Digital Nomads & Duty of Care: A Business Minefield?
Global Rescue
Evacuation, field rescue, risk management, intelligence and insurance for all types of travel
The pandemic has changed the business workforce for the near future.
One of the biggest management challenges in this evolving environment will be the ability for company leaders to update and meet their duty of care requirements to protect their employees whether they are office-bound, location-independent or on business travel.
What is the duty of care definition? According to Jeffrey Ment , an attorney with expertise in travel-related issues, “duty of care generally requires every employer provide employment that is safe for the employees, supplying and using safeguards and devices and doing every reasonable thing necessary to protect the life, health and safety of their employees.”
Digital nomadism doesn’t change an employer’s duty of care obligations, but it certainly raises awareness among C-suite executives, senior management teams, HR professionals, union leaders, government agencies and employees to examine the rigor of their organization’s current capabilities.
They carry a responsibility to their people, to take care of them and avoid exposing them to any unnecessary or undue risk, whether they are office bound or not. Managing the duty of care responsibilities for a remote workforce will be a new challenge as unprecedented numbers of employees log in from the beach, mountains and other places they’ve chosen to visit and work.?
Employers are responsible for complying with local employment laws. If you have staff working in another country then you may be bound by foreign employment laws – including payroll tax payments, social security contributions, holiday allowances, overtime pay, maximum working hours and more. Failure to comply could result in fines or legal action.
Managers must be aware of their employees’ locations. While the staff member is responsible for getting permission to work in a foreign country, it is up to company leadership for the business to comply with the laws of the host country.
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There have been significant court decisions based on breaches of duty of care responsibilities. For example, one lawsuit by the surviving family of a Lucent Technologies/AT&T employee who died after a surgical procedure in the Middle East and another by a Hotchkiss School student who contracted encephalitis while on a school-sponsored trip to China. In both cases, the court upheld the claims that resulted in sizable monetary awards (in one case in excess of $40 million) and damage to the organization’s reputation.
There are seven elements of a duty of care policy. Employers and employees should evaluate the current duty of care policy to make certain it includes key elements:
“It is essential that an organization’s leadership learn the laws, regulations, standards and prevailing practices of countries where their employees are visiting as digital nomads,” Ment said. “Doing so can insulate the organization from multimillion-dollar judgments and significant harm to the organization’s reputation and brand.”
Dan Richards is CEO of Global Rescue, the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services. He currently serves on the U.S. Travel and Tourism Advisory Board at the U.S. Department of Commerce and is a Global Member of the World Travel and Tourism Council.?
FREE WEBINAR: Corporate travel is an essential component of doing business, but the obstacles to travel have never been bigger or harder to navigate. Join experts from Global Rescue and The Ment Law Group on Wednesday, April 6, 12 p.m. Eastern 9 a.m. Pacific. Register: https://www.globalrescue.com/lp/business-travel-risk-webinar/index.html