The UK government wants to give workers the right to ignore emails after hours
Ignoring your boss could soon be a legal right
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
Among the first draft legislation from the new UK government are new employment rights, and the “right to switch off” for workers.
The right to switch off would allow workers to not respond to any work related messages or emails outside of working hours and while on annual leave.
By switching off when not at work, it is expected that employees will be more productive during working hours as their time outside of work will be 100% their own.
Doesn’t everyone do this anyway?
Certain sectors of the economy would be exempt from the right, where communicating outside of working hours is necessary for organizations such as those in the hospitality and retail industries.
The right is part of Labour’s Plan To Make Work Pay, which was unveiled earlier in May at the start of the new government’s election campaign and includes giving workers the right to flexible working.
Unions across the UK have welcomed Labour’s plans, with TUC General Secretary Paul Nowak reacting to the legislation stating, “No one should be pushed to the brink because of their job. Ever increasing hours, pace and expectations at work are causing problems up and down the country. This is a recipe for burnt-out Britain. So we welcome these measures to tackle work intensity. Introducing a right to switch off will let workers properly disconnect outside of working hours.”
Following the pandemic, the adoption of work from home, and the move into hybrid working as restrictions eased, Labour feared that life at home had intertwined with work with houses “turning into 24/7 offices”.
Are you a pro? Subscribe to our newsletter
Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!
The right to switch off is expected to be modeled on existing practices in place in Ireland, where it isn’t legislated but widely adopted into codes of practice, and Belgium, where it is legislated only for businesses of 20 people or more and the public sector. The UK right to switch off is expected to be similar to Ireland’s, and won’t be introduced within the Employment Rights Bill.
ViaiNews
More from TechRadar Pro
Benedict has been writing about security issues for over 7 years, first focusing on geopolitics and international relations while at the University of Buckingham. During this time he studied BA Politics with Journalism, for which he received a second-class honours (upper division), then continuing his studies at a postgraduate level, achieving a distinction in MA Security, Intelligence and Diplomacy. Upon joining TechRadar Pro as a Staff Writer, Benedict transitioned his focus towards cybersecurity, exploring state-sponsored threat actors, malware, social engineering, and national security. Benedict is also an expert on B2B security products, including firewalls, antivirus, endpoint security, and password management.
New fanless cooling technology enhances energy efficiency for AI workloads by achieving a 90% reduction in cooling power consumption
Samsung plans record-breaking 400-layer NAND chip that could be key to breaking 200TB barrier for ultra large capacity AI hyperscaler SSDs
NYT Strands today — hints, answers and spangram for Sunday, November 10 (game #252)