28 July 2008

More Compliance for Northland Business

The Flexible Working Arrangement Act came into effect on July 1st so if you haven’t already started thinking about the potential impact this could have on your business, now is a good time.
This legislation allows employees responsible for caring for another person (whether that person be a child or an adult, a family member or a non-family member) the right to ask you for flexibility in their working arrangements.

They can apply to you to work from home, work compressed hours, change their working days or change their start and finish times. They can only apply after working for you for at least 6 months.

You can decline their request for a number of reasons, like the inability to rearrange shifts, the impact it will have on quality or performance, or the inability to get extra staff.
Figures from the Department of Labour show that around 40% of workers will be care givers to someone.

While some employers may see this as a compliance nightmare, the reality is that many workplaces already offer flexible arrangements for employees, while others are starting to move towards this.

How do we comply with the Flexible Working Arrangement Act?

One way to tick the boxes is to have a flexible working policy and begin on the checklist on the DOL website. Another way is to look at countries like the UK who have worked under this type of requirement since April 2007.


From the British Chambers of Commerce guide ‘how to make flexible working hours work for you’ ways of practically introducing flexible working hours include;

- Part-time working: Work is generally considered part-time when employees are contracted to work for anything less than full-time hours.

- Term-time working: A worker remains on a permanent contract but can take paid or unpaid leave during school holidays.

- Job-sharing: This is a form of part-time working where two (or occasionally more) people share the responsibility for a job between them.

- Flextime: Flextime allows employees to choose, within certain set limits, when to begin and end work.

- Compressed hours: Compressed working weeks or fortnights don’t necessarily involve a reduction in total hours or any extension in individual choice over which hours are worked. The central feature is reallocation of work time into fewer and longer blocks during the week or fortnight.

- Annual hours: The period within which full-time employees must work is defined over a whole year.

- Working from home on a regular basis: Workers regularly spend time working from home.

- Mobile working/teleworking: This permits employees to work all or part of their working week at a location remote from the employer’s workplace.

- Career breaks: Career breaks, or sabbaticals, are extended periods of leave – normally unpaid – of up to five years, or more.


Regardless of whether ‘flexible working’ is law or not the reality is that many workplaces already offer flexible arrangements for employees, while others are starting to move towards this.
This may be a good opportunity for businesses to turn a required compliance measure into a positive incentive to


· retain skilled staff and reduce recruitment costs
· raise staff morale and decrease absenteeism
· meet labour market changes more effectively.
· Become a competitive ‘employer of choice ‘ in a world where skilled staff are becoming rare

The Northland Chamber of Commerce is the networking, education, advocacy and marketing group for Northland business, and is part of a nationwide network of 30 and a world-wide movement of 21,000 chambers. Subscription to the free fortnightly chamber e-news can be arranged on info@northchamber.co.nz. Enquiries to 09-4384771 or www.northchamber.co.nz, www.kaiparachamber.co.nz and www.farnorthchamber.co.nz

Resources DOL Website http://www.dol.govt.nz/worklife/resources/index.asp

British Chambers - How to do it http://www.aucklandchamber.co.nz/pdfs/2008%20pdfs/flexiblework.pdf

18 July 2008

Another National Park for New Zealand? In Northland!

Imagine A marine national park that stretches from Whangarei Heads to the Poor Knights to Cape Brett.

What reason could the Northland Chamber of Commerce possibly have for highlighting and encouraging discussion on this proposal? Lets look at the Goat Island Marine Reserve in Auckland. This brings in 16 million dollars of Economic Benefit to the Community along with 350000 visitors. Annually The Poor Knight Reserve as it stands pulls in around $10 million dollars per annum.

A marine national park concept is simple. Its based on Economic Development principles along with an underlying sustainability focus.

A Marine National Park would look something like this. Stop Commercial Fishing within the park and halve the recreational bag limit. Set aside 10% of the area where there are absolutely no fish zones. Preferably bordering the coast lines near some of our smaller settlements. (Marine National Parks differ from Marine Reserves in that customary fishing rights are preserved).
In a short time Fish Stock would flourish along with Ecological gains in the number of species and diversity of marine life. The area would now become a haven for Divers, Associated Industries and Tourism Ventures. The Northland point of difference being the Marine Park borders coastlines where visitors and locals could have easy access to areas without the need for boats.

Aside from Economic Benefits we can see that a Park like this would also provide ecological, social, cultural benefits. Aquamarine Farms could still also operate sustainably ad wouldn’t be counted as commercial fishing.

If an area like Goat Island can generate $16 Million dollars of benefit to the Auckland Economy and attract 350000 visitors imagine what a Marine National Park could do for Northland. It’s got to be worth considering.

Consider this. The potential for all this is on our door step right now. Hardly any capital investment is required. The only obstacles to a concept like this working being agencies, authorities, groups and people failing to see the benefits.

Let us know what you think. Should the Chamber invest time in bringing these groups together to begin the process? Can Northlanders be persuaded to work together for a common cause? ( Economic Development and sustainable future). Express an opinion on the latest ‘HOT’ topics at the Northland Chamber Blog Site at www.northchamber.blogspot.com