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Work and family balance in regional Victoria Kerry Haynes, Sara Charlesworth, Iain Campbell, Marian Baird, Larissa Bamberry Centre for Applied Social Research.

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Presentation on theme: "Work and family balance in regional Victoria Kerry Haynes, Sara Charlesworth, Iain Campbell, Marian Baird, Larissa Bamberry Centre for Applied Social Research."— Presentation transcript:

1 Work and family balance in regional Victoria Kerry Haynes, Sara Charlesworth, Iain Campbell, Marian Baird, Larissa Bamberry Centre for Applied Social Research

2 RMIT UniversitySlide 2 Background Work and family balance may be defined as ‘the desire to have access to employment opportunities and earn an adequate income while at the same time looking after the caring responsibilities of family life’ (Russell and Bowman, 2000). Much of the research to date has been metro centric

3 RMIT UniversitySlide 3 % Employed people who disagree that work and family life often interfere with each other (CIV)

4 RMIT UniversitySlide 4 Analysis of CIV data Higher proportions of regional employees report work & family interference (44% compared to 40% metro employees) 9 of the top 10 LGAs in terms of work and family interference are regional

5 RMIT UniversitySlide 5 % Employees reporting work and family interference (CIV) LGAMales (%)Females (%)Persons (%) Surf Coast614553 Southern Grampians564852 South Gippsland574652 Greater Bendigo644052 Colac-Otway475451 Moira584250 Buloke455349 Yarriambiack465148 Northern Grampians504648 Cardinia573748

6 RMIT UniversitySlide 6 Employee characteristics (CIV) Greater proportions of employees in regional Victoria in these groups reported work & family interference: Men Parents, especially single parents Those with a post-school qualification Those with higher household incomes (esp $80- $100K) Those with poor job security Those who reported their work was too demanding and stressful Those who reported they spent too much time and energy on work.

7 RMIT UniversitySlide 7 Factors that may affect work & family balance GenderWagesLabour demand Household structureLeave provisionsType of industries Family responsibilitiesHours workedSkill needs Community responsibilities Schedule of hoursChild care Flexibility of hoursAged care Influence over working arrangements Public transport Travel times Education & training opportunities

8 RMIT UniversitySlide 8 Pilot project -2006 4 LGAs –City of Greater Bendigo, Colac-Otway Shire, Horsham Rural City Council, Latrobe City Council Research methods –Data ‘snapshots’ (2001 Census) –Key stakeholder interviews –Employee focus groups –Regional forums

9 RMIT UniversitySlide 9 Key findings - demographics Compared to Melbourne, the 4 regional areas had: Similar proportions of couple families with children & most had both parents in the paid workforce Greater proportions of single parents Smaller proportions of the population of working age Smaller proportions with tertiary qualifications Greater proportions drawing on some form of income support Greater proportions on lower incomes.

10 RMIT UniversitySlide 10 Key findings – Labour markets Weaker level of labour demand, in particular a relative shortage of full-time job opportunities Limited range of industries and skills Higher proportions of women in part-time employment Much of the part-time work available was seen as inadequate and family unfriendly Casual work, shift work and inconsistent and fluctuating hours made work and family balance more difficult.

11 RMIT UniversitySlide 11 Key findings- infrastructure Issues raised during consultations: Childcare- limited provision, affordability and quality Transport- long distances often required to access suitable jobs, lack of public transport Education and training opportunities limited both for skilled and less skilled groups, and for women returning to work

12 RMIT UniversitySlide 12 Work, family & community balance Reliance in regional Victoria on volunteers to staff community services, eg. CFA Volunteering seen as adding to the quality of community life Juggle between work, family and community Longer hours or irregular work schedules may impact on employees’ ability to meet community responsibilities

13 RMIT UniversitySlide 13 Current project ARC linkage grant with IRV and RDV Locations: 4 pilot areas plus 4 new areas Data sources: –2006 census data, key stakeholder interviews, regional forums –CATI survey of 4,000 employees –Industry studies

14 RMIT UniversitySlide 14 Summary Demonstrated need to examine regional Victoria more closely in terms of work, family and community balance Particularly important with changes to industrial relations regulations, the economy and drought


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