Business

New LRA hybrid working guide offers support to employers

The Labour Relations Agency's chief executive Don Leeson and employment relations manager Patricia Coulter with the new guide to hybrid working. Picture: Phil Smyth
The Labour Relations Agency's chief executive Don Leeson and employment relations manager Patricia Coulter with the new guide to hybrid working. Picture: Phil Smyth The Labour Relations Agency's chief executive Don Leeson and employment relations manager Patricia Coulter with the new guide to hybrid working. Picture: Phil Smyth

THE Labour Relations Agency has launched a new comprehensive guide for Northern Ireland employers on hybrid working to coincide with the easing of Covid restrictions and the anticipated lifting of the work from home recommendation.

The LRA, as advisers and promoters of good employment practices, said the free guide identifies the issues, practicalities, and implications impacting on both employers and employees as they face more change at work.

It cover topics such as ‘making workplaces safer’ and ‘working from home’, each specifically designed to support businesses and organisations as they adapt to changing public health recommendations.

Compiled in consultation with business leaders and trade unions, the hybrid working guide (available from www.lra.org.uk) aims to help employers plan and manage the reverse shift as they transition their workforces back to the office after almost two years of home working.

This includes the pre-assessment, planning, consultative, contractual and review phases of the hybrid working model.

The guide also sets out the benefits, drawbacks, and practicalities that an employer should consider as well as recommendations on wellbeing support, inclusion, fairness, managing resistance and the associated legal implications.

Central to the guide is a template hybrid working policy which can be adapted to fit the needs of each individual business and organisation.

Provided with complete impartiality, the guide complements the wider range of services which the LRA delivers to the north’s business community and employees on an ongoing basis.

According to Patricia Coulter, employment relations manager at the LRA, the guide offers a timely and much needed support for all organisations which have had to adapt to the pandemic-enforced shift in working practices.

She said: “Lockdowns and restrictions have had a considerable impact on both employer expectations and employee preferences. Above all they’ve resulted in a cultural shift in how, where and the way we work.

“While the term ‘hybrid working’ is often quoted, the practicalities are not fully understood, and there isn’t a ‘one size fits all’ solution.

“Our guide will help employers best manage the transition, providing very practical advice and solutions to the 21st century workplace.”

In addition to the hybrid working guide, the LRA continues to provide Covid-19 related support to the Stormont Executive through its role as chair of the NI Engagement Forum, which brings together employee and employer representatives to offer expertise and experience on all employment rights and workplace-related issues.