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Introduction to
Employment Law
October 2019
About today’s session
• Back to basics
• Introduction/refresher
Today’s topics
• Jargon busting!
• Where does employment law come from?
• Contracts of employment
• What is an employee?
• Disciplinary and grievance issues
• Key principles of discrimination law
Jargon-busting
TOIL
4
Jargon-busting
PILON
5
Jargon-busting
Zero
hours
contract
6
Jargon-busting
LIFO
(and FIFO)
7
Jargon-busting
TUPE
8
Jargon-busting
COT3
9
Jargon-busting
SOSR
10
Jargon-busting
ET
(and ET1 and ET3)
11
Jargon-busting
SSP
12
Jargon-busting
EAT
13
Jargon-busting
ACAS
14
Where do UK employment
rights come from?
1. Statute and regulations
2. Contracts of employment
3. Case law
1. Statute and regulations
• Acts of Parliament
• Statutory Instruments
• EU law
Which UK employment laws
do you think come from the
EU?
• Paid holiday?
• Minimum Wage?
• Sick Pay?
• TUPE?
Which UK employment laws
do you think come from the
EU?
• Statutory minimum notice?
• Redundancy rights?
• Unfair Dismissal?
• Discrimination?
What might Brexit mean for
employment law?
• Trade agreements may require a
certain level of employment rights
• Standing of European Court decisions
• ECHR
2. Contracts of Employment
• Terms required by law (including
section 1 statement)
• Terms agreed between the parties
• Unwritten or implied terms
Section 1 statements (1)
• Names of the parties
• Job title/description of work
• Place of work
• Start date and continuous service date
• Pay amount and interval
• Hours of work
• Holiday entitlement
These have to be included in the statement
Section 1 statements (2)
• Terms about working abroad for more than
one month
• Terms about the length of temporary or
fixed term work
• Details of any collective agreements in
place
These have to be included in the statement
Section 1 statements (3)
These can be provided in a separate
accessible document:
• Terms relating to sickness absence and
sick pay
• Notice periods for either party
• Information about disciplinary and
grievance procedures
• Terms relating to the pension scheme
When should the section 1
statement be provided?
(a) On or before the day employment starts?
(b) Within two months of employment
starting?
(c) After one year’s service?
Section 1 statements
Forthcoming changes for new starters from
6 April 2020
• Workers as well as employees
• Day 1 right
• Additional points to cover e.g. probation
• More has to go in the statement
Section 1 statements
Forthcoming changes from 6 April 2020
For more information, please see
https://www.pureemploymentlaw.co.uk/some
-particular-changes/
Other clauses employers may
wish to include
• Deductions clause
• Suspension clause
• Right to make reasonable changes
• Confidentiality and data protection
• Other terms relevant to your workplace
Unwritten or implied terms
• Equal pay clause
• Health and safety
• “Duty of mutual trust and confidence”
3. Case law
• Decided cases determine legal principles
• Judicial interpretation of legislation,
regulations or contractual terms
• The court hierarchy and how cases become
binding
Case law - examples
• British Home Stores v Burchell (1978)
• Bear Scotland v Fulton (2015)
How are UK employment
rights enforced?
• Sometimes by government bodies (e.g.
HMRC, HSE)
• Sometimes by collective action
• Mostly by enforcement by individuals
(grievances, claims to an Employment
Tribunal, claims in the civil courts)
What is an employee?
“An individual who has entered into or works
under (or, where the employment has ceased,
worked under) a contract of employment".
What is a contract of
employment?
“a contract of service or apprenticeship,
whether express or implied, and (if it is
express) whether oral or in writing".
What does it mean to be self-
employed or freelance?
“working for oneself rather than for an
employer.”
What is a worker?
An individual who has entered into or works
under:
• A contract of employment; or
• Any other contract whereby the individual
undertakes to do or perform personally any
work or services for another party to the
contract
How is employment status
decided? (1)
•Tribunals and courts will look at a range of
factors
•Consider the reality of the situation, not
just the documentation
•Tax position isn’t always the same
How is employment status
decided? (2)
•Intention of the parties
•Mutuality of obligation
•Availability of benefits (holiday, sick pay)
•Control
•Integration
•Personal service and substitution
What are the main employee
rights in the UK?
• Contractual rights
• Protection against unfair dismissal*
• Whistleblower protection
• TUPE rights
• Right to a redundancy payment*
• Family-friendly rights
What are the main worker
rights in the UK?
• Protection against unlawful discrimination
• National Minimum Wage
• Working Time rights
Disciplinary & Grievance
Issues and Unfair Dismissal
Disciplinary Issues
• Misconduct
• For example:
• theft
• fighting
• refusing to obey instructions
Disciplinary Process
• Disciplinary Procedure
• ACAS Code
• Fairness
Disciplinary Process
• Investigate
• Disciplinary Hearing
• Appeal
Disciplinary Process
• Investigation:
• Witnesses
• Documents
• CCTV
• Any case to answer?
Disciplinary Process
• Invitation to Disciplinary Hearing:
• Accusations
• Supporting evidence
• Right to be accompanied?
• Possible outcome
Disciplinary Process
• Disciplinary Hearing:
• Who should hold it?
• Opportunity to explain
• Decision
Disciplinary Process
• Right of Appeal:
• Who should hold it?
• Opportunity to review
• Decision
• Statutory claim brought in Employment
Tribunal
• Employees only – not workers or self-
employed
• Most claims need 103 weeks’ service
• Not really about fairness!
• What is wrongful dismissal?
• What is unfair constructive dismissal?
What is unfair dismissal?
• Capability
• Conduct
• Redundancy
• Breach of a statutory enactment
• “Some other substantial reason”
5 potentially fair reasons
Unfair Dismissal
• Early conciliation
• Time limits
• ET1
• ET3
Unfair Dismissal
• Witnesses
• Documents
• Time frame
Unfair Dismissal
• The Hearing
• Burden of proof
• The decision
Grievances
• Unhappy employees
• Investigate
• Hearing
• Right to be accompanied
• Appeal
Key principles of
discrimination law
Protected characteristics
• Race
• Gender
• Disability
• Age
• Marital/civil partnership status
• Sexual orientation
• Religious or philosophical belief
• Gender reassignment
• Pregnancy
Four types of discrimination
Direct discrimination:
Because of a protected characteristic, A
treats B less favourably than A treats or
would treat others.
Four types of discrimination
Indirect discrimination:
Acts/decisions/policies which puts (or
would put) those with a protected
characteristic at a particular
disadvantage compared to others.
Four types of discrimination
Harassment:
A engages in unwanted conduct related to a
relevant protected characteristic which has
the purpose or effect of either:
• Violating B's dignity, or
• Creating an intimidating, hostile, degrading,
humiliating or offensive environment for B.
Four types of discrimination
Victimisation:
Where a person (A) subjects another person
(B) to a detriment because either:
• B has done a protected act; or
• A believes that B has done, or may do, a
protected act.
Harassment Example
• Harassment
Physically assisting wheelchair user into
premises against her wishes
Victimisation Example
•Victimisation
Gay employee raises grievance about
employer’s derogatory remarks about his
sexuality, consequently does not get
promised pay rise
Not Discrimination
A job centre told her
she couldn’t advertise
for 'reliable’
and 'hard-working'
applicants because it
could be offensive to
unreliable people.
Reasonable adjustments
• Need to have a disability
• Remove/minimise disadvantages
• Policies and practices that do not
disadvantage the disabled
What is reasonable?
• Varies for each case
• Practicality of adjustment
• Resources / size of employer
• Effectiveness in overcoming disadvantage
• Impact on the health and safety of others
Potential adjustments
• Physical features
• Hours
• Redeployment
Who is protected?
• Employees and job applicants
• Applicants
• Former employees
• Contract workers and agency workers
• Partners
Who is liable?
• Employer’s liability for acts of employees
• Personal liability of employees
• Reasonable steps defence
Lawful Discrimination
Exceptions
• Genuine occupational requirements
• Positive action
Potential discrimination
related areas
• Advertising
• Promotions
• References
Any Questions?
Don’t forget to subscribe to
our free, plain English
ebulletins:
www.pureemploymentlaw.co.uk

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Introduction to Employment Law for Sussex CIPD - 10 October 2019

  • 2. About today’s session • Back to basics • Introduction/refresher
  • 3. Today’s topics • Jargon busting! • Where does employment law come from? • Contracts of employment • What is an employee? • Disciplinary and grievance issues • Key principles of discrimination law
  • 15. Where do UK employment rights come from? 1. Statute and regulations 2. Contracts of employment 3. Case law
  • 16. 1. Statute and regulations • Acts of Parliament • Statutory Instruments • EU law
  • 17. Which UK employment laws do you think come from the EU? • Paid holiday? • Minimum Wage? • Sick Pay? • TUPE?
  • 18. Which UK employment laws do you think come from the EU? • Statutory minimum notice? • Redundancy rights? • Unfair Dismissal? • Discrimination?
  • 19. What might Brexit mean for employment law? • Trade agreements may require a certain level of employment rights • Standing of European Court decisions • ECHR
  • 20. 2. Contracts of Employment • Terms required by law (including section 1 statement) • Terms agreed between the parties • Unwritten or implied terms
  • 21. Section 1 statements (1) • Names of the parties • Job title/description of work • Place of work • Start date and continuous service date • Pay amount and interval • Hours of work • Holiday entitlement These have to be included in the statement
  • 22. Section 1 statements (2) • Terms about working abroad for more than one month • Terms about the length of temporary or fixed term work • Details of any collective agreements in place These have to be included in the statement
  • 23. Section 1 statements (3) These can be provided in a separate accessible document: • Terms relating to sickness absence and sick pay • Notice periods for either party • Information about disciplinary and grievance procedures • Terms relating to the pension scheme
  • 24. When should the section 1 statement be provided? (a) On or before the day employment starts? (b) Within two months of employment starting? (c) After one year’s service?
  • 25. Section 1 statements Forthcoming changes for new starters from 6 April 2020 • Workers as well as employees • Day 1 right • Additional points to cover e.g. probation • More has to go in the statement
  • 26. Section 1 statements Forthcoming changes from 6 April 2020 For more information, please see https://www.pureemploymentlaw.co.uk/some -particular-changes/
  • 27. Other clauses employers may wish to include • Deductions clause • Suspension clause • Right to make reasonable changes • Confidentiality and data protection • Other terms relevant to your workplace
  • 28. Unwritten or implied terms • Equal pay clause • Health and safety • “Duty of mutual trust and confidence”
  • 29. 3. Case law • Decided cases determine legal principles • Judicial interpretation of legislation, regulations or contractual terms • The court hierarchy and how cases become binding
  • 30. Case law - examples • British Home Stores v Burchell (1978) • Bear Scotland v Fulton (2015)
  • 31. How are UK employment rights enforced? • Sometimes by government bodies (e.g. HMRC, HSE) • Sometimes by collective action • Mostly by enforcement by individuals (grievances, claims to an Employment Tribunal, claims in the civil courts)
  • 32. What is an employee? “An individual who has entered into or works under (or, where the employment has ceased, worked under) a contract of employment".
  • 33. What is a contract of employment? “a contract of service or apprenticeship, whether express or implied, and (if it is express) whether oral or in writing".
  • 34. What does it mean to be self- employed or freelance? “working for oneself rather than for an employer.”
  • 35. What is a worker? An individual who has entered into or works under: • A contract of employment; or • Any other contract whereby the individual undertakes to do or perform personally any work or services for another party to the contract
  • 36. How is employment status decided? (1) •Tribunals and courts will look at a range of factors •Consider the reality of the situation, not just the documentation •Tax position isn’t always the same
  • 37. How is employment status decided? (2) •Intention of the parties •Mutuality of obligation •Availability of benefits (holiday, sick pay) •Control •Integration •Personal service and substitution
  • 38. What are the main employee rights in the UK? • Contractual rights • Protection against unfair dismissal* • Whistleblower protection • TUPE rights • Right to a redundancy payment* • Family-friendly rights
  • 39. What are the main worker rights in the UK? • Protection against unlawful discrimination • National Minimum Wage • Working Time rights
  • 40. Disciplinary & Grievance Issues and Unfair Dismissal
  • 41. Disciplinary Issues • Misconduct • For example: • theft • fighting • refusing to obey instructions
  • 42. Disciplinary Process • Disciplinary Procedure • ACAS Code • Fairness
  • 43. Disciplinary Process • Investigate • Disciplinary Hearing • Appeal
  • 44. Disciplinary Process • Investigation: • Witnesses • Documents • CCTV • Any case to answer?
  • 45. Disciplinary Process • Invitation to Disciplinary Hearing: • Accusations • Supporting evidence • Right to be accompanied? • Possible outcome
  • 46. Disciplinary Process • Disciplinary Hearing: • Who should hold it? • Opportunity to explain • Decision
  • 47. Disciplinary Process • Right of Appeal: • Who should hold it? • Opportunity to review • Decision
  • 48. • Statutory claim brought in Employment Tribunal • Employees only – not workers or self- employed • Most claims need 103 weeks’ service • Not really about fairness! • What is wrongful dismissal? • What is unfair constructive dismissal? What is unfair dismissal?
  • 49. • Capability • Conduct • Redundancy • Breach of a statutory enactment • “Some other substantial reason” 5 potentially fair reasons
  • 50. Unfair Dismissal • Early conciliation • Time limits • ET1 • ET3
  • 51. Unfair Dismissal • Witnesses • Documents • Time frame
  • 52. Unfair Dismissal • The Hearing • Burden of proof • The decision
  • 53. Grievances • Unhappy employees • Investigate • Hearing • Right to be accompanied • Appeal
  • 55. Protected characteristics • Race • Gender • Disability • Age • Marital/civil partnership status • Sexual orientation • Religious or philosophical belief • Gender reassignment • Pregnancy
  • 56. Four types of discrimination Direct discrimination: Because of a protected characteristic, A treats B less favourably than A treats or would treat others.
  • 57. Four types of discrimination Indirect discrimination: Acts/decisions/policies which puts (or would put) those with a protected characteristic at a particular disadvantage compared to others.
  • 58. Four types of discrimination Harassment: A engages in unwanted conduct related to a relevant protected characteristic which has the purpose or effect of either: • Violating B's dignity, or • Creating an intimidating, hostile, degrading, humiliating or offensive environment for B.
  • 59. Four types of discrimination Victimisation: Where a person (A) subjects another person (B) to a detriment because either: • B has done a protected act; or • A believes that B has done, or may do, a protected act.
  • 60. Harassment Example • Harassment Physically assisting wheelchair user into premises against her wishes
  • 61. Victimisation Example •Victimisation Gay employee raises grievance about employer’s derogatory remarks about his sexuality, consequently does not get promised pay rise
  • 62. Not Discrimination A job centre told her she couldn’t advertise for 'reliable’ and 'hard-working' applicants because it could be offensive to unreliable people.
  • 63. Reasonable adjustments • Need to have a disability • Remove/minimise disadvantages • Policies and practices that do not disadvantage the disabled
  • 64. What is reasonable? • Varies for each case • Practicality of adjustment • Resources / size of employer • Effectiveness in overcoming disadvantage • Impact on the health and safety of others
  • 65. Potential adjustments • Physical features • Hours • Redeployment
  • 66. Who is protected? • Employees and job applicants • Applicants • Former employees • Contract workers and agency workers • Partners
  • 67. Who is liable? • Employer’s liability for acts of employees • Personal liability of employees • Reasonable steps defence
  • 68. Lawful Discrimination Exceptions • Genuine occupational requirements • Positive action
  • 69. Potential discrimination related areas • Advertising • Promotions • References
  • 71. Don’t forget to subscribe to our free, plain English ebulletins: www.pureemploymentlaw.co.uk