Click here for the easy-to-read version
Creating carers’ leave, better access to parental leave for parents with disabilities, flexible working arrangements, minimum standards for paternity leave, and so on: the EU Work-Life Balance directive has the potential to be a great tool for family members of people with intellectual disabilities, and also parents with intellectual disabilities, to better combine work and caring responsibilities.
On June 21st, the Council of Ministers will position itself at the Employment, Social Policy, Health and Consumer Affairs (EPSCO) Council, which brings together ministers responsible for these areas of work from all EU member states. Inclusion Europe has signed an Open letter to the EPSCO Council alongside 18 other European umbrella organisations, as well as Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) and representatives of the European Economic and Social Committee.
In this letter, we are asking the EPSCO Council to adopt a position on the EU Work-Life Balance directive, so the legislative procedure can move forward and the directive is not further delayed.
“We need to treat people as people and not only as workforce”, MEP Marian Harkin has said. EU Member States have it in their hands to help make life easier for all people with caring responsibilities in Europe, to promote gender equality and support families. The time is now!
If you want to raise awareness of the topic online, please do so using the hashtags #EPSCOiscoming and #IwantWorkLifeBalance.
Find the Open letter below:
It’s in your hands – the fate of working parents and carers across Europe depends on you
Time for the EPSCO Council to adopt a position on the EU Work-Life Balance directive
Brussels, 18 June 2018
Dear Ministers,
We represent, via our European umbrella organisations, 3.471 NGOs and 89 trade union confederations. Our call is joint with the Presidents and Vice-Presidents of three political groups in the European Parliament, the Rapporteur and shadow Rapporteurs of five political groups, and the Presidents and Vice Presidents of three Intergroups and Coalitions of the European Parliament, together with the Presidents of two groups in the European Economic and Social Committee.
We urge you to respect European citizens and their representatives by moving forward and adopting a Council position on the proposal for a Directive on Work-Life Balance for parents and carers at your meeting on 21st June 2018.
On this date, you will be asked to position yourself in favour or against the Council position on the EU Work-Life Balance Directive. With your decision, you will not only express your country position on a text, but you will also decide on the fate of millions of parents and carers in the European Union: people who struggle every day to juggle their responsibilities towards their children, families and other people with support needs, with their working lives.
The existing EU legal and institutional framework fails to sufficiently address challenges faced by its citizens and does not provide adequate solutions for the needs of modern societies. This proposed directive includes provisions for improving equal sharing of work and care between women and men, by introducing minimum standards for paid paternity leave, paid parental leave, carers leave and flexible working arrangements for parents and carers.
The proposal for a Directive on Work-Life Balance is the right way forward and we urge you to adopt a Council position and not further delay the adoption of a general approach.
All EU Heads of State and Governments, together with the EU Institutions, proclaimed the European Pillar of Social Rights in Gothenburg in November 2017 and this directive is the first concrete output that would transform the principles of the Pillar into reality, providing improvements to the lives of millions of parents and carers.
The European Commission published the proposal for a directive on 26 April 2017. The European Social and Economic Committee delivered its opinion, in broad support of the proposal, in December 2017. The European Parliament has a clear calendar of works: the Legal Affairs Committee and the Women’s Rights and Gender Equality Committee have already voted on their respective opinions and the Employment and Social Affairs Committee will vote in the coming weeks. All these procedures are transparent and European citizens can follow them step by step, exposing the elected representatives to scrutiny.
On the contrary, the deliberations in the Council are not subject to the same level of transparency. This can lead to indefinite postponement of decisions, with the excuse that a compromise cannot be reached among the national delegations with citizens left in the dark about why there is a lack of progress.
More than a year after its publication and one year from the 2019 European elections, it is now time for you to take up your responsibility and secure that citizens recover trust in the European project and its social dimension.
Working parents and their families as well as carers and those who depend on them do not have time to lose.
Please do not waste this opportunity to show your citizens you care about them.
Signatories:
COFACE Families Europe
AGE Platform Europe
Alzheimer Europe
Autism Europe
European Disability Forum
EuroCarers
Eurochild
EuroHealthNet
European Network for Independent Living
European Women’s Lobby
European Youth Forum
ILGA Europe
Inclusion Europe
International Federation for Spina Bifida and Hydrocephalus
Make Mothers Matter
Mental Health Europe
Social Platform
SOS Children’s Villages International
European Trade Union Confederation – ETUC
Udo Bullman MEP, S&D President
Philippe Lamberts MEP, Greens/EFA Co-President
Monika Vana MEP, Greens/EFA Vice-President
Gabriele Zimmer MEP, GUE/NGL President
David Casa MEP, EMPL Rapporteur and EPP EMPL coordinator
Maria Arena MEP, S&D EMPL shadow rapporteur
Agnes Jongerius MEP, S&D EMPL coordinator
Vilija Blinkeviciute MEP, S&D FEMM shadow rapporteur
Iraxte Garcia-Perez MEP, S&D FEMM coordinator
Jana Zitnanska, MEP, ECR EMPL shadow rapporteur
Ernest Urtasun MEP, Greens/EFA FEMM shadow rapporteur and co-coordinator
Jean Lambert MEP, Greens/EFA EMPL Coordinator
Terry Reintke MEP, Greens/EFA FEMM co-coordinator
Tania Gonzalez Peñas MEP, GUE/NGL EMPL shadow Rapporteur
Olga Senhalova MEP, President Disability intergroup
Brando Benifei MEP, Vice-Chair, Disability Intergroup
Marek Plura, MEP, Vice President of the Disability Intergroup
Miriam Dalli MEP, Chair of the Coalition for Mental Health and Wellbeing in the EP
Daniele Viotti MEP, co-Chair of the LGBTI Intergroup
Gabriele Bischoff, President of the Workers’ Group, European Economic and Social Committee
R.A. Arno Metzler, President of the Diversity Europe Group, European Economic and Social Committee
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Download the letter in pdf version
For more information, please contact
Guillaume Jacquinot, Policy Officer, at g.jacquinot@inclusion-europe.org
Angelika Hild, Communications Officer, at a.hild@inclusion-europe.org
Easy-to-read version
Click on a word which is in bold to read what it means.
We need to help families of people with intellectual disabilities
and parents with intellectual disabilities!
The “EU Work-Life Balance directive” will be an important law
for family members of people with intellectual disabilities.
It will also be important for parents with intellectual disabilities.
Family members of people with disabilities
often lack time because they need to
care for the person with the disability.
It is hard for these family members to have a job as well.
It is also hard for parents with disabilities to have a job,
because they do not have enough time.
The “EU Work-Life Balance directive” will make life easier
for family members of people with intellectual disabilities
and parents with intellectual disabilities.
The “EU Work-Life Balance directive” says that people should get paid,
even when they need time away from work to look after their families.
It also says that people who care for a family member
should get flexible working hours.
Flexible working hours means
that you can work at the times when it is best for you.
For example, you do not need to work every day
from 9 o’clock to 5 o’clock.
You can decide when you want to work.
If you have flexible working hours,
it is much easier to care for someone and have a job.
Inclusion Europe and other organisations
have signed a letter.
In this letter we ask the Council of the European Union
to make the “EU Work-Life Balance directive” happen.
Marian Harkin is a Member of the European Parliament.
“Everybody must be treated as a person
and not just as a worker,” she says.
We agree with Marian Harkin.
We think that the Council of the European Union
should work towards making the “EU Work-Life Balance directive” a law.
If you agree with this message,
write about it online.
You can use the hashtag #IwantWorkLifeBalance.