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May 29, 2008 ( PowerHomeBiz
) - Berkshire, UK ---
Responding to The Chancellor’s announcement, Paula Wynne, Co-Founder and
Communications Director of Remote Employment, a website dedicated to
connecting Employers with Job Seekers who want to work flexibly, remotely or
work from home, said: “This move from the government to support flexible
working will be welcomed by millions of parents across the country!”
(news continued below)
A staggering ‘one in seven’ mothers work flexible hours with 12 percent
of them using a ‘Term Time’ working arrangement. Home working franchises and
online businesses have helped many Mums to pursue a career and maintain an
income with the opportunity to work from home.
However, Dads are worse off. It is estimated that they see their children
one month a year less when compared to time spent with their children by
their partner. Some sources estimate that UK workers as a whole spend 47
days a year commuting to and from work, a huge majority of this could be
men. Flexible working is a possible cure for both these disadvantages.
Currently only parents of children under six years old have the right to
request flexible working as well as carers of the disabled. The new agenda
extends the right to all those with children up to the age of 16. Mr Brown
said: "The right to request flexible working has been working for lots of
people over the last few years. It is working for parents of young children
and now it can apply to children under 16 where families need time off to
help bring them up.”
Flexible working has moved steadily up the agenda since April 2003 and
now Gordon Brown aims to improve the country's work-life balance by
encouraging employers to provide flexible working across the workforce. A
Government survey in 2005 found that 14 per cent of British employees had
requested a change to their working arrangements since the ‘right to
request’ was introduced. Twenty-two per cent of parents of children under 6
have requested to work flexibly, and 81 per cent of these requests have been
fully or partly accepted.
The survey also showed that requests are significantly more common from
women than men, with 36% of women with dependent children under the age of
six making a request to work flexibly between 2003 and 2005, compared with
only 12 % of men with dependent children under six.
Flexible working is much more than part-time working. It can mean working
compressed hours, flexi-time, term-time-working, working remotely or working
from home. It includes job-share arrangements which can bring additional
benefits for employers as each partner brings a different set of skills to
the job.
Flexible working is highly sought after by parents who want to juggle
career aspirations with family life. Employees may choose to work flexibly
to meet childcare or caring commitments, as well as allowing them to study
or pursue other interests outside their work. More often than not the career
ladder takes a back seat as Paula experienced: “When my son was little I
wanted to take him to school as well as fetch him, and be there for homework
and after school activities.”
This meant Paula’s career aspirations often took a nose dive and she
accepted jobs that may not have been ideal, but flexible working gave her
the pleasure of watching her son having a swimming lesson or playing
football after school.
Over the years Paula dug her heels in and only accepted positions where
an employer allowed her to work flexibly. When she couldn’t work this way
any longer, she simply side-stepped and freelanced or outsourced her office
skills and experience to small companies, giving her son the continued
support throughout his secondary years of education.
Asked if she regretted her decision, Paula said: “I have never regretted
it. Everybody should have the right to choose how they want to work. I was
very fortunate to work flexibly and take work home. I could have been up
before dawn to get the train to London and home after my son was in bed, but
then what’s the point of having a child if you never see them? I could have
done a lot more, learnt a lot more and gained more recognition, but at least
I never missed my son’s first goal or his first performance in the school
play. That is far more valuable to me!”
“It would have been great to work in my dream job, but they were always
out of reach with hours and commuting. This is the reason I started Remote
Employment, it was difficult to find flexible jobs and maintain my career.
We aim to be the best site for connecting employers and job seekers who want
flexible work.”
Paula and her business partner Ken Sheridan, a Dad of two teenage sons,
want Remote Employment to fill the gap in the job market by offering a
connection to employers and job seekers who want to work flexibly, remotely
or work from home. Remote Employment is for everyone who has the need to
work this way.
Paula believes that the government’s new flexible working agenda,
alongside home based business
opportunities, which is being driven by the huge advances in technology,
is the way forward for the majority of parents. It provides them with more
control over how they do their work, increases job satisfaction and work
production, and an all round improvement in work-life balance.
For more information on Remote Employment's modern recruitment solutions,
contact Paula Wynne on 0844 800 8355 or paula@remoteemployment.com.
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