A blog about News.
About talkofthetown


Member Since:
June 21, 2006
Last Signed In:
December 02, 2008
Profile Views:
10752
Blog Views:
147886
View Profile
Send a Message
Send To A Friend
Sign Guestbook
Add as a Friend

Previous Posts
Depressing Christmas cards
Leading Catholic: Disney has corrupted kids
Kid comes before designer jeans
Predicting the stock market
Judge: Obese fliers should get two airline seats
Palin's unfortunate interview backdrop!
Record number of pot plants seized in state
Safe haven or easy way out?
Where's the good gas prices news?
McDonald's shines in bad economy
Archives
June 06
July 06
August 06
September 06
October 06
November 06
December 06
January 07
February 07
March 07
April 07
May 07
June 07
July 07
August 07
September 07
October 07
November 07
December 07
January 08
February 08
March 08
April 08
May 08
June 08
July 08
August 08
September 08
October 08
November 08
December 08
More Archives
June 06
May 06
April 06
March 06
February 06
January 06
December 05
November 05
October 05
September 05
August 05
July 05
June 05
May 05
April 05

Blog Roll


Ask The Californian
Editorials
Entertainment
Eye of Bakersfield
Faith Forum
Fired Up!
Inside Sports
Neighbors
Right Thinking
Sound Off
Talk of the Town
Subscribe!
RSS 2.0 feed RSS 2.0
Add to My Yahoo
Add to My Google
Add to Bloglines
Add to My AOL

Share!


talkofthetown - > Talk of the Town -> British unions: allow Web fun at work, and don't use MySpace as a reference
British unions: allow Web fun at work, and don't use MySpace as a reference
British people are funny.

One of its biggest unions opposes an employer ban on using social networking sites such as MySpace or Facebook at work.

The Trades Union Congress, which represents 6.5 million workers in Beatles land, says workers should be allowed to have a little fun chatting on their breaks.

God knows, no responsible union would encourage such frivolous activity during work time. That employees might violate this tenet could be a real concern.

But then the union says employers should not use these sites as a basis to hire or not hire  people.

That's not living in the real world. If someone is so immature to use their MySpace page as their trumpet for drug use or other dangerous activities, I think and employer is obligated to consider that as a hiring issue.

I have a MySpace page for the express purpose of background access to people we write about. 

If I get a new message, I might glance at it at work, but the site is fraught with distraction so I don't hang out there.

Young people do. And it could lead to their downfall. Unions should be more interested in protecting their employees, not setting them up for failure.

Posted by Steve E. Swenson
Posted in these Groups:
Topics:
posted by talkofthetown on Friday, August 31, 2007 at 09:03 AM
Report a Violation
Viewed 33 times
1 comments from 1 users

1

posted by blognroll on Aug 31, 2007 at 10:12 AM
I think the reason we haven't heard more about this sort of thing is that administrators at most job sites live in glass houses, so they dare not throw stones. 
1

  (You need to be signed in to leave a comment)

BAKERSFIELD.COM HOT TOPICS:

Advertisement