It's abhorrent. How can red Labour who are in charge in Wales, be against low paid workers , who are at the mercy of big companies.
What idiots are running the country
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I've just read on the trusty Wales Online pages that people can now be fined for not working from home (where they are able to), and also that their employers can also be fined if they fail to allow people to work from home. I've gone into work (more or less) since the pandemic started, and have no desire to work from home. To be fair to them, my employers have provided me with a lot if kit to enable me to work from home, but there has never been an insistence that I actually had to.
This seems a bit excessive to me, particularly with a Christmas break approaching, when a lot of people will be off work for a week or so anyway. Does anyone else think this is a step too far?
It's abhorrent. How can red Labour who are in charge in Wales, be against low paid workers , who are at the mercy of big companies.
What idiots are running the country
Why would you not want to work from home? Do you love commuting or something?
Personally I absolutely hated working from home. Had the biggest impact on my mental health of anything in my life (and I've been through the usual stuff).
It's also considered pretty inefficient and has long term problems for many (though I aopreciate others think differently on that and this needed be long term..)
Nonetheless this is an absolutely ridiculous policy from the Welsh government.
It's ridiculous, working from home is really affecting some people's mental health. Sooner or later the solution becomes more damaging than the problem, we're there in my opinion.
I have the best of both worlds and mix it up each week as I feel like.
Saves me fuel, wins me back commuting time, eat with the family at a reasonable time. Stuff like shopping and hair cuts don’t come out of my own time and works result and achievements are higher than ever before.
I wouldn’t want to be 100% either way anymore.
The rules haven't changed here at all, but publishing an intention to impose them is s bit ridiculous. As long as the employer can show why a person can't work from home then who is anyone to argue.
I agree about the mental health aspect though. I've been into the office twice. I miss the Monday morning chats about the crap you've watched on TV and just going to lunch with someone. The savings have been good but its all at a cost.
I love working from the office. It's really well set up for doing work. Working from home is OK now and then, but I'd hate for it to be my permanent workplace or even where I spend most of my time. I value separation of work and home life.
Our firm has kept its offices open throughout and I'm grateful for that. The guidance as to whether you can/should go to the office changes with government guidance - at the moment it's the case that you can come in if it is necessary for your mental or physical health to do so. A lot of our staff our young people living in shared accommodation in easy reach of the office and I think a lot of them would much rather work in the office rather than their bedroom in their shared flat and so it is important for them to be able to go in. I look after a dozen or so of our new graduate joiners and almost without exception they've been in to the office every day that they can - they love it and it's helped them integrate quickly. So this idea that the younger generation is dead against the "old fashioned" working practices of the office is just not true (or at least it isn't in my work place).
Having said all of that: at the moment, I am not going in to the office and I really don't think anyone that has a reasonable home work set up should do so. Omicron is absolutely flying through the population here in London. Overall case numbers in our place are multiple times that of the highest peak last year. I'd not make it law: it's too subjective to decide who has a "good" reason for coming in and who does not. But if you can work at home, that's one less commuter that runs the risk of catching and speading it. But I do think that travel to work places should be discouraged where possible. (obviously all of this applies only to people who can realistically work from home. If you are a window cleaner or whatever it's obviously irrelevant).
I'm glad I don't work from home.
It must be so lonely for those who do this.
Love working from home, felt I got to know people and speak to more people over Teams than I would have in the office. I was enjoying the blended working as well of 2 days in the office a week although 1 was enough for me.
I mean it's understandable, in under two years it has been illegal to work and run businesses in the hospitality sector, illegal to mix with more than your own household, illegal to travel more than 5 miles from your house without a good excuse, illegal to not wear a mask in certain settings unless exempt.
Fines for home working are just the next step. I think if our vaccine take up was a fair bit poorer there would be all sorts of mandates for that too.
Dont get me wrong, I along with most bought into the rules and restrictions in March 2020 and then last Christmas but when you think of it it's just madness.
This is what happens when you don't have proper scrutiny of a government. The opposition is useless, the Welsh media are cheerleaders, and the UK media don't care.
This is a genuine scandal. Absolutely ****ing disgraceful. If I hadn’t just read it on the BBC website, I would have assumed this story was the invention of some conspiracy-theory nutcase.
A £60 fine for going to work? Incredible. Truly incredible. Welsh Labour are an abomination. I’ve voted Labour most of my adult life, including in the last election. Never again.