Close Menu
  • News
  • Home
  • In Profile
  • Finance
  • Legal
  • Technology
  • Events
  • Features
  • Well Being
  • Marketing
  • HR & Recruitment
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Events Calendar
  • Business Wall
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • 0843 289 4634
X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube
Trending
  • Developing an AI use policy
  • 3 learnings for SMEs from Climb24, the UK’s festival of innovation
  • Protect your start-up with a simplified shareholders’ agreement
  • Employment Expert Warns of TikTok Career Trends’ Negative Impact: Are Workplaces Falling Short?
  • Simply Asset Finance secures £120m loan facility from Bank of America
  • Campers acknowledges the impact of the North West adoption programme
  • Empowering ESMBs with Cutting-Edge Solutions: An Interview with Giovanni Crispino, Head of EMEA ESMB at Salesforce
  • Louise Hunt Skelley Ply And Samanta Bullock Launch A New Era Of Disability Advocacy
X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube
SME Today
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Events Calendar
  • Business Wall
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • 0843 289 4634
  • News
  • Home
  • In Profile
  • Finance
  • Legal
  • Technology
  • Events
  • Features
  • Wellbeing
  • Marketing
  • HR & Recruitment
SME Today
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Events Calendar
  • Business Wall
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • 0843 289 4634
You are at:Home»Legal»Changes to employment law – what do they mean for your business?
employment law

Changes to employment law – what do they mean for your business?

0
Posted By sme-admin on November 7, 2022 Features, Legal

Gita Patel, an employment solicitor at SA Law, discusses Rishi Sunak’s plans for employment rights.

These are uncertain times for UK businesses. Just last month, newly elected Prime Minister Liz Truss promised sweeping employment law reforms, including a “red tape bonfire” of EU regulation. But now that Rishi Sunak has taken over, do employers still need to prepare for this?

The answer is: yes, as the Brexit Freedoms Bill is still being pushed through – meaning that basically all EU-derived employment laws are going out the window. But what exactly will these proposed reforms entail, and how will this impact small businesses?

The bill aims to scrap all EU-retained law by the end of 2023, which includes the Working Time Regulations 1998 (WTR), the Transfer of Undertaking (Protection of Employment) Regulations 2006 (TUPE) and the Agency Workers Regulations 2010.

Despite the name, the WTR cover more than just the ’48-hour work week’ and mandate a range of rights such as:

  • Rest break entitlement during shifts of 6+ hours;
  • Uninterrupted rest periods of 11 hours each day and 24 hours each week; and
  • 4 weeks’ annual leave (topped up to 5.6 weeks’ through separate legislation).

Although the proposal means that the WTR and the rights that go with it could be scrapped, there is likely to be opposition. Any decision to overturn important employment rights when the government has previously promised to strengthen them, is unlikely to be supported by many.

We are seeing an increasing number of employers offering their staff more rather than less, such as hybrid working opportunities or allowing employees to work compressed hours. Employers who implement any proposed reform which significantly curtails employees’ rights may see employees leaving their business to go work for a competitor offering better employee protections and benefits.

Instead, we expect that the government will make more sensible changes in areas such as rules around holiday pay given that these have been the subject of extensive litigation in recent years. Reforms in these areas are likely to be welcomed by businesses.  However, given the complexity of this area, this is unlikely to be an easy task for the government.

TUPE

The TUPE Regulations could also potentially be affected. The latest version of TUPE was introduced in 2006 with the aim of providing rights to employees if the business they work for transfers to a third party.

Despite the government promising to overhaul EU retained law, it is unlikely to remove all the protections TUPE provides, as it is an important legal framework for the transfer of staff.  Businesses are in the main familiar with these provisions despite the current rules being complex and technical.

Instead, the government may seek to make the rules more business friendly by extending consultation timings or allowing contractual changes to take place post-transfer.

What about trade unions?

Strike action has increased over the years and is likely to continue to do so particularly given the cost-of-living crisis.

Earlier this year, the government put in place new laws to reduce the impact of strikes. The new laws allow businesses to hire agency workers to plug staffing gaps caused by strike action and increased the maximum damages limit in unlawful industrial action.

Truss wanted to make it much harder for strikes to take place – and Sunak, it appears, intends to do the same. Truss’ proposals to make industrial action more difficult included:

  • increasing the minimum notice period for strike actions by two weeks to four weeks;
  • introducing a mandatory six-month ‘cooling off period’ after each strike; and
  • increasing the ballot threshold for the decision to strike from 40% to 50%.

If these changes still go ahead under Sunak’s government, they will allow businesses to better prepare for a strike due to the extra time, will prevent unions from striking at will within the six-month period after a ballot, and will make it more difficult for a strike to take place due to the 10% increase in the ballot threshold.

In recent months, rail workers, Royal Mail employees, and teachers have all been involved in industrial action, with some happening on the same day. Such reform, therefore, would be positive news for many businesses, as it would result in strike action causing virtually no disruption, which is, of course, the entire purpose of a strike.  Strikes are generally unpopular with the public, so we consider this to be an area that the government might maintain a focus on in order to reduce the power of the unions.

Future

With so much uncertainly, employers should watch this space and be prepared for further developments in the coming months.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

3 learnings for SMEs from Climb24, the UK’s festival of innovation

Protect your start-up with a simplified shareholders’ agreement

How salespeople can adapt and thrive in a rapidly changing landscape.

Comments are closed.

Follow SME Today on Linkedin and share all the topics you find interesting

The Newsletter

Join our mailing list to receive the latest news and updates from SMEToday
Read our Latest Newsletter:

Sign Up
Events Calendar
    • Marketing
    June 27, 2024

    Empowering ESMBs with Cutting-Edge Solutions: An Interview with Giovanni Crispino, Head of EMEA ESMB at Salesforce

    June 24, 2024

    Why Human Storytelling is Vital for Every Startup Marketing Strategy

    • Finance
    June 28, 2024

    Simply Asset Finance secures £120m loan facility from Bank of America

    June 19, 2024

    Do You Need To Insure Your Side Hustle?

    • Health & Safety
    April 15, 2024

    Careless Driving Habits Common Practice Among Motorists

    March 20, 2024

    Cleaning stairs, climbing ladders and changing light bulbs: which of these activities are allowed under health and safety rules?

    The Great British Expos 2024
    The Great British Expo's
    • Events
    June 18, 2024

    Get the Most Out of Your Ideas with IP. BWR IP Seminar

    June 3, 2024

    Nicola Peake Launches Peakefest to Inspire and Rejuvenate Business Founders

    • Community
    June 24, 2024

    Festivals Unite to Launch National Green Events Code

    May 10, 2024

    Breast Cancer Consultant Dr Hugo De La Pena Has Raised More Than £10,000 For Cancer Research

    • Food & Drink
    May 24, 2024

    Devon distillery raises a glass to future growth with £100k funding deal

    May 13, 2024

    Sussex mum toasts success as small business grows

    • Books
    March 5, 2024

    No Silver Bullet: Bursting the bubble of the organisational quick fix

    January 12, 2024

    Top lessons all entrepreneurs can learn from the boy who survived the wild

    About

    SME Today is published by the same team who deliver The Great British Expos’. We have been organising various corporate events for the last 10 years, with a strong track record of producing well managed and attended business events across the UK.

    Join Our Mailing List

    Receive the latest news and updates from SMEToday.
    Read our Latest Newsletter:


    Sign Up
    X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
    Most Recent Posts
    July 2, 2024

    Developing an AI use policy

    July 2, 2024

    3 learnings for SMEs from Climb24, the UK’s festival of innovation

    July 1, 2024

    Protect your start-up with a simplified shareholders’ agreement

    June 28, 2024

    Employment Expert Warns of TikTok Career Trends’ Negative Impact: Are Workplaces Falling Short?

    June 28, 2024

    Simply Asset Finance secures £120m loan facility from Bank of America

    Categories
    • Books
    • Community
    • Education and Training
    • Environment
    • Events
    • Features
    • Finance
    • Food and Drink
    • Health & Safety
    • HR & Recruitment
    • In Profile
    • Legal
    • Marketing
    • News
    • Property & Development
    • Sponsored Content
    • Technology
    • Transport & Tourism
    • Well Being
    Copyright © 2024 SME Today.
    • ABOUT SME TODAY: THE GO TO RESOURCE FOR UK BUSINESSES
    • Privacy
    • Contact

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.