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Primary sponsor:
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Sponsors:
That this House notes that workers in the UK lack adequate legal
safeguards from working in uncomfortably high temperatures, owing
to the lack of a statutory maximum temperature at which employers
would have to introduce control measures, such as breaks, access
to water or air conditioning; further notes that this would
correct an anomaly in current legislation where a legal minimum
working temperature exists, but a corresponding upper limit does
not exist in statute; appreciates that excessive heat in the
workplace is responsible for heat stress and thermal discomfort,
and can impact seriously on health, well-being and productivity;
recognises that this is a matter of concern for workers in a wide
range of workplaces including offices, schools, shops, bakeries,
vehicles, trains, call-centres, theatres and construction sites;
and calls on the Government to adopt the recommendations of the
TUC and joint union Cool It campaign to introduce into law a
maximum working temperature of 30 degrees Celsius or 27 degrees
Celsius for those doing strenuous work, beyond which employers
would have a statutory duty to introduce effective control
measures.