New zero-hours rules âa step in the right directionâ
Young people working in insecure jobs have been promised a ânew dealâ by the government.
A law announced last week includes a ban on âexploitativeâ zero-hours contracts which allow employers to only pay staff when they need them.
The Employment Rights Bill will give workers the right to a contract reflecting the number of hours they regularly work.
It also requires bosses to give âreasonable noticeâ and compensation if shifts are changed or cancelled.
The governmentâs claimed the new rules will provide more security and less instability for workers.
But people who want to opt in to zero-hours contracts because of the flexibility they offer can still do so.
BBC Newsbeat spoke to young workers to find out what they think about the new legislation.
About one million UK workers are currently on zero-hours contracts.
Figures from thinktank the Work Foundation suggest under-25s are five times more likely to be on zero-hours contracts than older workers.
Fraser McGuire, 20, from Derby, works two zero-hours jobs, one at a pub and one at a hotel bar.
Fraser says heâd prefer contracted hours but âas a young worker, zero-hours contracts always tend to be the standardâ.
âIt can be really difficult mentally as well as obviously financially.
âOne month, I might be able to get easily enough to make my rent and make ends meet but then the next month, I might not be able to at all.â
Fraser does think the changes could mean young workers feel more empowered at when it comes to standing up for their rights.
âIf your boss sets your hours on a weekly basis you will be much less likely to stand up and challenge them than if you had a guaranteed hours contract because you donât want to lose your income,â he says.
He says the new law is âa step in the right directionâ but wants to know how it will be enforced.
âI really do wonder how theyâre going to define and enforce the term âexploitationâ,â he says.
âBut at least even identifying those really bad employers or those really precarious situations is definitely a massive step in the right direction.â
Tamara Beattie has been on a zero-hours contract for more than two years since having her daughter.
She works for a healthcare agency and says while the flexibility helps her balance childcare, she has âno securityâ when it comes to paying her bills.
Tamara says there are weeks when she canât pick up any shifts and has to rely on Universal Credit to supplement her income.
âI canât financially support myself just on the amount of hours that I get,â Tamara says, adding that itâs had an impact on her mental health.
âI like being able to provide for myself and for my daughter and I canât do that because a lot of workplaces donât offer the hours that I need around my little girl.â
Tamara, who lives in Fife, welcomes the new legislation but says people will still need options like zero-hours contracts unless more is done to support working parents.
âItâs only good if theyâre going to implement other things in workplaces like making sure employers are family friendly,â she says.
âUnless I can find something thatâs a lot more flexible, Iâm gonna find it really difficult to find more hours.â
âBarriers will be loweredâ
Major unions Unite and Unison have welcomed the bill, with the GMB union saying it will âmake a big difference to the lives of working peopleâ.
But the Independent Workersâ union of Great Britain (IWGB), says their members have been overlooked.
It represents some gig economy workers, such as Uber and Deliveroo drivers, who arenât explicitly mentioned in the new bill.
Because they are seen as self-employed, they arenât entitled to benefits such as holiday and sick pay.
General secretary Henry Chango Lopez says this makes them âsome of the most precarious and exploited in society, lacking the most basic rights and remaining unsupported by legislationâ.
The Trades Union Congress (TUC) estimates more than 4m people in England and Wales work in the gig economy.
Tim Sharp, the TUCâs senior employment rights officer, tells BBC Newsbeat because itâs a âdisparate workforceâ working across so many areas, they can be âhard to reachâ.
But there are some workers in the sector, including Uber drivers, who have been able to gain some of those rights after taking their cases to court.
Henry, from the IWGB, says this puts the responsibility on people working in the gig economy to get better conditions rather than the government.
But the TUC says some of the measures set to be introduced by the new government, such as the right to organise, could help âall precarious workersâ.
âThereâs a clear intention to help them develop a collective voice,â says Tim, adding: âThere are still huge barriers to trade unions organising.
âWhat we hope and expect is that some barriers will be lowered.â