 |
In this
update:
Holiday
rights for workers on long-term sick leave
The
European Court of Justice (ECJ) has recently
handed down its long-awaited decision on the
controversial issue of holiday rights for
workers on long-term sick leave.
In
Stringer and others v HMRC, together with
the joined case of Schultz-Hoff v Deutsche
Rentenversicherung Bund, the ECJ examined
the scope of the Working Time Directive and
confirmed a number of key points:
-
Workers
on sick leave do accrue annual leave during
their absence.
-
Whether
annual leave can be taken during a period of
sick leave, or should be carried over, is a
matter for national courts to
determine.
-
Where
workers have been on sick leave for the whole or
part of the leave year, the right to paid annual
leave is not extinguished at the end of the
leave year (as is the position under the Working
Time Regulations 1998). Workers must have the
opportunity to take the holiday at a later
date.
-
Workers
who have been on sick leave for the whole or
part of the leave year and have not been able to
take annual leave before their employment is
terminated are entitled to a payment in lieu of
any outstanding statutory holiday entitlement.
This payment must be calculated at the normal
rate of pay (i.e. so that workers are put in a
position which is comparable to the position
they would have been in had they exercised the
right during the employment relationship). The
Working Time Regulations appear to give a
greater degree of flexibility in terms of
calculation.
The
Stringer case will now return to the
House of Lords. They will have to, amongst other
issues, decide whether a worker should be
allowed to take annual leave during sick leave
and also consider amending the Working Time
Regulations to allow holiday to be carried
forward.
The potential cost
implications of this decision will not be
welcomed by employers, particularly in the
current economic climate. They will need to
revisit their sick leave policies and permit
workers either to take annual leave during sick
leave or carry it over to the following leave
year (or pay them in lieu). The decision is
likely to lead to many employers terminating the
employment of those on sick leave far earlier
than they might otherwise have done. However,
although this might avoid the costly accrual of
annual leave, it may expose employers to claims
of unfair dismissal and disability
discrimination.
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When is an
employer exempt from the duty to make reasonable
adjustments?
The Employment Appeal Tribunal
(EAT) has confirmed that there are four key
elements when considering whether an employer is
exempt from the duty to make reasonable
adjustments under the Disability Discrimination
Act 1995.
In Eastern and Coastal Kent
PCT v Grey, the EAT noted that in order to
decide whether an employer is exempt from this
duty, each of the following elements should be
satisfied:
-
the employer does not know
that the disabled person has a
disability;
-
the employer does not know
that the disabled person is likely to be at a
substantial disadvantage compared with persons
who are not disabled;
-
the employer could not
reasonably be expected to know that the disabled
person has a disability; and
-
the employer could not
reasonably be expected to know that the disabled
person is likely to be placed at a substantial
disadvantage in comparison with persons who are
not disabled.
The EAT emphasised that the
four elements are cumulative, not alternative,
requirements. The Employment Tribunal had made
an error in this case when it held that the
employer's knowledge of the applicant's
disability (dyslexia) thereby constituted
knowledge that she was likely to be placed at a
substantial disadvantage in comparison with
people who did not have dyslexia. The case will
be returned to a fresh Tribunal to consider the
four requirements.
Back to the top
Compensation
rates on the up from 1 February
Compensation limits for a variety of
tribunal awards and other statutory payments are
due to increase from 1 February. The key changes
are listed below:
-
Maximum
basic award for unfair dismissal/statutory
redundancy payment: increasing from £9,900 to
£10,500
-
Maximum
compensatory award for unfair dismissal:
increasing from £63,000 to £66,200
-
Maximum limit on a week's pay:
increasing from £330 to
£350
Back to the top
Deadline
extended for decision on national minimum
wage
The Low
Pay Commission will now report its
recommendations for this year's national minimum
wage by 1 May 2009, after being granted a three
month extension by the Secretary of State for
Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform
(BERR).
As the
Low Pay Commission bases its recommendations on
research, evidence and analysis of economic
data, the extension will provide an extra two
months data, including the Bank of England's
next Inflation Report, employee jobs figures for
December 2008, GDP figures for the fourth
quarter of 2008 and updates on average earnings.
The extension is not expected
to affect the planned implementation date of 1
October 2009 for the new national minimum wage
rates.
Back to the top
Disability
targets for public sector
employers
The
Government has published a new White Paper
entitled "New Opportunities", addressing a
number of issues relating to social mobility,
including disability.
The White
Paper states that the public sector will need to
lead by example in its recruitment of those with
moderate to severe learning disabilities and
severe mental health conditions. The Department
of Health is leading work to help the NHS employ
more people from these groups, and the Civil
Service will modify its recruitment practices to
do the same.
The Government will publish
its broader mental health and employment
strategy in the Spring.
Back to the top
Nearly half
of employers planning cutbacks
Staff cutbacks are due to be
broader and deeper in the UK than those made
last year, according to reports of a survey of
HR decision makers by recruiter
Randstad.
Almost half (46%) of the
public and private organisations surveyed said
they plan to make cutbacks in the next few
months, compared to 38% who made headcount
reductions between the summer and mid-November
last year. The proportion of organisations
planning reductions that expect to cut more than
10% of their employees is due to double to 22%
and 55% of the organisations with more than
10,000 employees expect to make reductions in
the next few months.
Back to the
top
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