Gartner Says Legal & Compliance Leaders Are Least Prepared to Address COVID-19 Employee Safety Decisions Associated with a Return to the Workplace
Gartner experts say that legal and compliance leaders should focus on three main aspects of returning to work: Monitoring developments for when to return to the workplace; developing new work standards that will ensure employee safety and compliance with local mandates, and working with business leaders to develop new onsite safety measures that will protect employee health and privacy.
Monitoring Developments
“As local mandates regarding lockdowns and essential business vary significantly, legal and compliance leaders are faced with tough decisions in balancing employee health and safety considerations, local restrictions, and pressures to return to the workplace,” said Ms. Balasubramanian.
Many of these leaders are attempting to navigate variations in international, national, state, and local mandates and requirements, while:
- Streamlining compliance by applying the most stringent guidance across operations.
- Working directly with regional VPs or other local “boots on the ground” to track evolving requirements, and quickly communicate changes, to take a localized approach when necessary.
- Planning for the possibility of a second wave of infections.
Developing a Return to Workplace Playbooks
In the April 27 Gartner poll, 95% of legal leaders said that social or physical distancing measures must be put in place before allowing any return to work. Many are preparing a “return to workplace” playbook which includes protecting employees, establishing social or physical distancing requirements, providing adequate personal protective equipment (PPE), and screening for symptoms.
“Safely returning to the workplace and monitoring the ongoing health and safety of the employee workforce requires collecting an unprecedented amount of employee data, particularly employee health information,” said Ms. Balasubramanian. “Public health considerations have dramatically softened local social, cultural, and privacy norms.”Recent survey results also highlight that 59% of legal leaders are considering or currently collecting COVID-19 test results and 47% are considering or collecting current symptom data. Many are working with HR and facilities to collect temperature data (keeping privacy considerations in mind) and using contact tracing apps and technologies to monitor employee locations.
“While many companies are facing business pressures to return to the workplace, the most progressive companies understand this decision requires a ‘dial,’ not a ‘switch.’ Any plans to effectively balance the employee health and safety requirements with legal and privacy considerations must also include mechanisms to monitor developments and appropriately calibrate the response as necessary,” said Ms. Balasubramanian.