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Employment Law Update Laura Merrylees and Sheila Attwood.

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Presentation on theme: "Employment Law Update Laura Merrylees and Sheila Attwood."— Presentation transcript:

1 Employment Law Update Laura Merrylees and Sheila Attwood

2 Trade Union Act 2016

3 Trade Union Act 2016 - Balloting 50% turnout threshold of those entitled to vote for all ballots – simple majority of those voting in favour of action Additional threshold of 40% of those entitled to vote in ballots related to important public services (IPS) must vote in favour of action

4 Trade Union Act 2016 – Important public services Additional 40% threshold applies where the majority of those are “normally engaged” in the provision of important public services Government to introduce regulations and guidance defining those subject to 40% threshold To include health, education, transport, fire, border security and other public-services sectors

5 Trade Union Act 2016 – Electronic balloting Government has committed to an independent review of electronic balloting for strike ballots within 6 months No legal commitment to its introduction

6 Trade Union Act 2016 – Industrial action Doubling of minimum notice of industrial action to 14 days (or seven by agreement) Voting paper to include a summary of the dispute, period within which action is expected to take place and type of industrial action, short of a strike, where relevant Ballot mandate expires after six months, or up to nine months if both sides agree

7 Trade Union Act 2016 – Picketing Union must appoint a picket supervisor who is readily identifiable at picketing location Supervisor to have a letter of authorisation from union and be familiar with Code Authorisation letter to be shown to the employer on request

8 Trade Union Act 2016 – Check off Check-off deductions for union members in the public sector can still be made subject to conditions Alternative means of payment available to members Union makes reasonable payments towards employer’s costs for the deductions Government to delay implementation by 12 months

9 Gender pay gap reporting

10 Gender pay gap and equal pay Definitions: Equal pay – differences between individuals or groups performing the same or similar work Gender pay gap – differences in average earnings of men and women, regardless of role

11 Why gender pay gap reporting now? Representation Senior levels More women than men in lower-paid roles Impetus If measure the gender pay gap, and report it, are more likely to act on it “What gets measured gets managed; what gets publicly reported gets better managed”

12 Gender pay gap reporting Equality Act 2010 (Gender Pay Gap Information) Regulations 2016 Private and voluntary sector 250+ employees – someone who “ordinarily works in Great Britain and whose contract of employment is governed by UK legislation” Annual reporting

13 Gender pay gap measures Five benchmarks to report: Mean and median pay Bonus pay Receipt of bonuses Pay bands Definitions What constitutes pay? What is a bonus? Quartile pay bands

14 Gender pay gap outcomes Five benchmarks - no raw data Confirmation information is accurate 12-month time lag Employer’s website, plus government website – league table or database? Narrative Why is there a gap? What are we doing about it? “If you don’t tell your story, someone else will”

15 What's next? Regulations come into force – expected October 2016 Pay – 30 April 2017 Bonuses – year from 30 April 2016 Public sector – Government pledged to "extend our plans for gender pay gap reporting…to include the public sector"

16 Public-sector exit payments – repayment and cap

17 Draft Repayment of Public Sector Exit Payments Regulations 2016 Provision for repayment contained in the Small Business, Enterprise and Employment Act 2015 Repayment of Public Sector Exit Payments Regulations 2016 – Government originally intended to implement by April 2016 Latest consultation closed on 25 January 2016

18 Draft Repayment of Public Sector Exit Payments Regulations 2016 Provision for higher earning public-sector employees to repay an exit payment if they re-join the public sector within a year Earnings threshold of £80,000 Applies to individuals who return to any part of the public sector Applies to contractors who return “off-payroll”

19 Draft Repayment of Public Sector Exit Payments Regulations 2016 Amount to be repaid will be reduced by a taper over time Applies to employer payments to provide unreduced pensions on early retirement Amount of any statutory redundancy payment will not be subject to repayment

20 Draft Repayment of Public Sector Exit Payments Regulations 2016 Payments in scope for repayment include: Redundancy (voluntary and compulsory) Payments of the balance of a fixed-term contract Settlement agreements

21 Draft Repayment of Public Sector Exit Payments Regulations 2016 Excluded payments include: For incapacity resulting from accident, injury or illness Payment in lieu of notice Accrued but untaken leave

22 Draft Repayment of Public Sector Exit Payments Regulations 2016 Former employer obliged to keep a record of the payment for three years Employee obliged to inform old and new employer if exit payment has been made in last 12 months

23 Draft Public Sector Exit Payment Regulations 2016 Provision included in the Enterprise Act 2016 Draft Public Sector Exit Payment Regulations 2016 – expected to come into force in October 2016

24 Draft Public Sector Exit Payment Regulations 2016 Limits the total aggregate value of an exit payment to a public-sector employee to £95,000

25 Draft Public Sector Exit Payment Regulations 2016 Payments that form part of the cap include: Redundancy (voluntary or compulsory) Payments of the balance of a fixed-term contract Payment in lieu of notice Settlement agreements Employer payments to provide unreduced pensions on early retirement Excluded payments include: Injury or ill health related payments Accrued but untaken leave

26 Future developments Consultation on reforms to public-sector exit payments – closed on 3 May 2016

27 Apprenticeship levy

28 Paying in…. 6 April 2017 0.5% of entire paybill (wages, bonuses, commissions, pension contributions). Minus £15,000pa allowance All employers, with a paybill of more than £3 million a year. Payable through PAYE the next month …Getting out Digital apprenticeship service account + top-up (England) Time-bound

29 Apprenticeship levy – planning ahead Funding the levy Can't be used to pay wages Change to national insurance contributions Training Existing apprenticeships continue under current funding arrangements Review of training What might you want to change? What roles could be done as an apprenticeship?

30 Holiday pay

31 Holiday pay – Overview Working Time Regulations 1998 implement the European Working Time Directive Health & Safety measure Workers are entitled to 5.6 weeks’ leave in each leave year

32 Holiday pay – Overtime hours Worker must receive “normal remuneration” during period of paid annual leave British Airways Plc v Williams and Others – payments should be included in the calculation of holiday pay if they are “intrinsically linked” to the performance of the worker’s duties Neal v Freightliner Ltd – Employment tribunal decision which found that elements including shift premia and overtime should be included

33 Holiday pay – Overtime hours Bear Scotland Ltd and others v Fulton and others; Hertel (UK) Ltd v Woods and others; Amec Group Ltd v Law and others [2015] Concerned compulsory but non-guaranteed overtime Non-guaranteed overtime to be included in the calculation of holiday pay Patterson v Castlereagh Borough Council [2015] IRLR 721 NICA – inclusion of voluntary overtime where “normally carried out” and was an “appropriately permanent feature” of the worker’s pay

34 Holiday pay – Overtime hours Guaranteed and obligatory non-guaranteed overtime to be included in the calculation of holiday pay (NB appeal in Lock v British Gas) Voluntary – is it part of “normal remuneration”?


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