http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/4338656.stm
Unions have likened the working conditions of some of the UK's 600,000 temporary workers as being reminiscent of the "dark ages".
The TUC has delivered a dossier of abuse of temporary staff to ministers.
The dossier included instances of temps being denied training, having to pay for work clothing and receiving lower wages than permanent staff.
However, employers said the TUC's case studies were not representative of how temps are treated generally.
Harrowing
The dossier contains sometimes harrowing depictions of life as a temp worker. One temporary factory worker said her life was filled with insecurity and she felt treated as a second-class citizen.
Brendan Barber, TUC general secretary
"Over the years we have endured the stress and strain of not knowing if we were to be finished at a minutes notice if costs had to be cut in the area we worked in," she said.
"We never got asked if we wanted to do any over time as that was for the permanent staff as well, we would be stealing their overtime if we got it."
The worker added that she was often asked to do work that she had not been trained for and received only Statutory Sick Pay even after being involved in a workplace accident.
Brendan Barber, TUC general secretary, said such experiences were not uncommon.
"Temping is vital to today's modern economy, but, with no proper protection too many agency temps are suffering working practices from the dark ages."
"Too many are treated like a throwaway second-class worker and have to take it or leave," Mr Barber said.
But in response the Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC), which represents recruitment agencies, said it was unfair to depict the treatment of temps in such a negative light.
"We are not condoning poor treatment but to talk about dark age treatment just isn't right," Marcia Roberts, REC deputy chief executive, said.
"Our research suggests that temp working suits the employer, the lifestyle of the worker and boosts the UK economy."
The group added that temps were far from being low-paid and low-skilled, with over half having attained an A-level qualification.
European directive
The TUC has long called for temps to be given the same rights as permanent staff.
We don't want something in the labour market that will stifle employment growth
Marcia Roberts, Recruitment and Employment Confederation
Under UK law, temporary workers have no right to redundancy pay, to claim unfair dismissal or to take maternity leave.
But last month the TUC's campaign took a serious blow when the European Commission shelved the draft Agency Workers Directive (AWD).
The AWD would have ensured that temporary workers enjoy the same conditions as permanent staff.
The AWD is one of 68 draft directives earmarked by the European Commission to be scrapped in a bid to cut red tape.
Business opposes the rights of temps being brought into line with permanent staff.
"We don't want something in the labour market that will stifle employment growth," Ms Roberts told BBC News.
So how do you bum-on-seat umbrella-dwellas paying IR35 feel about this terrible treatment you temps are getting?
Perhaps you guys might consider leaving this terrible tempdom and running your own business instead?
Unions have likened the working conditions of some of the UK's 600,000 temporary workers as being reminiscent of the "dark ages".
The TUC has delivered a dossier of abuse of temporary staff to ministers.
The dossier included instances of temps being denied training, having to pay for work clothing and receiving lower wages than permanent staff.
However, employers said the TUC's case studies were not representative of how temps are treated generally.
Harrowing
The dossier contains sometimes harrowing depictions of life as a temp worker. One temporary factory worker said her life was filled with insecurity and she felt treated as a second-class citizen.
Brendan Barber, TUC general secretary
"Over the years we have endured the stress and strain of not knowing if we were to be finished at a minutes notice if costs had to be cut in the area we worked in," she said.
"We never got asked if we wanted to do any over time as that was for the permanent staff as well, we would be stealing their overtime if we got it."
The worker added that she was often asked to do work that she had not been trained for and received only Statutory Sick Pay even after being involved in a workplace accident.
Brendan Barber, TUC general secretary, said such experiences were not uncommon.
"Temping is vital to today's modern economy, but, with no proper protection too many agency temps are suffering working practices from the dark ages."
"Too many are treated like a throwaway second-class worker and have to take it or leave," Mr Barber said.
But in response the Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC), which represents recruitment agencies, said it was unfair to depict the treatment of temps in such a negative light.
"We are not condoning poor treatment but to talk about dark age treatment just isn't right," Marcia Roberts, REC deputy chief executive, said.
"Our research suggests that temp working suits the employer, the lifestyle of the worker and boosts the UK economy."
The group added that temps were far from being low-paid and low-skilled, with over half having attained an A-level qualification.
European directive
The TUC has long called for temps to be given the same rights as permanent staff.
We don't want something in the labour market that will stifle employment growth
Marcia Roberts, Recruitment and Employment Confederation
Under UK law, temporary workers have no right to redundancy pay, to claim unfair dismissal or to take maternity leave.
But last month the TUC's campaign took a serious blow when the European Commission shelved the draft Agency Workers Directive (AWD).
The AWD would have ensured that temporary workers enjoy the same conditions as permanent staff.
The AWD is one of 68 draft directives earmarked by the European Commission to be scrapped in a bid to cut red tape.
Business opposes the rights of temps being brought into line with permanent staff.
"We don't want something in the labour market that will stifle employment growth," Ms Roberts told BBC News.
So how do you bum-on-seat umbrella-dwellas paying IR35 feel about this terrible treatment you temps are getting?
Perhaps you guys might consider leaving this terrible tempdom and running your own business instead?
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