Yorkshire Post

Millions of workers across UK ‘are donating unpaid overtime to companies’

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WORKERS ARE putting in billions of pounds worth of unpaid overtime, with the problem especially acute among teachers and managers, a new study shows.

The TUC urged companies to stop relying on staff doing extra hours for free and to make sure employees took a proper lunch break and left on time.

Research found that 5.3 million people worked an average of 7.7 hours a week in unpaid overtime last year, unchanged from the previous year, worth £33.6bn.

Chief executives topped a list of those doing the most unpaid overtime, at an average of 13.2 hours a week, followed by teaching staff (12.1 hours), finance managers (11.3 hours) and managers in production and health care (10 hours).

The union organisati­on dubbed today Work Your Proper Hours Day, saying the average employee doing unpaid overtime had effectivel­y worked for free so far this year.

The TUC warned that working time protection­s could be weakened when the UK left the EU.

General secretary Frances O’Grady said: “Few of us mind putting in some extra time when it’s needed, but if it happens all the time and gets taken for granted, that’s a problem.

“So make a stand today, take your full lunch break and go home on time. The best bosses understand that a long hours culture doesn’t get good results.

“So we’re asking managers to set an example by leaving on time too. The Government still doesn’t have a water-tight plan to stop working time protection­s getting weaker when we leave the EU.

“The Prime Minister should promise to put a guarantee into our future trade deals with Europe that British workers will have a level playing field with EU workers.”

Kevin Courtney, general secretary of the National Union of Teachers, said: “Once again, the TUC has found that teachers and the education sector as a whole are subject to enormous levels of unpaid overtime.”

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