Workplace mental health support- do employers understand obligations?
Photo:
RNZ / Rebekah Parsons-King
Xero has confirmed it is dropping the employee assistance programme it offered free to businesses that use its software.
Those customers could use it to provide mental health support to their own staff, as an employee assistance scheme - or EAP.
When its offering winds up at the end of the month, Xero customers will still have the option to access professional wellbeing support for their employees, with the same international EAP provider, but they'll have to pay.
Businesses have a level of responsibility for staff physical and mental health, under the 2015 Health and Safety at work Act.
But do employers understand their obligations under the law?
Kathryn speaks to Peter Siminovich, chief executive of Mind Compass, which is contracted by the Employers and Manufacturers Association to train its members on stress and wellness management in their businesses.
She also speaks with Council of Trade Unions Legal Officer, Gayaal Iddamalgoda.
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A toll fee is split into three separate parts: Most of the money goes towards debt repayment, with 80 cents of every individual payment going towards operating costs and a percentage on tax. Toll fees will be removed after the debt to build the road has been repaid. According to NZTA's current estimate, the earliest of the three toll roads to repay its debt will be Takitimu Drive, which is expected to be toll free by 2031. The Northern Gateway is forecast to be paid for by 2039, and the Tauranga Eastern Link by 2040. Photo: Supplied/ NZTA In addition to the existing three highways, three roads are expected to charge tolls after they are constructed: Transport Minister Chris Bishop has previously said the government would explore a new charging model - toll concessions. This is a new type of public-private partnership model, in which the private sector contracts the operating rights of a certain section of the road. 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