No agreement on working time directive opt out

Published: 4 May 2009 y., Monday

Laikrodis
Attempt to reach agreement over the working time directive - which limits workers to 48 hours including overtime - broke down late Monday night (27 April) as MEPs and EU Ministers failed to agree. In December members voted 421 votes to 273, with 11 abstentions, to abolish the opt-out clause that 15 countries had taken up. Social Democrat Mechtild Rothe who led the Parliament's negotiations will make a statement to the House on Monday.

The three main stumbling blocks were the opt out, on-call time and multiple contracts. Many countries that kept the opt-out argued that to ensure flexible working time and to allow people more choice, limits on the time they could work were unnecessary.
 
On the other hand supporters of the 48 hour week said it protected workers from being exploited by employers asking them to work long hours.
 
“A bad agreement would have worsened the situation”
 
Speaking about the deadlock the man who drafted Parliament's report on the working time directive, Spanish Socialist Alejandro Cercas, said: “This is very sad. However, a bad agreement would have worsened the situation of workers in general and of doctors in particular. We have left the future open and hope to have a solution with the new Commission and the new Parliament.”
 
The conciliation committee - made up of MEPs and Ministers - whose job is to find agreement between the two branches of the EU's legislature ran up against their final deadline this week without the breakthrough needed.
 
Since there is no agreement, the current directive remains into force, though the Commission can draft a new proposal from scratch.  Such new legislation would need to take account rulings from the European Court of Justice about on-call time.
 

Šaltinis: europarl.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Ukraine, Sri Lanka provide models for solving statelessness

Once stateless, these young Crimean Tatars have now returned to Oktyabrskoe in southern Ukraine, where they are attending a national school more »

Frankfurt Book Fair Opens

Gerhard Schröder and Amre Mussa, the secretary general of the Arab League, opened the Frankfurt Book Fair on Tuesday more »

FBI: Albanian mobsters 'new Mafia'

Thousands of Albanians and others who fled the Balkans for the United States in recent years have emerged as a serious organized crime problem, threatening to displace La Cosa Nostra (LCN) families as kingpins of U.S. crime more »

Sweden: Sharp rise in applications from new EU workers

Four months after the EU was enlarged with 10 new member states, Sweden has noted a sharp raise in the number of employees from the new countries applying for work permits more »

The Investigation

A pro-independence Chechen Web site was shut down by the Lithuanian government more »

10th anniversary of Estonia ferry tragedy

Survivors and families of the 852 victims of the 1994 sinking of the "Estonia" car ferry in the Baltic Sea marked the 10th anniversary of the tragedy more »

Israeli mayor calls for Gaza town to be erased

Responding to Kassam rockets being fired into the Israeli town of Sderot, the local mayor says the Gaza town of Beit Hanoun should be destroyed more »

The Results of Kazakh Elections

Kazakhstan's Central Election Commission announced on 23 September that the pro-presidential Otan party garnered 60 percent of the vote in 19 September parliamentary elections more »

UKRAINE PREMIER HIT BY TV CAMERA BATTERY

In the city of Ivano-Frankovsk on Friday, a TV camera battery was thrown at Ukraine's presidential nominee Prime Minister Victor Yanukovich more »

Fringe Parties Gain in Germany Elections

Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder's party was heartened Monday after faring better than expected in east German state elections more »