Employment Library

  • Queens Diamond Jubilee Celebrations

    Late May bank holiday has been moved to 5th June and an additional bank holiday to mark the Queen’s Jubilee will take place on 6th June 2012.

  • The London Olympics 2012

    This year also has in store some other very exciting sporting events .

  • Increases to statutory redundancy

    In 1 February 2012 Increases to statutory redundancy payment, basic award and guarantee payment. 

  • TUPE - Post Transfer Consultation

    The Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) has considered ( AMICUS and TGWU v Glasgow City Council ) whether the Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 2006 (TUPE) require a transferee employer to consult with the union representatives...
  • Unfair Dismissal - Reasonable Responses

    In Sarkar v West London Mental Health NHS Trust , the Court of Appeal has ruled that the Employment Tribunal (ET) was entitled to find that the decision to dismiss Dr Sameer Sarkar from his post as a Consultant Psychiatrist at Broadmoor Hospital was...
  • Unsuccessful Job Applicants - Access to Recruitment Information

    In Meister v Speech Design Carrier Systems GmbH , the European Court of Justice (ECJ) was asked by the German Labour Court to give a preliminary ruling on whether an unsuccessful job applicant who can show that he or she meets the requirements for a post...
  • Unfair Dismissal - Polkey Reductions - Some Speculation Inevitable

    In Eversheds Legal Services Ltd. v de Belin , whilst upholding Mr de Belin’s claims of unfair dismissal and sex discrimination, the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) found that the Employment Tribunal (ET) had failed to address Eversheds’...
  • Triangular Agency Working Arrangements - The Correct Approach

    A further case ( East Living Ltd. v Sridhar and TSG Services Ltd. ) has confirmed the approach an Employment Tribunal (ET) should take when deciding whether or not an agency worker is in reality the employee of the end user company. Mr Sridhar was...
  • Age Discrimination - Mandatory Retirement

    Whilst enforced retirement at age 65 has now been abolished and the Equality Act 2010 has replaced the Employment Equality (Age) Regulations 2006 , the decision of the Supreme Court in a case brought under the Regulations ( Seldon v Clarkson, Wright...
  • Age Discrimination - Life After the Abolition of the Default Retirement Age

    The Default Retirement Age (DRA) has now been abolished and it is no longer permissible for an employer to dismiss an older worker on the ground of retirement unless this can be objectively justified under the Equality Act 2010 . This does not mean that...
  • Rest Breaks - Appropriate Alternative Arrangements

    Under the Working Time Regulations 1998 (WTR), workers are entitled to an uninterrupted 20-minute rest break if their daily working time exceeds six hours. However, there are exceptions to this general rule to take account of unusual or particular working...
  • Resolving Workplace Disputes

    As of 6 April 2009, the Employment Act 2008 repealed the Statutory Dispute Resolution Procedures in their entirety. In their place is a voluntary Advisory Conciliation and Arbitration Service (ACAS) Code of Practice , which sets out the basic principles...
  • Unfair Dismissal Claims - A Minute Late is Too Late

    An employee must bring an unfair dismissal claim within three months of his or her effective date of termination and the time limits for presenting claims to the Tribunals Service are normally strictly enforced. If the deadline is missed, the Employment...
  • Varying Employees' Contracts of Employment

    With economic prospects still looking gloomy, many employers are seeking ways to reduce staff costs and an alternative to making redundancies is to reorganise employees’ patterns of working. It is important to remember, however, that where this would...
  • Whistleblowers - The Scope of the Protection

    In BP plc v 1. Elstone 2. Petrotechnics Ltd. , the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) had to determine whether a worker could bring a claim under Section 47B of the Employment Rights Act 1996 (ERA) on the ground that he had suffered a detriment from his...
  • The Corporate Manslaughter Act

    The Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007 established a new statutory offence of corporate manslaughter (corporate culpable homicide in Scotland). An organisation is guilty of the offence if the way in which it manages or organises its...
  • A Guide to Dealing with Requests for Flexible Working Arrangements

    The statutory right to request flexible working arrangements is currently available to parents of children aged 16 and under (under 18 where the child is disabled) and employees who care for, or expect to care for, certain adults. From 2014, however, the...
  • The Equality Act 2010 - A Guide for Employers

    The Equality Act 2010 has replaced nine major pieces of discrimination legislation and other ancillary measures that have been introduced over the last forty years. The core provisions of the Act came into force on 1 October 2010. As well as harmonising...
  • TUPE - Post-Transfer Obligations and Collective Agreements

    The Court of Appeal has overturned the decision of the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) in Alemo-Herron and others v Parkwood Leisure Ltd. Parkwood Leisure Ltd. had taken over a company that acquired employees of the London Borough of Lewisham’s...
  • Collective Redundancy Consultation - Government Announces Changes

    EU Directive 98/59/EC, the Collective Redundancies Directive, was enacted into UK domestic law by the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 (TULRCA). Whilst the Directive requires a minimum consultation period of only 30 days for...
  • A Guide to the Agency Workers Regulations

    The Agency Workers Regulations 2010 (AWR) came into force on 1 October 2011. All agency workers are entitled, from the first day of their assignment, to information on any job vacancies and to make use of collective facilities and amenities available to...
  • Protecting Business Interests

    When an employee leaves to go to work for another organisation, their employer may wish to have in place safeguards to protect sensitive information relating to the business, to prevent it from falling into the hands of a competitor. One possible way of...
  • Collective Redundancy Consultation - Decision Outside Scope of Directive, Rules ECJ

    In United States of America v Nolan , the Court of Appeal sought guidance from the European Court of Justice (ECJ) as to the point at which the obligation to consult arises under Directive 98/59/EC, the Collective Redundancies Directive. Difficulties...
  • Whistleblowing - Disclosure Must Be Made In Good Faith

    The Public Interest Disclosure Act 1998 (PIDA) – often referred to as the ‘Whistleblowing’ Act – came into force in July 1999. PIDA inserted new sections into the Employment Rights Act 1996 which give workers legal protection when...
  • Damages for Wrongful Dismissal

    The Supreme Court has ruled ( Edwards v Chesterfield Royal Hospital NHS Foundation Trust ) that a consultant surgeon who suffered a loss as a result of findings of personal and professional misconduct made against him in disciplinary proceedings that were...
  • In Brief: Assessment of Repetitive Tasks Tool

    Musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) are the most common occupational illness in Britain. They include problems such as low back pain, joint injuries and repetitive strain injuries of various sorts, and affect more than 500,000 people every year. They are often...
  • In Brief: ACAS E-learning Guides

    The Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service (ACAS) now has ten electronic learning guides available on its website. The topics are: • bullying and harassment; • managing absence in the workplace; • handling redundancy; •...
  • Driving on Company Business

    Research by the Health and Safety Executive shows that 20 people are killed and 250 are seriously injured each week in traffic accidents involving someone driving for business reasons. The threat of employers being prosecuted for road accidents involving...
  • TUPE - What Constitutes an 'Organised Grouping of Employees'?

    A service provision change under the Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 2006 (TUPE) takes place when, immediately before the transfer, there is an ‘organised grouping of employees’ situated in Great Britain which...
  • Dismissal and the Effective Date of Termination

    The Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) has overturned a decision of the Employment Tribunal (ET) that a revised notice of dismissal did not prevent an employee from completing the one year’s continuous employment necessary for him to bring a claim of...
  • Disability Discrimination - Normal Day-to-Day Activities

    For the purposes of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 (DDA) , a person had a disability if they had a physical or mental impairment which had a substantial and long-term adverse effect on their normal day-to-day activities. Under the Equality Act 2010...
  • TUPE - Assignment of Pub Lease Not a TUPE Transfer

    The Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) has ruled ( Lom Management Ltd. v Sweeney ) that although the Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 2006 (TUPE) may apply when the lease of a commercial property has been assigned, this will...
  • TUPE - An Introduction

    The Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 2006 apply to any size of business and protect the employment rights of employees when their employer changes as a result of the relevant transfer of a business or a part of one. They...
  • Disability Discrimination - Failure to Make Reasonable Adjustments

    When deciding a reasonable adjustments claim under Section 4A of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 (now replaced by the Equality Act 2010 ), the Employment Tribunal (ET) must identify the relevant provision, criterion or practice (PCP) and then...
  • Disability Discrimination - Limits on Duty to Make Reasonable Adjustments

    Under Section 4A of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 (DDA), employers had a duty to make reasonable adjustments to working practices in order to ensure that a disabled employee was not disadvantaged. Under the Equality Act 2010 , which has now...
  • In Brief: Advice on Occupational Asthma

    The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) estimates that each year between 1,500 and 3,000 people in Great Britain develop occupational asthma. The number rises to 7,000 cases a year if asthma made worse by work is taken into account. The cost to society is...
  • Informing and Consulting Employees

    The EU Information and Consultation Directive 2002 establishes minimum requirements for consulting and informing employees on a wide variety of subjects. The Information and Consultation of Employees Regulations 2004 implement the Directive in the UK. ...
  • Staff Handbooks and Contractual Rights

    It is not uncommon for employees’ contracts of employment to expressly incorporate the staff handbook, although much of its contents will refer to policy matters rather than having contractual status. The decision of the Court of Appeal in Keeley v...
  • Written Statement of Employment Particulars

    A contract of employment may be verbal but all employees, whether part-time or full-time, are entitled by law to be given a written statement setting out the main particulars of their employment, provided their employment lasts for one month or more. All the...
  • In Brief: Data Protection

    The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) has published a consolidated version of the guidance on data protection issues in employment. This brings together the four existing guides on recruitment and selection, employee records, monitoring at work and...
  • In Brief: ACAS Guidance on Holiday and Holiday Pay

    The Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service (ACAS) has useful guidance for employers puzzling over staff holiday pay entitlements. The guidance leaflet gives a summary of holiday entitlements, setting out: the right to annual leave; when a...
  • In Brief: Working at Height Regulations

    Falls from height are the single biggest cause of workplace deaths and one of the main causes of serious injury. A place is ‘at height’ if there is a risk of a fall liable to cause personal injury. The Work at Height Regulations 2005 were...
  • In Brief: Guidance on Cancer and Working

    Employees diagnosed with progressive forms of cancer are regarded as having a disability for the purposes of the Equality Act 2010 . Employers therefore have a duty to make reasonable adjustments to help employees overcome disadvantages arising from their...
  • In Brief: Guidance on Recruiting Refugees and Asylum Seekers

    The UK Border Agency has useful guidance to help UK employers understand the status of asylum seekers, refugees and those with humanitarian protection . This explains what documents employers should ask prospective employees to produce to ensure that they...
  • Supreme Court Rules in Equal Pay Case

    The Supreme Court has ruled, by a majority of three judges to two, that 174 former employees of Birmingham City Council who left their jobs between 2004 and 2008 do have the right to pursue their equal pay claims in the civil courts as breach of contract...
  • Stress - An Employer's Duties

    The 13th edition of the Absence Management survey report , which is produced by the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) in conjunction with healthcare provider Simplyhealth, found that in 2012 stress was the most common cause of...
  • Employment Tribunal Fees

    Currently, bringing a claim to the Employment Tribunal (ET) is free of charge and the cost of running the service is £84 million per annum. In 2012, as part of the Government’s review of employment and workplace law, the Ministry of Justice...
  • ECHR Rules on Protection of Political Beliefs

    The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) has ruled that United Kingdom legislation is deficient as it does not protect employees, including those with less than one year’s service, from dismissal on grounds of political opinion or affiliation ( ...
  • Employment Rights - Ministers of Religion

    For many years, it was accepted law that ministers of religion did not normally come within the definition of ‘employee’ for the purposes of the Employment Rights Act 1996 (ERA) because they were traditionally deemed to be ‘office...
  • Failing to Prevent Bribery - Are You at Risk?

    The Bribery Act 2010 came into force on 1 July 2011. It created a new offence which can be committed by a commercial organisation if it fails to prevent persons associated with it from committing bribery on its behalf. A business can provide a defence by...
  • Dealing with Employee Absence

    Employee absences can be both costly and disruptive. It is advisable to have systems in place to measure and analyse these costs so that you can identify problem areas. Are there patterns of absence? Does a particular department have a below average...
  • ECHR Rules in Religious Discrimination Claims

    The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) has handed down its rulings in four UK cases in which Christian employees claimed to have suffered discrimination at work on account of their religious beliefs. Two of the cases concerned women who were prevented...
  • Employees Who Fall Sick Whilst on Annual Leave

    On more than one occasion, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) has said that the purpose of the entitlement to paid annual leave is to enable a worker to rest and to enjoy a period of relaxation and leisure, whereas the purpose of the entitlement to sick...
  • Government Announces Further Flexible Working Measures

    The Additional Paternity Leave Regulations 2010 gave new fathers who qualify the right to take additional paternity leave during the period which begins 20 weeks after the child’s date of birth and ends 12 months after this date if the mother chooses...
  • Drug Policy - Recognising the Signs and What to Do

    Research findings from Medscreen, based on drug testing carried out over the last ten years across a variety of professions, reveal that there has been a 3,000 per cent increase in the number of workers testing positive for cocaine. More than five per cent...
  • Lost ET1 Claim by Fax Presented in Time

    An employee wishing to bring an unfair dismissal claim must do so within three months of their effective date of termination (EDT). Time limits for presenting claims to the Employment Tribunal (ET) are normally strictly enforced. Rule 1 of the ET Rules of...
  • Redundancy - Selection for Redundancy

    The Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) has held that where all members of a ‘pool’ are redundant, the employer does not have to undertake a formal redundancy selection process ( Zeff v Lewis Day Transport plc ). Mr Zeff worked for Lewis Day...
  • No Homophobic Harassment Where Claimant Engaged in Similar Conduct

    A man who succeeded in his argument that homophobic workplace banter directed at a heterosexual worker could constitute harassment, under Regulation 5 of the Employment Equality (Sexual Orientation) Regulations 2003 , has lost his claim because the...
  • Religious Discrimination - Refusal to Allow Time Off Work to Attend Mosque

    Under the Employment Equality (Religion or Belief) Regulations 2003 , now superseded by the Equality Act 2010 , indirect discrimination occurs when an employer applies a ‘provision, criterion or practice’ (PCP) which puts or would put those who...
  • In Brief: New Minimum Wage Rates

    Employers are reminded that, in accordance with the recommendations of the Low Pay Commission, the adult hourly rate of the National Minimum Wage increased from £6.08 to £6.19 on 1 October 2012. However, the development rate (which covers...
  • Redundancy - Suitable Alternative Employment

    In a further case on whether or not it was reasonable for an employee at risk of redundancy to refuse an offer of suitable alternative employment, the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) has reaffirmed that the test is a subjective one. In such cases, the...
  • Redundancy Selection - A 'Pool of One'

    In Wrexham Golf Club Co. Ltd. v Ingham , the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) held that when deciding which employees are potentially at risk of redundancy, there will be cases where it is reasonable for the employer to focus on a single employee without...
  • Graduate Recruitment

    Most businesses would like to benefit from an influx of talent, enthusiasm and fresh ideas. The challenge is to achieve it at an acceptable cost. One option is to employ a recent graduate. In the past, most graduate recruitment was undertaken by large...

Latest News

 
Agency Workers and the 'Swedish Derogation' Exception
 
Stringfellows' Lap Dancer Not an Employee
 
Criminal Record Disclosures 'Incompatible' With Human Rights
 
Government Announces New Minimum Wage Rates
 
Acas Publishes Collective Redundancies Guide
 
Employment Tribunal Fees - Update
 
Employment Tribunals Have No Jurisdiction in Job Evaluation Disputes
 
EHRC Launches Guidance on Preventing Discrimination
 
Construction Company Fined Over Worker's Death
 
Establishing Disability Under the Equality Act