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posted by on Wednesday May 24 2017, @05:54AM   Printer-friendly
from the 10-weeks-vacation dept.

Do you leave work behind when you physically move out of your workplace? Or do the texts, messages, emails keep pulling you back, monopolizing your life beyond work hours? Do you believe that this can get to a point where an individual eventually breaks down?

These questions were answered with a new French labour reform law enforced from January 1 2017. It requires French companies with more than 50 workers to guarantee their employees a "right to disconnect" from technology after office hours. Companies need to start discussions with employees to define their rights to ignore work related messages. If a deal cannot be reached, the company must publish a charter that would state the demands on, and rights of, employees out-of-hours.

[...] Other countries too have attempted to address the issue of out-of-office work stress. In Japan, Tokyo's governor has ordered strict monitoring of those working beyond 8pm. A German law forbids managers from contacting employees on vacation. South Korea, known for its gruelling work hours, launched a work-life balance campaign last year to encourage annual leaves.

But despite these examples, most remain skeptical of such a law being passed in other countries, especially the U.S., where long workweeks and foregone vacation time are the norm. In 2015, the French worked an average of 1,482 hours a year, while Americans worked about 1,790 hours. U.S. workers not just get less vacation time than their European counterparts but also end up using only 73% of it.

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 24 2017, @05:26PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 24 2017, @05:26PM (#514960)

    I maintain a strict policy of reciprocity:
    - The company treats me well? I treat it well!
    - The company shows flexibility when dealing with me? I am flexible when the company asks me to!
    - The company gives you 2 weeks when they fire you? I will give it two weeks when I quit!
    - The company is reasonable? So am i!

    But if the company doesn't, then the variables change:
    - The company asks flexibility, but doesn't give it? Neither do I!
    - The company tells your coworkers to pack their shit and go right now when they fire them? When I quit, I will give you 1 minute notice!
    - The company is unreasonable? I mimic its behavior.
    - Oh, and when this is the case, when I'm off-duty (i.e. anything more than 40hr/week, namely what you really pay me for ... and I am aware of the whole W-2 exempt thing, but let's be serious now), I do not answer the phone, I do not check company mail, I am unavailable to you.

    People need to grow a bit more backbone and actually stand up for themselves instead of bending over, accepting the cactus in their asshole and asking "may I have another one, sir?"