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June 30, 2020

The Netherlands: What the Dutch can teach the world about remote work - by Katie Bishop

If you’ve been balancing your laptop on a precarious stack of cookbooks, or lamented VPN speed from your kitchen table, you’re not alone. Ever since restrictions were put in place to slow the spread of Covid-19, companies have been scrambling to enable colleagues to work from home.

As we adapt to the much-cited ‘new normal’, some experts are predicting that remote work might be here to stay. This is leaving many nervously eyeing up our makeshift home desk set-ups, and wondering how on earth we can handle the backache.

But for some, remote working is just another day at the office .Thousands of workers in the Netherlands benefit from the country’s astonishingly flexible work culture. While the percentage of employed persons usually working remotely before the coronavirus outbreaklingered at around 4.7% in the UK, and 3.6% in the US, 14.1% of the Netherland’s workforce reports usually working away from the office. The Netherlands has long led the global shift toward remote work, with only Finland
catching up in recent years while other countries lag behind.

“When the pandemic started, I suddenly found myself playing the part of a remote-work coach for my wife and our neighbours,” says Yvo van Doorn, an Amsterdam-based engineer. “I was suddenly answering questions about home networks and video conferencing. It was eye-opening because I’d taken these things for granted.”


Read more at: 
What the Dutch can teach the world about remote work - BBC Worklife

June 28, 2020

Pollution - The Netherlands to ban many single-use plastics by next summer - by Victoria Séveno

Good news for the environment! The Netherlands will ban a number of single-use plastic products from July 2021, in an effort to protect our beaches and oceans.

Read more:
The Netherlands to ban many single-use plastics by next summer

EU-Coronavirus:Travel Lists: Revealed: Draft list of countries that will be allowed to enter EU when borders open

Locked away in a meeting room in Brussels, officials are debating who will be allowed to enter the EU on July 1 when the bloc's international borders are scheduled to be opened - and who will be forbidden.

Read more at:
Revealed: Draft list of countries that will be allowed to enter EU when borders open | Euronews

June 27, 2020

The Netherlands: Britons and Swedes Remain Subject to Quarantine When Traveling to the Netherlands

Authorities in the Netherlands have decided to keep the quarantine rule
in place for nationals of the United Kingdom and Sweden, due to the
Coronavirus developments, the Dutch government announced in a notice.

Read more at:
Britons and Swedes Remain Subject to Quarantine When Traveling to the Netherlands - SchengenVisaInfo.com

June 26, 2020

European Aircraft Industry ; Netherlands agrees to contribute 3.4 billion euros to Air France-KLM bailout

The Dutch government has reached a deal with France to contribute 3.4 billion euros ($3.8 billion) to an Air France-KLM (AIRF.PA) bailout that had strained relations between the airline group’s state shareholders, sources told Reuters.

Read more at:
Netherlands agrees to contribute 3.4 billion euros to Air France-KLM bailout - Reuters

June 25, 2020

The Netherlands: It's officially summer in the Netherlands, with a hot, sunny week ahead

The Netherlands has a hot, sunny week ahead, with the temperature reaching as high as 32 Celsius on Thursday, according to weather forecaster KNMI.

Read more: 
tt's officially summer in the Netherlands, with a hot, sunny week ahead - DutchNews.nl

June 24, 2020

The Netherlands: Kurdish Iranian politician survives assassination attempt in the Netherlands: - by Wladimir van Wilgenburg

Sadegh Zarza, the 64-year-old former leadership member of the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (PDKI), survived an assassination attempt on Saturday in the Dutch city of Leeuwarden, an attack his family has blamed on the Iranian government.

Dutch police arrested a 38-year-old male Iranian national at the scene and have begun interrogating him as part of their investigation.

According to the Leeuwarden Courant, a former classmate in Iran recently called Zarza in the Netherlands and asked, as a favor, that he provide some assistance to his son who was about to begin studies in Rotterdam. Zarza agreed to meet the son at the Leeuwarden train station.

Read more at:
Kurdish Iranian politician survives assassination attempt in the Netherlands: Local media