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Posts Tagged ‘Health And Safety’

Managing employees business travel time

Q: Please could you give me some advice on our engineering staff claiming travel time to and from work?

As a company, we do allow our engineers to claim a certain amount of travelling time if they have to leave early to travel a long distance and the same if they are driving home. Unfortunately it is getting to the stage that some engineers are claiming travel time too frequently and I need it to control it.

What I propose to say to them is that they can only claim travel time if it is before 7am and after 5.30pm as this allows one hour either side of their contracted hours.

Please let me know your thoughts.

A: On the presumption that it is not unreasonable for an employee’s commuting time, to and from their normal place of work, to be around an hour,  it is quite a regular practice to exclude an hour on the outward and return journey when travelling on business away from the employees base, when that travel time is outside of their normal working hours.

This time is then recorded for the purposes of monitoring working hours under the Working Time Regulations. This is good business practice because if you needed to defend a claim following a health and safety incident or a road accident you would be able to provide appropriate employee records.

Payment for travel to and from a clients site is then down to each company to decide on its own policy. – If it is your normal policy to pay travelling time it would not be unreasonable to exclude the one hour “assumed commuting” time for each journey made outside normal working hours.

How is your policy worded? Do you need any help in drafting a revised policy to reflect the way you wish to cover payment for travelling time?

For answers to questions like this or any other employee related issues why not contact HR Management Support Ltd. for guidance and advice

Unfair Dismissal qualifying service changes

Unfair Dismissal qualifying service changes with effect from 6th April 2012:

The Government has confirmed that with effect from 6 April 2012 the qualifying period of service required for an employee to present a claim for unfair dismissal would be extended from 1 to 2 years.

This increase will provide employers with a greater opportunity to assess the suitability and performance of new employees and more flexibility in terminating their employment if they are deemed not to be meeting the required standards.

Currently, an employee can present a claim for ordinary unfair dismissal once they have 1 years’ continuous service.  However, there are certain exceptions to this when an employee with any length of service can present a claim for unfair dismissal.

For example:

  • where the individual has been dismissed for making a protected disclosure (i.e. whistle blowing)
  • in relation to trade union activities
  • health and safety reasons
  • pregnancy, maternity or other ‘Family Friendly’ rights.

It is expected that these exceptions will continue to apply and will no doubt become more important with the future increase in the qualification requirement.  There may also be an increase in allegations and claims relating to discrimination which also do not require any qualifying period.

Consolidating a number of previous acts the Employment Rights Act 1996 confirmed the qualifying period to be 2 years but at the time there was a legal challenge to the qualification period on the basis of indirect sex discrimination (R v Secretary of State Ex. P Seymour-Smith (2000) – a case which was based on a dismissal which took place in 1991.

Mrs Seymour-Smith claimed that the requirement for 2 years’ service to bring  a claim for unfair dismissal was indirectly discriminatory against women, and therefore incompatible with the Equal Treatment Directive, since less women were able to comply with the requirement (to have 2 years’ service) than men.

The House of Lords held that although the 2 year requirement did constitute indirect discrimination contrary to the Directive the Government had ‘objectively justified’ the requirement – to encourage recruitment by employers.

With effect from 1st June 1999 the 2  year qualifying period was reduced to the current 1 year requirement.  It remains to be seen whether another challenge to the 2 year requirement will be mounted once the increase takes effect in April and if so, whether the challenge would result in the same outcome as in the earlier Seymour-Smith case.

The increase to 2 years service to pursue a case of Unfair Dismissal will bring the position in line with the qualification requirement for a redundancy payment which, under the statutory scheme, requires an employee to have 2 years’ service.

Beeton Edwards LLP, Solicitors

I would just like to say what a superb and professional service we received from Tim Stell. We took on a new employee and Tim prepared the Terms and Conditions of Employment along with the Grievance Procedure, Health and Safety Policy, sickness and absence procedure all for an incredibly reasonable price. The work was carried out efficiently and promptly and saved us one big headache. I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend Tim’s services to anyone needing HR advice. We shall be using Tim for all our HR and employment law needs.

Dominic Beeton

Beeton Edwards LLP, Solicitors

www.beetonedwards.co.uk

Agency Workers Directive Delayed Until October 2011

Agency Workers Directive delayed until October 2011

The Government has announced that the introduction of the Agency Workers Directive (AWD) will now be delayed until October 2011.

The AWD will give agency workers the right to the same pay, holidays and basic conditions as permanent staff after 12 weeks in the role.

There had previously been speculation that the Government would enact the legislation before next year’s general election, as they had been called to do by the TUC; however, it now seems that concerns about imposing further regulation on businesses, many of which are struggling in the current economic climate, have caused the Government to re-think this timing and opt for the latest possible implementation date.

The second consultation on the draft regulations has also been launched. In addition to the entitlements referred to above, an agency worker will gain the following under the consultation’s proposals:

  • A right to information about vacancies for permanent posts within the organisation
  • Equal access to on-site facilities such as child care and transport
  • Improved health and safety protection for new and expectant mothers including the right to time off for ante-natal appointments
  • Despite this later implementation date, employers may wish to assess their use of temporary workers now and the increased cost of that use after the implementation of the directive.
  • The search is on for UK’s youngest innovators May 18, 2012
    The Intellectual Property Office (IPO) has launched this year’s Cracking Ideas competition and is inviting children across the country to use their creativity to invent a special space-themed gizmo or gadget. […]
  • LUXEMBOURG ARM OF TAX UMBRELLA SCHEME WOUND UP May 17, 2012
    A Luxembourg company Zigmund Mather S.a.r.l. which had sourced clients for the “Sunday Solutions Scheme”, a tax scheme for the self-employed, has been ordered into liquidation in the High Court on grounds of public interest following an investigation by Company Investigations of The Insolvency Service. […]
  • Leamington Spa online recruitment companies now offline May 17, 2012
    Four Leamington Spa-based recruitment companies, Online Recruiter Ltd, Financial Times Accounts Ltd, First Star Recruitment Limited and Working Solutions Websites Direct Limited, have been ordered into liquidation in the High Court on grounds of public interest following an investigation by Company Investigations of The Insolvency Service. […]
  • 21-month prison sentences for Manchester ‘debt solution’ company directors May 17, 2012
    Two company directors in Manchester, Benjamin Humphreys and Daniel Moore, have been sentenced to 21 months’ imprisonment each by Chester Crown Court for fraudulent trading at their debt solution company, Churchwood Corporate Services Limited (CCSL). […]