The Morning After: California introduces right to disconnect bill
Even with burnout, overwhelm, budget cuts, hiring freezes, waves of redundancies and everything else in 2024, there's still little regulation in the US to stop employers tapping workers to respond to requests either at their desk or through their smartphones and laptops at home.
(Of course, France is showing us all up, having introduced a right-to-disconnect policy back in 2017. Those pesky, utterly correct French...)
This week, California State Assemblyman Matt Haney introduced AB 2751, a right to disconnect" proposition. If passed, it would make every California employer lay out exactly what a person's hours are and ensure they aren't required to respond to work-related communications while off the clock. Time periods in which a salaried employee might have to work longer hours would need to be laid out in their contract.
I do think it's fitting that California, which has created many of these technologies, is also the state that introduces how we make it sustainable and update our protections for the times we live in and the world we've created," Haney told The San Francisco Standard.
He's not wrong: California is the birthplace of Gmail, the iPhone, although not Slack - watch out Vancouver, Canada.
- Mat Smith
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Amazon tried to sell the technology to other retail chains, but its only major deal was with Starbucks in a few locations. These systems require high ceilings to accommodate the cameras and sensors. Reuters suggested many retailers consider Amazon a competitor and didn't want its hooks in their systems. For now, the systems will continue in select UK stores.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/the-morning-after-california-introduces-right-to-disconnect-bill-111536502.html?src=rss