Let's not get started on the "Right to request work from home" policy that Varadkar introduced when he was in government. Definition of a nothing policy.
We can definitely rubbish the fools who beleived it changed anything or was something to celebrate and commend FFG for enacting if you want to reminisce?
I suppose he is talking about consultants. Pile of leeches. Consultants are analogous to AI. The work someone is being paid to do in the first place rented out to someone else.
This is the opinion of Pádraig Rice is a Social Democrats TD for Cork South-Central.
Recently, a group of 113 civil society organisations wrote to the clerk of the Dáil to highlight their collective concerns about how the Dáil manages its business. Core to their complaint was that the process of external input is “opaque, inconsistent and difficult to track in a predictable way.”
Anyone find a copy of this letter? I have emailed him to ask for one, but it might be a while before he gets back to me.
No mention from Mr Rice of the delay at the start of the year...
Minister for Environment, Darragh O'Brien, is claiming that we'll only achieve half of the emissions reductions we've signed up to by 2030. Source. So I'd say that we do need laws that are transformative or radical to get us back on track.
Wouldn't call it an opinion. It's fact. What have they actually achieved since the formation of the new government? Absolutely nothing done.
They haven't even legislated the revised nightclub laws that were supposed to happen under the last government....
McEntee failing upwards
Let's not get started on the "Right to request work from home" policy that Varadkar introduced when he was in government. Definition of a nothing policy.
We can definitely rubbish the fools who beleived it changed anything or was something to celebrate and commend FFG for enacting if you want to reminisce?
better than nothing , WFH works for very few industries
It's not a policy that gives anyone a right to WFH. It just gives a person the right to request WFH. And the companies just reject it.
So nothing would be the exact same scenario as the policy does just that.....nothing.
as i said WFH only works for very few industries
You claiming that doesn't make it true.
Besides, nobody has ever suggested that waiters or firemen should be able to WFH.
It changed literally nothing.
They codified an employee's right to ask if they could WFH, and laid out employers right to refuse. These "rights" already existed.
You have the right to ask your employer for €500,000 a month in salary, they've the right to refuse. We don't need additional laws on that do we?
Don't commend the Government for wasting time setting down laws that didn't need to be set down, and that changed nothing.
no they actually didnt , before the law the employee had no right to ask for WFH
Yes they did, unless you're telling me that people had no right to ask for a change in their terms of employment before covid ffs....
massively increased indian visas
I suppose he is talking about consultants. Pile of leeches. Consultants are analogous to AI. The work someone is being paid to do in the first place rented out to someone else.
This is the opinion of Pádraig Rice is a Social Democrats TD for Cork South-Central.
Anyone find a copy of this letter? I have emailed him to ask for one, but it might be a while before he gets back to me.
No mention from Mr Rice of the delay at the start of the year...
odd question do we need laws that are " transformative, radical" as Pádraig Rice trys to indicate
Transformative - well if a new law doesn't change something it's kinda pointless to enact as a law, so yes all new laws should be transformative.
Radical - that seems like an ideological desire.
Minister for Environment, Darragh O'Brien, is claiming that we'll only achieve half of the emissions reductions we've signed up to by 2030. Source. So I'd say that we do need laws that are transformative or radical to get us back on track.