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2021-03-19

[I] Goldman Sachs staff revolt at ‘98-hour week’
[I] Over half of staff go back to workplace
[I] Health chiefs confirm Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid jab safe to use

2021-03-17

[I] Half of UK managers back mandatory Covid vaccines for office work
[I] Brussels to propose Covid certificate to allow EU-wide travel

2021-03-16

[I] Nick Candy leads £1m drive to oust London mayor Sadiq Khan
[I] UK defends Oxford Covid vaccine over fears of blood clots

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[I] Emirates will now let you pay to not sit next to a stranger

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[I] Biden eyes 4 July as ‘Independence Day’ from virus
[I] Royal family ‘very much not racist’, insists duke

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[I] England’s £23bn test and trace programme condemned by MPs
[I] FUFA rewards Hippos Team with $ 160,000

2021-03-09

[I] The advice on drinking alcohol and taking ibuprofen after having a Covid vaccine
[I] Royal family in turmoil over Meghan’s racism claims in Oprah interview

2021-03-03

[I] Huawei to more than halve smartphone output in 2021
[I] Covid vaccines show few serious side-effects after millions of jabs

2021-03-01

[I] Employers aim for hybrid working after Covid-19 pandemic
[I] Hunt for mystery person who tested positive for Brazilian Covid-19 variant
[I] Trump teases supporters with hint of new presidential run

2021-02-28

[I] 32m Covid tests by post to reopen schools

2021-02-25

[I] Watchdog strengthens audit rules for KPMG, EY, Deloitte and PWC
[I] US set to approve Johnson & Johnson’s single dose Covid vaccine

2021-02-22

[I] Vaccines cut Covid hospital admissions by up to 94%
[I] Bond trading finally dragged into the digital age

2021-02-19

[I] US will not send vaccines to developing countries until supply improves
[I] Macron urges Europe to send vaccines to Africa now

2021-02-18

[I] Covid infections dropping fast across England, study shows

2021-02-17

[I] KPMG appoints first female leaders
[I] No jabs, no jobs

2021-02-16

[I] Covid vaccines are reducing UK admissions and deaths
[I] Are planes as Covid-safe as the airlines say?

2021-02-15

[I] Heathrow arrivals escorted to £1,750 hotel isolation

2021-02-14

[I] Auditor Grant Thornton ‘failed to check Patisserie Valerie cash levels’
[I] UK returns to school in three weeks
[I] Harry and Meghan expecting second child
[I] UK Premier hails ‘extraordinary feat’ of 15m jabs

2021-02-11

[I] AstraZeneca on course to roll out vaccine for new Covid variants by autumn

2021-02-10

[I] UK - Covid-19: 10-year jail term for travel lies defended
[I] Ghanaian-born surgeon 'to help Gorilla Glue woman'

2021-02-09

[I] UK weather: Snow disruption continues as temperatures plummet
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International

[ 2021-03-17 ]

Half of UK managers back mandatory Covid vaccines for office work

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More than half of managers in the UK want to be
allowed to make coronavirus vaccinations mandatory
for staff returning to work, according to a survey
that adds to pressure on the government to support
“jabs for jobs” to help accelerate the
reopening of the battered British economy. 

Close to half also said that office access should
be restricted for those who refused to get a
vaccination on non-medical grounds, the national
poll conducted by the Chartered Management
Institute of more than 1,000 managers found.

Three-fifths of managers have already decided to
make testing available for their employees when
they are allowed to return to the office — with
a fifth saying this will become mandatory to
return to work.

Ann Francke, CMI chief executive, said:
“Managers have shown a significant level of
support for mass testing and vaccinations. And
widespread take up would allow for a swift and
safe return to work.”

Boris Johnson, prime minister, has admitted that
the issue raises serious “philosophical and
ethical” concerns and has ordered a review by
Michael Gove, the Cabinet Office minister.

Gove launched the consultation on Monday —
inviting responses from interested parties into
how Covid-19 certification could work through the
use of testing or vaccination data. The review
will look at the ethical, equalities, privacy,
legal and operational aspects of a certification
scheme.

Lawyers warn that it would be difficult for
companies to insist on mandatory vaccinations
under current workplace legislation, given the
risk of discriminating against workers who cannot
or will not be vaccinated.

As a result, Downing Street would prefer a system
under which companies let staff or customers
choose to demonstrate proof of either vaccination
or recent testing. Businesses can get free
coronavirus workplace tests under a government
scheme.

In the CMI survey, over half agreed it was a
manager’s role to encourage employees to get a
Covid-19 vaccination. The same number were
concerned about potential conflict between staff
reluctant to be vaccinated and workers who feel
unsafe working with those people.

The Trades Union Congress said that it was
encouraging workers to get vaccinated. Frances
O’Grady, TUC general secretary, said workplace
testing “can play a key role in our public
health effort?.?.?.?but employers should not
introduce testing until they can guarantee that
all of their workforce have access to decent sick
pay”.

The CMI survey also showed that the pandemic will
have a lasting impact on how companies use their
offices, with only a fifth of bosses saying that
they wanted employees to return to the workplace
five days a week.

Many companies are already bringing in hybrid
working policies from when restrictions lift in
the summer, mixing time in the office and at home.
Most organisations have found that staff worked
efficiently in their homes during the pandemic,
and many workers want to retain some of that
flexibility.

Almost half of managers said their organisations
would probably reduce the office space in their
main headquarters as a result.

But the poll showed a split between sizes of
businesses, with larger companies showing a
greater willingness to adopt flexible working,
while SMEs were more likely to say workers will go
back much or all of the time. 

The government has told companies to keep workers
at home if possible, although there are exemptions
for those who need to be in the office for
essential business or personal reasons.

About 15 per cent of managers whose staff were
working from home said that employees would
continue to work mostly or entirely remotely in
future.

Source - FT, UK



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