White House Chronicle

News Analysis With a Sense of Humor

  • Home
  • King’s Commentaries
  • Random Features
  • Photos
  • Public Speaker
  • WHC Episodes
  • About WHC
  • Carrying Stations
  • ME/CFS Alert
  • Contact Us

In Praise of the Four-Day Work Week

September 13, 2010 by Llewellyn King 8 Comments

Let us make the three-day weekend permanent.

What do you remember about Labor Day? My bet is you remember not the Monday holiday but the Sunday, because the middle day of a three-day weekend is a day of luxury. It begins in the blessed minutes after waking, when you lie there in a cocoon of warmth; an indulgent few minutes that will begin to slip away with the movement of an arm or the opening of eye.

If you are with someone you love, it is luxury redefined up; guiltless indulgence, secured by the knowledge that work and stress are at bay. The chores have been executed on the previous day and — wonder of wonders — work will not cloud the horizon until Tuesday.

That mounting anxiety, which creeps into Sunday as the evening approaches, will not arrive until late Monday. You wonder, as you creep from your place of reverie to keep a flexible appointment with coffee and the bathroom, why every weekend cannot contain one day without care, one day, as the French say, sans souci.

When I worked for the BBC in London many years ago, we worked three days and took three days off. Longer work days but fewer of them.

Having worked every shift in the book, I was convinced that for journalists at least this was the perfect setup. My colleagues were more productive than any other set of workers I have labored with and happier. Many turned down jobs outside of the BBC just to keep the shifts they loved. Long, hard days followed by the triple crown of three days off.

This showed. Several wrote books, one finished a play and all kinds of gardens flourished, along with hobbies and sports. You can get on a golf course more cheaply and more easily on a Tuesday than you can on an over-stretched Saturday.

Years later, when I was president of the Washington-Baltimore Newspaper Guild, during contract negotiations I suggested the idea of longer work days but fewer of them. The Washington Post management was ecstatic; many of their staffing problems, particularly on weekends, would be solved along with the complexity of compensatory time for well-paid employees who did not get overtime.

Win-win, you say? Not so fast. When I asked the permission of the Newspaper Guild International to put the proposal formally in negotiations, the worthies in the union hierarchy exploded. We had a model contract, blessed in the 1930s by the great journalist Heywood Broun (actually, a reluctant unionist like so many in the Guild) and we were not going to depart from that contract. Moreover, the model contract called for shortening work days, not lengthening them.

Unions may be the most liberal part of the political spectrum, but internally they are incredibly conservative and change-averse. Journalists were not to have the quality of their lives improved and The Washington Post was not to improve its staffing situation.

Well, I am back at work. And working people are talking about resetting America.

So I say, let us look afresh at the four-day work week. First let us resolve the problems of physical work, where a longer day is a bigger burden. But for the great majority of America’s workers (the paper-pushers, if you will), the virtues of a four-day work week might fit with the resetting of so many things in our lives.

Everything else is changing; newspapers are struggling, information technology dominates our lives and our transportation infrastructure is overloaded.

Fewer, longer work days would ease the stress on so many services and improve the ratio of commuting time to work time. Employers would get a happier workforce and the quality of life in the working world would be so improved.

Please join me in my campaign to abolish Monday. We can win. It has no core constituency. It is vulnerable.

 

Email, RSS Follow
Email

Filed Under: King's Commentaries Tagged With: Labor Day, work week

Comments

  1. Marc Goldsmith says

    September 13, 2010 at 10:19 am

    Amen, I like the idea, plus Monday has all the appeal of a wet dish rag. For those of us that don’t serve customers directly it is an easy transition. For others the customer wants more than 9 to 5 service and companies would do better with longer daysthat serve customers better.

    Reply
  2. Marc Goldsmith says

    September 13, 2010 at 10:19 am

    Amen, I like the idea, plus Monday has all the appeal of a wet dish rag. For those of us that don’t serve customers directly it is an easy transition. For others the customer wants more than 9 to 5 service and companies would do better with longer daysthat serve customers better.

    Reply
  3. Joan Walsh Cassedy says

    September 13, 2010 at 7:20 pm

    It would actually not challenge companies that much as most holidays are recognized on Mondays (or would that mean a Wednesday start for the 8 or so Monday holidays? Hmmmm…..

    Reply
  4. Joan Walsh Cassedy says

    September 13, 2010 at 7:20 pm

    It would actually not challenge companies that much as most holidays are recognized on Mondays (or would that mean a Wednesday start for the 8 or so Monday holidays? Hmmmm…..

    Reply
  5. Tammy Hall says

    September 20, 2010 at 7:50 am

    This is a wonderful idea. With a 2 day u usually are playing catch up from the work week then, back to work no rest or enjoyment. This will provide relief from the stress of being in a hurry all the time (trying to relax and enjoy yourself for once).

    Reply
  6. Tammy Hall says

    September 20, 2010 at 7:50 am

    This is a wonderful idea. With a 2 day u usually are playing catch up from the work week then, back to work no rest or enjoyment. This will provide relief from the stress of being in a hurry all the time (trying to relax and enjoy yourself for once).

    Reply
  7. Stephen Lott says

    September 20, 2010 at 9:58 am

    You can add me to the list to abolish Mondays! I’m all for longer workdays and shorter weeks. We surely need to change something my friend.
    Thanks for the read.

    Reply
  8. Stephen Lott says

    September 20, 2010 at 9:58 am

    You can add me to the list to abolish Mondays! I’m all for longer workdays and shorter weeks. We surely need to change something my friend.
    Thanks for the read.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Stephen Lott Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

White House Chronicle on Social

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Vimeo
  • YouTube
Fear Is Afoot, Be Afraid America

Fear Is Afoot, Be Afraid America

Llewellyn King

There is enough fear to go around. There is fear of the indescribable horror when the ICE men and women, their faces hidden by masks, grab a suspected illegal immigrant. Their grab could come at the person’s home or place of work, while picking up a child from school or standing in the hallway of […]

The AI Tsunami Is Approaching Shore; Jobs at Big Risk

The AI Tsunami Is Approaching Shore; Jobs at Big Risk

Llewellyn King

The Big One is coming, and it isn’t an earthquake in California or a hurricane in the Atlantic. It is the imminent upending of so many of the world’s norms by artificial intelligence, for good and for ill. Jobs are being swept away by AI not in the distant future, but right now. A recent […]

The U.S. Commands the Heights of Science — for Now

The U.S. Commands the Heights of Science — for Now

Llewellyn King

Pull up the drawbridge, flood the moat and drop the portcullis. That, it would seem, is the science and research policy of the United States circa 2025. The problem with a siege policy is that eventually the inhabitants in the castle will starve. Current actions across the board suggest that starvation may become the fate […]

This Isn’t the Time To Politicize Electricity Again

This Isn’t the Time To Politicize Electricity Again

Llewellyn King

The future of electricity is being discussed in terms of how we make it: whether it should be generated by nuclear, wind and solar or by coal and natural gas. Nuclear is favored by the utilities and the Trump administration, but it will take decades and untold billions of dollars to build up a sizable […]

Copyright © 2025 · White House Chronicle Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in