providers to co-design resources for person-centred support for people with intellectual disability.

NDS consults members on NDIS Review’s priorities for reform

In response to the NDIS Review’s What We Have Heard Report, NDS asks members to share ideas and solutions in our Network and Community of Practice meetings.

RC probes employers on workplace adjustments and culture

blue banner that reads Royal Commission hearing summary

25/11/2021

Over the past two days, the RC turned to recruitment, retention, workplace adjustments, and workplace culture.Witnesses from McDonald's, Accenture, National Australia Bank (NAB), and Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT) described a range of policies and practices on workplace adjustment.

RMIT took a 'proactive' approach via universal adjustments, attempting to use design to avoid the need for adjustments in the first place. By contrast, McDonald’s didn’t have specific policies on adjustments for people with disability, emphasising the majority of their restaurants were run by franchisees which are their own legal entities. Counsel suggested this approach left it up to luck; the witness disagreed but accepted they don’t centrally record if adjustment requests had been fulfilled. NAB saw merit in a disability employment target, but wanted to be able to track this through their systems first.Representatives from the NDIA, Department of Social Services and Australian Taxation Office were questioned on their participation rates of people with disability. Rates at the NDIA and DSS were significantly higher than both the private sector and the Australian Public Service (APS) average, partly due to disability being a focus of their work, the witnesses said. The three panellists admitted take-up of ‘workplace passports’, which allow an adjustment to ‘follow an employee’ through their employment, remained low.The focus then turned to work health and safety in the APS. Safe Work Australia, WorkSafe Victoria, and ComCare were asked what they had done to address employers’ misperception that there was higher risk in employing people with disability than people without. Some responded culture needed to change, including outside their organisation.

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