密歇根州法案拟禁止雇主强制员工在下班后进行沟通
Michigan bill would bar employers from requiring after-hours coms with workers

原始链接: https://www.cbsnews.com/detroit/news/workplace-boundaries-act-employees-after-hours/

密歇根州拟议的《工作场所员工界限法案》(参议院第948号法案)旨在保护员工免受“随时待命”的压力。该法案由参议员埃里卡·盖斯(Erika Geiss)提出,旨在禁止雇主要求员工在指定工作时间之外查阅或回复与工作相关的电子邮件、短信或社交媒体信息。 该法案为以下情况提供了例外:合同规定有值班义务的员工、自行设定工作时间的员工,以及涉及州或联邦紧急情况的通信。 如果法案获得通过,劳工与经济机会部将负责监督执行。违规公司可能面临罚款,或被要求向受影响的员工支付加班费。支持者认为,在日益数字化的经济中,该法案对于维护员工福祉、家庭生活和职业尊严至关重要。该提案目前正在参议院劳工委员会审议中。

密歇根州一项拟议法案旨在禁止雇主要求员工在指定工作时间之外进行与工作相关的沟通。 Hacker News 上的讨论显示出意见分歧。一些评论者认为此类立法没有必要,称其为“过度官僚主义”,认为这会给企业带来监管阻力,且对于已有明确雇佣合同的人来说可能多此一举。另一些人则主张,该法律是员工重获工作与生活平衡的必要工具,并认为个人谈判往往不足以解决劳资双方之间的权力失衡。 人们还就管理下班后通知的实际解决方案进行了探讨。用户建议使用“Buzzkill”等第三方应用程序来批量处理通知、通过备置专门的工作手机来强制执行界限,或采用平台原生的“办公时间”功能来屏蔽特定账户的消息。归根结底,这场对话突显了数字时代下“随时在线”与“明确个人时间与职业责任界限”之间日益加剧的紧张关系。
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原文

A bill is pending in the Michigan Legislature that would set rules on when and for what reason an employer could contact an employee outside of a normal work schedule. 

Senate Bill 948, which was introduced by Sen. Erika Geiss, D-Taylor, has been referred to the Labor Committee. The bill is also known as the Workplace Employee Boundaries Act. 

"In an increasingly 'always-on, always available' economy, we must take action to protect workers and create stronger boundaries," Geiss said when introducing the bill. "Too many workers are expected to be constantly available, answering emails, messages, and calls long after their workday ends. That pressure erodes well-being, undermines family life, and disproportionately impacts working parents and caregivers. It is a matter of fairness, dignity, and basic respect." 

bill analysis dated June 18 explains that an employee could be compensated in their contract for on-call availability. Another option is that the employee could set hours of availability, during which they would be able to access and respond to work-related matters.  

Messages regarding a state or federal emergency that affected business operations also would be allowed.

But in general, should this bill become law in Michigan, an employer could not require an employee to access or respond to work-related matters outside of their assigned hours. This includes emails, text messages or social media messages regarding employment duties or scheduling future work shifts, the bill analysis explains. 

Violations could be reported to the state's Department of Labor and Economic Opportunity, with fines to the company and/or overtime pay to the employee among the possible results. 

The potential costs, according to the bill analysis, include the administrative work required by the Department of Labor and Economic Opportunity to create training materials and process any complaints that may be filed. 

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