Employees able to ask for remote working from when they start new job
Working from home revolution! Employees will have right to ask for remote working from the moment they start a new job under proposed new laws
- Small businesses minister Kevin Hollinrake said it will make employees happier
- Ex-Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith said businesses will struggle getting jobs done
- Campaigners are also demanding job adverts list the flexible working on offer
Millions of workers will have the right to demand working from home on day one of their new job under new laws drawn up by ministers.
The Government wants to allow for more flexible working, including job-sharing, flexi-time and staggered hours, to improve work-life balance.
It will be seen as a boost for employees who have domestic commitments such as caring for their children or elderly relatives.
At present, workers can demand to work from home only after six months in a new job
Small businesses minister Kevin Hollinrake (pictured) said: ‘Giving staff more say over their working pattern makes for happier employees and more productive businesses’
But critics last night said it could be a blow for smaller businesses and carry on starving city centres of commuter footfall which hasn’t fully returned since the Covid-19 pandemic.
At present, workers can only demand to work from home after six months in a new job.
The proposed legislation would bring this forward to the first day.
Small businesses minister Kevin Hollinrake said: ‘Giving staff more say over their working pattern makes for happier employees and more productive businesses. Put simply, it’s a no-brainer.
‘Greater flexibility over where, when, and how people work is an integral part of our plan to make the UK the best place in the world to work.’
But former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith said there was ‘no evidence’ for what Mr Hollinrake was saying.
Former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith (pictured) said: ‘What you end up with if you’re not careful is small businesses finding it difficult to get certain jobs done because people just say “I’m heading off home”
He said: ‘For small businesses there are real issues here. They’re worried about this sort of thing, because what you end up with if you’re not careful is small business finding it difficult to get certain jobs done because people just say “I’m heading off home”.
‘The Government needs to make it clear there’s a way small businesses will be able to cope with this.
‘If you’re a great big multinational that’s got tonnes and tonnes of people around it’s not such a problem.’
Campaigners are also demanding job adverts list the flexible working on offer.
Trades Union Congress boss Frances O’Grady said: ‘Flexible working should be available to everyone.
‘It’s how we keep mums in work, close the gender pay gap and give dads more time with their kids, and it’s how we keep disabled workers, older workers and carers in their jobs.
‘Allowing working people to ask for flexible working from their first day in a job would be a small step in the right direction, but we’d like the Government to go much further to ensure that flexible work now becomes the norm.’
‘Where’s the value for the taxpayer?’: Data reveals 90% of Welsh government staff are still working from home
Around nine in ten Welsh government staff are still working from home, it recently emerged.
The Labour-led Welsh government will now offer office space to other public sector workers. This will ensure taxpayer-funded buildings are put to good use and ‘maximise the benefits of office, remote and hybrid working’, a spokesman said.
But the Welsh Conservatives said more staff should be coming in to ensure taxpayers’ money is not wasted on heating near-empty office buildings.
The Welsh Government HQ in Cathays Park, Cardiff
In September, 10.4 per cent of staff went to Welsh government offices daily – an average of 549 staff out of more than 5,200. The Welsh government said this rose to 11 per cent in October.
Welsh Tory leader Andrew RT Davies asked whether entire floors were being heated for just a few workers.
He added: ‘We have exceptional facilities for our public servants to work in.
‘If they are not being used, where is the value for money for the taxpayer?’
Gareth Hills, national officer of the civil service union FDA Cymru Wales, said the current number of staff working from home showed that ‘the pandemic has changed the world of work and I think that change is permanent’.
‘We’re seeing increased hybrid working and that can allow for even more savings for the taxpayer as less office space is needed,’ he added.
It comes after huge backlogs built up at the DVLA, which has its headquarters in Swansea, partly due to remote-working during the pandemic.
Tens of thousands of drivers were forced to wait months for documents if they sent them by post.
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