Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)
GRAHAM HISCOTT Staff reforms score a zero Anger at protections for flexible staff
MINISTERS have been accused of failing to give proper protection to millions of flexible workers.
The Government will today publish its response to last year’s Taylor Review on modern working practices.
Among the proposals are to give all workers – including those on casual and zero-hours contracts – the right to holiday and sick pay from day one.
Workers will also be able to request a more stable contract and a pay slip.
Prime Minister Theresa May claimed it would ensure “an economy for everyone.” But critics condemned the report as a waste of time.
Tim Roache, GMB general secretary, compared it to “trying to put out a forest fire with a water pistol.” He added: “If the Government is serious about making life better for working people, giving workers the right to Oil giant BP raked in £140 a second last year. Recovering oil prices helped it bank £4.4billion, more than double the £1.9bn haul for 2016. Boss Bob Dudley hailed it as “one of the strongest years in BP’S recent history”. request that their bosses stop paying them poorly or treating them badly is an unfunny joke.”
Labour’s Shadow Business Secretary Rebecca Long-bailey said: “Today’s response is just more words, with no real action to improve the lives of the millions of people in insecure work.”
TUC General Secretary Frances O’grady said: “The Government has taken a baby step – when it needed to take a giant leap. These plans won’t stop the hire and fire culture of zero-hours contracts or sham selfemployment. And they will still leave 1.8 million workers excluded from key protections.”
Yet business groups welcomed the plans. The CBI’S Neil Carberry said: “Business agrees with the
Government that flexibility and fairness must go hand in hand.”