10 minute read | December.21.2023
In this month’s instalment, our team discuss the regulations for the Protection from Redundancy (Pregnancy and Family Leave) Act 2003 and the Carer’s Leave Act 2003 that were laid before Parliament on 11 December 2023. We also highlight a recent case where the Employment Appeal Tribunal held that an agreed contractual compensation payment due on termination of employment did not make it just and equitable for the tribunal to cap its award for whistleblowing detriment and dismissal. We further discuss changes that will come into force on 1 January 2024 under the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Act 2023 and discuss HMRC’s guidance for businesses working with umbrella companies as well as the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) and the Financial Conduct Authority’s (FCA) policy on remuneration requirements for small firms.
1. The Protection from Redundancy (Pregnancy and Family Leave) Act 2023
The draft Maternity Leave, Adoption Leave and Shared Parental Leave (Amendment) Regulations 2024 were laid before Parliament on 11 December 2023. Currently, employees on maternity leave, shared parental leave or adoption leave already have special protection in a redundancy situation insofar that they have the right to be offered a suitable alternative vacancy, if one is available, before being made redundant. If passed, the following additional redundancy protections will apply:
Key takeaways
As more employees will qualify for priority status, employers considering or planning redundancies in 2024 will need to ensure they have properly considered the implications of the new protections. Employers may want to consider adopting methods for identifying potentially suitable roles across their organisations, including group companies, and ensure this is kept up to date. In the event an employer fails to offer a priority status employee a suitable alternative role, an employee will be able to bring a claim for automatic unfair dismissal (there is no qualifying service for this claim), and the compensatory award is uncapped.
2. The Carer’s Leave Act 2023
On 11 December, the draft Carer’s Leave Regulations 2024 were laid before Parliament. The Carer’s Leave Act 2023 will give employees who are unpaid carers up to five days unpaid leave from work a year in support of their caring responsibilities and will come into force on 6 April 2024. Here are several key points to note:
Key takeaways
Employers should consider updating policies to reflect the right to carer’s leave and implement a system to keep track of the number of days taken.
3. Agreed contractual compensation payment did not make it just and equitable to cap tribunal award
In SPI Spirits (UK) Ltd v Zabelin, the Employment Appeal Tribunal held that an agreed contractual compensation payment due on termination of employment did not make it just and equitable for the tribunal to cap its award for whistleblowing detriment and dismissal.
The Facts
The respondent argued that it would be ‘just and equitable’ for the claimant’s remedy to be capped at £270,000, as this was the maximum liability on termination stated in the contract of employment. The respondent argued that the award should not be uplifted for failure to follow the Acas Code of Practice, as the claimant’s written grievance did not contain any protected disclosures – instead, these were made verbally by the employee at a later date. The Employment Tribunal disagreed, applied a 20% uplift to compensation and awarded the claimant over £1 million. The respondent appealed.
The Employment Appeal Tribunal agreed with the Employment Tribunal, finding that:
Key takeaways
Employers should note that a provision in an employment contract that purports to restrict the financial culpability of a respondent in the event of termination of employment cannot be used to cap the amount of compensation that the tribunal awards.
4. Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Act 2023 commencement regulations published
On 15 December 2023, the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Act 2023 (Commencement No. 1) Regulations 2023 were published. The regulations bring into effect those aspects of the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Act 2023 (REULA) that will repeal certain EU-derived legislation at the end of 2023. The following changes will come into force on 1 January 2024:
REULA therefore provides courts with greater scope to depart from retained EU case law, opening up the possibility of greater divergence in a number of areas. This may lead to increased litigation, with claimants and respondents alike seeking to depart from retained EU case law.
5. HMRC’s guidance for businesses working with umbrella companies
Employment businesses (sometimes referred to as recruitment agencies) source workers for end-user clients by engaging with “umbrella” companies. An umbrella company functions as the official employer for contract workers hired by an employment business. The umbrella company handles administrative payroll, compliance duties and tax on behalf of the employment business, which allows the employment business to offload its employer liabilities.
However, HMRC’s new guidance makes it clear that employment businesses cannot completely avoid employment duties when relying on umbrella employment arrangements. The HMRC guidance sets explicit expectations around pay rate transparency, proper information disclosures and ongoing payslip monitoring. The key points to note from the guidance is that employment businesses must:
The guidance also makes clear that non-compliance with the above may result in HMRC taking action against the employment business. Such action includes:
Key takeaways
HMRC’s guidance provides clarity as to where in the chain responsibility for employment rights, pay and tax lies. End-user clients may wish to consider building a contractual right regarding tax and national insurance obligations into the commercial terms held with the employment business.
6. PRA and FCA finalise policy on remuneration requirements for small firms
To ensure that remuneration rules for smaller, less complex dual-regulated firms are proportionate to the risks they post to consumers and markets in the UK, the PRA and FCA have introduced new proportionality levels which relax some pay rules for “small firms.” Such firms will not be required to apply “malus and clawback” (as required under the FCA’s relevant remuneration codes and practices rules) for performance years starting on or after 8 December 2023.