After a fairly quiet summer period, there were developments on several fronts in October. The new duty to take reasonable steps to prevent sexual harassment became law, although is not yet in force. The Supreme Court...more
During January the UK government introduced legislation to impose minimum service level requirements in some sectors during industrial action. It is also consulting on how to calculate holiday entitlement for part year and...more
In Smith v Pimlico Plumbers Ltd the Court of Appeal for England and Wales allowed a worker to carry forward statutory holiday he had accrued during the course of his employment, which he had taken but not been paid for, until...more
Cashiered – supermarket staff succeed in Supreme Court -
To bring an equal pay claim, an employee has to point to a comparator of the opposite sex doing like work, work rated as equivalent or work of equal value. If the...more
4/12/2021
/ Adoption ,
Employee Benefits ,
Employee Rights ,
Employer Liability Issues ,
Equal Pay ,
Holiday Pay ,
International Labor Laws ,
Parental Leave ,
Sex Discrimination ,
UK ,
UK Employment Appeal Tribunal ,
Wage and Hour
Noteworthy – no holiday pro-rating for "part year" music teacher -
In The Harpur Trust v Brazel the Court of Appeal confirmed that a music teacher was entitled to be paid for 5.6 weeks' annual holiday, even though she only...more
9/9/2019
/ Constructive Discharge ,
Diversity ,
Employer Liability Issues ,
Employment Litigation ,
Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) ,
Foreign Workers ,
Holiday Pay ,
Immigrants ,
International Labor Laws ,
UK ,
UK Employment Appeal Tribunal ,
Wage and Hour
No handbrake turns – holiday pay included voluntary overtime pay -
The Court of Appeal confirmed the EAT decision in East of England Ambulance Service NHS Trust v Flowers that holiday pay has to include voluntary overtime...more
6/17/2019
/ Collective Bargaining ,
Employer Liability Issues ,
Employment Contract ,
Employment Litigation ,
Employment Tribunals ,
Holiday Pay ,
International Labor Laws ,
Non-Disclosure Agreement ,
Over-Time ,
UK ,
UK Employment Appeal Tribunal ,
Unions ,
Wage and Hour
Direction of travel – private hire drivers were workers -
In Addison Lee Ltd v Lange, the EAT confirmed the current direction of travel in "gig economy" cases by finding that private hire drivers were workers and as such...more
Weekly newsletter on employment matters.
In this weeks issue:
- Small steps – government response to the Taylor Review.
- That hurts. Working time detriment could lead to injury to feelings award.
- It's not...more
2/12/2018
/ Age Discrimination ,
Employee Benefits ,
Employee Rights ,
Employer Liability Issues ,
Employment Contract ,
Employment Litigation ,
Holiday Pay ,
International Labor Laws ,
Parental Leave ,
Pension Schemes ,
Proposed Legislation ,
Public Sector ,
Retirement Plan ,
Sick Leave ,
UK ,
UK Employment Appeal Tribunal ,
Wage and Hour ,
Work Schedules
In this weeks issue:
- You broke it, you fix it – unpaid holiday could be carried forward indefinitely
- Go with the flow – burden of proof shifts in discrimination claims
- Going up – increased minimum wage and...more
Cards on the table – employment manifesto pledges issued -
The Conservatives, Labour Party and Liberal Democrats have all confirmed in their manifestos that pre-Brexit EU employment rights will be maintained and that gig...more