Skip to main content
Beauchamps Close
Back

  • B-Connect
  • About us
    • About Beauchamps
    • Client service
    • Core values
    • Corporate social responsibility
    • History
    • Knowledge management
    • Partnerships
  • Our People
  • Our services

    Practice Areas

    • Banking & Finance
    • Commercial Real Estate
    • EU, Procurement & Competition
    • Construction
    • Corporate, Commercial & M&A
    • Corporate Governance & Company Compliance
    • Employment & Benefits
    • Energy & Natural Resources
    • Inward Investment
    • Technology & Intellectual Property
    • Litigation & Dispute Resolution
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Planning & Environmental
    • Private Client & Family Law
    • Insurance & Professional Indemnity
    • Public & Regulatory
    • Insolvency & Corporate Restructuring
    • Medical Negligence and Personal Injury*

    Sectors

    • Charities & Not For Profit
    • Energy & Natural Resources
    • Financial Services
    • Healthcare
    • Real Estate
    • Retail
    • Sport
    • Technology & Communications
    • Brexit
    • Food & Agri
    • Housing
    • Family Business
    View All Services
  • What's new
    • Beauchamps - proud sponsor of and official legal adviser to Leinster Rugby
    • Brexit Update
    • Doing business in Ireland
    • General Data Protection Regulation
    • The Companies Act 2014
    • Covid-19 Updates
  • Careers
    • Why join Beauchamps?
    • Current opportunities
    • Lawyers
    • Business services
    • Intern & trainee programmes
Contact Search
Search Menu
Beauchamps
Search Menu
What's new

Right to Request Remote Working

31 Jan 2022

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. What's new
  3. Publication

Share

The Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment has published the General Scheme of the long awaited Bill providing a framework for employees to exercise a right to request remote working. The legislation remains at draft stage and changes should be anticipated between now and the time at which it is enacted later in the year. Notwithstanding the potential for future change, it appears certain that the following principles will apply:

  • Employees with more than 6 months service with their employer will  have a right to request remote working.
  • Employers will be required to have a remote working policy in place. The current Bill makes it a criminal offence for an employer not to have a written policy in place for its employees.
  • Employers will be able to set a timeframe for a response to requests to work remotely, although the timeframe cannot exceed 12 weeks.
  • Employees will have to provide certain information in their request, including the proposed location for remote working, the number of days to be worked remotely and a self-assessment of the proposed location, addressing issues such as data protection, confidentiality, internet connectivity and ergonomic suitability of the workspace.
  • An employer can refuse a request to work remotely on "business grounds" and the Bill includes a non-exhaustive list of examples of these business grounds, including the nature of the work not allowing for the work to be done remotely, the potential negative impact on quality of business product or service or on the performance of the employee or other employees, the burden of additional costs, concerns for the protection of business confidentiality or intellectual property, concerns for the suitability of the proposed workspace on health and safety grounds and concerns regarding internet connectivity.
  • The WRC will have a role in determining whether an employee's application has been addressed in accordance with the legislation, for example whether the request has been responded to within the relevant timeframe, but it will not have the power to direct an employer to allow remote working.

The terms of the Bill are likely to be the subject of discussion and comment, particularly as employees begin to return to the workplace. The Bill indicates that the Department will issue a Code of Practice on the right to request remote working in due course and we will continue to update clients as the Bill advances towards enactment.

For more information please get in touch with Paul Gough or your usual contact in Beauchamps.

About the author

Paul Gough

Partner

About Paul 

Paul specialises in employment law and advises employers and employees on all aspects of the employment relationship, contentious and non-contentious. He has represented a wide range of clients, including financial institutions, international companies and public bodies in a diverse range of employment related issues before the WRC, including unfair dismissal claims, equality related disputes, claims arising under the Organisation of Working Time Act, TUPE and claims under the Safety, Health and Welfare at Work Act.

Beauchamps

Related Services

Beauchamps

Our Location

Riverside Two

Sir John Rogerson's Quay

Dublin 2, D02 KV60

Ireland, DX No. 63

General Enquiries

T: +353 (0) 1 418 0600

F: + 353 (0) 1 418 0699

E: info@beauchamps.ie

  • Cookie Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Accessibility
  • Sitemap
  • Contact
  • Privacy
© 2023 Beauchamps LLP