With the holiday season coming up and with droves of post-HSC students looking for jobs, I thought I'd make a point about this.
You may know this, or you may not.. but I know we have alot of job seekers here who have perhaps never been in the work force before and can be quite naive when it comes to things.
Straight to the point:
Under currently existing N.S.W law, it is illegal for an employer to demand a period of unpaid work trials for job applicants & new employees.
This obviously doesn't include situations where you engage as a volunteer or as a participant of a work experience program (e.g for school).
I know people and certainly heard stories in this forum dating far back in which people have been working for free at a new job for a little while, as a 'trial' for your manager. This is illegal.
Straight off the Office of Industrial Relations website of the N.S.W government:
"There is no such thing as an unpaid trial where an employer requires you to work in a job for a trial period. This is particularly so where the work you perform benefits the employer's business and would otherwise be performed by paid staff."
If you know this already, good on you. But if you don't, be careful.
You may know this, or you may not.. but I know we have alot of job seekers here who have perhaps never been in the work force before and can be quite naive when it comes to things.
Straight to the point:
Under currently existing N.S.W law, it is illegal for an employer to demand a period of unpaid work trials for job applicants & new employees.
This obviously doesn't include situations where you engage as a volunteer or as a participant of a work experience program (e.g for school).
I know people and certainly heard stories in this forum dating far back in which people have been working for free at a new job for a little while, as a 'trial' for your manager. This is illegal.
Straight off the Office of Industrial Relations website of the N.S.W government:
"There is no such thing as an unpaid trial where an employer requires you to work in a job for a trial period. This is particularly so where the work you perform benefits the employer's business and would otherwise be performed by paid staff."
If you know this already, good on you. But if you don't, be careful.
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