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WORKING IN SWITZERLAND

What Swiss employees need to know about working in a heatwave

Working while temperatures exceed 30C is not only unpleasant, but can also be dangerous to health and safety. What are Swiss employers’ responsibilities in such cases?

What Swiss employees need to know about working in a heatwave
Extra protection is required for those working outdoors.Image by David Mark from Pixabay

Unlike in countries such as Germany, where authorities can declare ‘heat-free’ days when people don’t have to work, no such perk exists in Switzerland.

Or, rather, no longer exists, because before the turn of the millennium, many cantons had these so called Hitzefrei days. For the past 20 years, however, that is no longer the case. In 2003, Basel-City was the last canton to abolish this regulation.

One key exception is for pregnant or breastfeeding women who are not required to work in temperatures above 28C (or below -5C in the winter).

What does Swiss law say?

Generally speaking, the employer must protect employees’ health and safety in the workplace.

While this refers to all kinds of workplace situations, the Swiss Labour Act also specifies health protection in concrete terms.

In extreme weather conditions, for instance, the room temperature, air circulation, and relative humidity must be coordinated in such a way that “a room climate is not detrimental to health and appropriate to the type of work”.

The State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) has also issued guidelines for employers about how to protect their workforce during hot spells.

What are the SECO’s recommendations to protect workers during heatwaves?

For those working in offices or other indoor spaces with an internal midday temperature of 32C, employers should consider installing fans, changing work hours (avoiding high-heat periods in the middle of the afternoon), and offering extra breaks.

For outdoor workplaces, such as construction sites for example, employers should — besides voluntarily adjusting work hours as mentioned above — also inform workers about the risks of the sun, heat and ozone; provide means of protection (suitable clothing, sunscreen, etc.), as well as shaded areas for break periods, while ensuring there is plenty of bottled water at hand.

Levels of physical effort should also be reduced as the temperature climbs further.

READ ALSO: Switzerland’s official advice on how to protect yourself in a heatwave

Beware of heat-related work accidents

High temperatures put a strain on the body and can be dangerous for people working outdoors, according to a warning issued by the National Accident Insurance Fund (SUVA).

“Statistics show that on days when temperatures exceed 30C, there are 7 percent more accidents than on other summer days,” SUVA said in a press release.

For all those working outdoors (and their employers), SUVA suggests the following measures:

  • Protect the head from heat and UV rays: if safety requirements permit, wear a helmet with a neck protector and a front visor or a sun hat
  • Cover the skin as much as possible with light summer work clothes and apply sunscreen several times a day to exposed areas
  • Be attentive to the feeling of thirst and drink water at least every 20 minutes to avoid dehydration due to perspiration. Make sure you are sufficiently hydrated before you even start work
  • Take regular breaks in the shade. Frequent short breaks provide better recovery than a few long breaks
  • Adapt the pace of work according to the heat and the feeling

What happens if you have a heat-related health problem or injury at work?

As for all kinds of accidents, if you work for your employer for at least eight hours per week you will be automatically insured under the obligatory accident insurance scheme, also known as UVG (German), LAA (French), or LAINF (Italian).

READ ALSO: How does accident insurance work in Switzerland?

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JOBS

Which professions in Switzerland are harder for foreigners to break into?

In many sectors of Switzerland’s economy, Swiss employees prevail over foreign ones — and vice-versa.

Which professions in Switzerland are harder for foreigners to break into?

In the past, the ‘division of labour’ in Switzerland was clear: foreign nationals held mostly manual (and therefore lower-paid) jobs, while the Swiss worked in managerial / executive and other middle and high positions.

Many sectors still follow these traditional roles, with some jobs held almost exclusively by Swiss citizens, and others by foreign nationals.

Which jobs are mostly held by the Swiss?

To find this out, the Basel-based consultancy firm, Demografik, surveyed professions with more than 10,000 employees.

It found that “about 60 percent of the country’s masons and flooring installers are foreign-born,” Neue Zürcher Zeitung (NZZ), reported.

The comparable figure among the country’s unskilled workers as a whole is even higher —  84 percent.

“Swiss nationals also make up only a third of kitchen assistants and cleaning staffers” — jobs typically held by immigrants with no higher education or vocational training.

On the other hand, Swiss citizens hold a number of jobs that are almost unattainable for unskilled foreign nationals, including police officers, teachers, lawyers, senior administrative staff, and social workers.

Only a small percentage of immigrants work in these professions.

However, they dominate fields such as service staff, chauffeurs, unskilled industrial workers, and construction — jobs where very few Swiss can be found.

Why is this?

“The proportion of foreign workers is highest in jobs that are generally considered unappealing – whether because of the low pay, high level of physical demands or irregular working hours,” said Demografik economist Lisa Triolo.

“Nevertheless, these professions are important for the functioning of the economy, because they are difficult to automate.”

Triolo also found that foreigners mainly work in areas where recruiting employees has been difficult.

“The longer the vacancy period in an occupational group, the higher the proportion of foreigners,” she pointed out.  “For example, construction is the sector in which companies take the longest to fill an open position.”

Is this survey objective?

It is, if you focus primarily on unskilled foreign workers, who basically take on jobs that the Swiss don’t want.

The picture is different, however, if you include skilled professionals into the mix.

Many of them hold the same positions, and earn equal or even higher wages, than their Swiss counterparts.

READ ALSO: In which jobs in Switzerland do foreign workers earn more than the Swiss? 

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