UK Lords committee pushes hybrid work to boost disability inclusion

LONDON, ENGLAND — The House of Lords committee has urged the government to promote hybrid and remote working as a key strategy to integrate more people with disabilities and careers into the workforce.
The committee highlighted that such flexible arrangements can make employment feasible for individuals who might otherwise be excluded, primarily by alleviating the challenges of commuting.
Flexibility as a path to inclusion
Removing the daily commuting, people with disabilities or long-term illnesses will be able to take more effective control of their health and their duties.
This flexibility, in particular, was identified by the report as a key factor in helping many individuals experience a better work-life balance, which directly addresses the obstacles that have traditionally restricted their various work opportunities.
“Many disabled people, parents and carers may have an improved experience of work or may even be able to work where this would otherwise not be possible,” noted the committee.
This is not a theoretical measure only because hybrid working is, so far, the new reality for 28 percent of the working adult population in the United Kingdom.
It is an effective business model that benefits both employees and employers, as it has been proven that companies that advertise hybrid jobs attract more job applicants and can hire workers from a broader geographical range.
Moreover, Committee Chair Rosalind Scott notes, “They get more job applicants if they advertise hybrid working, and there is also some evidence sickness absence is reduced,” highlighting the mutual benefits of using such flexible work arrangements.
Addressing hybrid work inequalities
Nevertheless, according to its potential, the committee has established that there are considerable access inequalities regarding home working, with more access for professionals, university graduates, and people living in London. This inequality poses a threat of forming a two-tier workforce in which flexibility cannot be achieved equally.
There is also a “preference gap” between employers and employees. Meanwhile, the majority of workers prefer to work two days a week, while employers tend to prefer three days a week. This discrepancy leads to the fact that hybrid models are still negotiable, and their implementation is not yet in place.
The report warns against the failure to invest in training managers to serve remote teams as a big oversight that can undermine the success of hybrid working. It encourages ministers to push employers to cover these management training courses so that employees have a good backup.
The committee states that the employer and the employee are expected to manage the hybrid arrangement without the need for the new law. Nonetheless, it highlighted the importance of the government in providing useful guiding principles and motivation for enterprises to adopt and develop open-minded strategies.
This hybrid pressure has the potential to transform the labor market radically into a more inclusive and productive space. However, its success will depend on one important national initiative to fill the digital and management gaps, which poses a threat to establishing a new, irreversible inequity among the workforce.

Independent




