1 / 13

ODEP-Women’s Bureau Workplace Flexibility Initiative

ODEP-Women’s Bureau Workplace Flexibility Initiative. Disability Employment Initiatives’ Grantee Webinar Carol Boyer Policy Advisor Office of Disability Employment Policy U.S. Department of Labor April 12, 2011. Workplace Flexibility Definition.

quana
Download Presentation

ODEP-Women’s Bureau Workplace Flexibility Initiative

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ODEP-Women’s Bureau Workplace Flexibility Initiative Disability Employment Initiatives’ Grantee Webinar Carol Boyer Policy Advisor Office of Disability Employment Policy U.S. Department of Labor April 12, 2011

  2. Workplace Flexibility Definition • WF pertains to a spectrum of work structures that alters the time and/or place that work gets done on a regular basis • About how work gets done • 21st Century response to a one-size-fits-all way of working • Can make companies more profitable and improve lives • “ . . . in today’s 21st century work force, nearly four out of five working Americans—across age, income, and stage in life—want more flexibility at work. But a flexibility gap exists: the demand for flexibility far exceeds its availability" (Source: Alfred P. Sloan Foundation’s Workplace, Work Force, and Working Families Program)

  3. Why Does WF Matter to DEI Grantees? • Older workers need to work longer to save for retirement • Many lower-wage workers have nonstandard work schedules & multiple jobs to make ends meet • More people with disabilities are working/not working but need a range of supports • Youth demand WF environments

  4. Women’s Bureau’s Workplace Flexibility Initiative • The WB and its National Dialogue on Workplace Flexibility initiative directly support the Secretary of Labor’s strategic goal of assuring fair & high-quality work-life environments and the White House’s efforts to promote workplace flexibility • Promoting work-life balance, including flexible workplace polices, is one of the many ways the WB will improve working conditions & promote economic security for all working women

  5. ODEP-WB Workplace Flexibility Initiative • Collaboration between ODEP & DOL’s Women’s Bureau (WB) MOA signed 8/9/10 • To expand and promote the use of flexible workplace strategies for people with complex situations • Workplace Flexibility Forum (1/24/11) • Roadmap of Recommendations • Electronic Toolkit Corporate Voices Logo

  6. Workplace FlexibilityBackground • Workplace Flexibility is a “business imperative” (Ellen Galinsky, Families & Work Inst. ) • National Study of the Changing Workforce (NSCW) • Largest, most comprehensive, on-going study of the U.S. workforce and their lives on and off the job • Builds on DOL’s 1977 Quality of Employment Survey (QES) • Conducted by Families & Work Institute (1992, 1997, 2002 & 2008) • Sample comprises 2,769 wage & salaried employees • 2008 response rate was 54.6%; Completion rate was 99.0% • Sample error is +/- 1%

  7. Demographics of U.S. Workforce (1977-2008) • More employees age 40+ – up from 39% in 1977 to 68% in 2008 • More people of color – up from 12% in 1977 to 21% in 2008; among employees under age 29, percentage of people of color increased from 13% in 1977 to 39% in 2008 • More dual-earner couples – up from 66% in 1977 to 79% in 2008 • Almost equal numbers of women as men

  8. Employee Elder Care Statistics • Currently, nearly 1 in 5 employees provides care for a relative or in-law over age 65 (17%) • Within past 5 years, 42% of employees provided care • In next 5 years, 1 in 2 employees expects to provide care (49%)

  9. An Effective WorkplaceCan Make a Difference • Flexibility – one component • Job Challenges & Learning • Autonomy • Work-Life Fit • Supervisor Task Support • Climate of Respect & Trust • Economic Security

  10. Economic Security & Work-Life Fit Most Important Health & Wellbeing OutcomesEffective workplace dimensions significantly predicting health outcomes rank ordered by relative importance Source: FWI 2008 NSCW: (N=2,471 to 2,769).

  11. Implications of WF for People with Complex Situations • Reasonable Accommodations (RA) can be seen as “unfair” by nondisabled workers(Schur et al., 2005) • RA can help create WF • WF can increase the recruitment, retention & promotion of people with disabilities (Shartz et al., 2006) • WF does not always = RA & vice versa • WF often more available to white-collar workers, but much research on how WF scheduling can help hourly workers

  12. ODEP’s Workplace Flexibility/ Customized Employment (CE) Resources • Universal Design approach to employment • Innovative, evidence-based Workplace Flexibility policy and practice—CE • CE expands traditional WF around time and place to include flexibility around job tasks • CE offers a three-dimensional WF strategy of time, place, and tasks www.dol.gov/odep/FWA-CE/

  13. Questions? Thank You!

More Related