
National living wage
Employment Law, HR NewsFrom 1 April the new National Living Wage (NLW) is payable to workers aged 25 and over. The introductory rate is set at £7.20 an hour and is expected to rise to over £9 by 2020. BIS guidance on ‘Calculating the minimum wage’ has been updated…

Recent case law on monitoring, dismissal and references
HR NewsRecent case law on monitoring, dismissal and references
A Romanian case on Yahoo messaging at work prompts a flurry of press reports, constructive dismissal is tested in the EAT, and an adverse verbal reference leads to successful disability…

Landmark cases for HR in 2016
HR NewsLandmark cases for HR in 2016
The following cases are due to be considered by the UK courts and at a European level during 2016. They deal with current HR issues such as calculating holiday pay correctly, religious dress and discrimination at…

Prominent cases in 2015
HR NewsDiscrimination law has been growing in scope, while travel to work time, holiday pay, employee misdemeanours on social media, and collective consultation obligations have all featured in claims before courts and tribunals this year – and some…

April enforcement dates…
Employment Law
April enforcement dates, new legislation, and the latest case law from courts and tribunals
This month the shared parental leave rules reached the ‘expected week of childbirth’ trigger, the Small Business, Enterprise and Employment…

Spring employment law changes
Employment LawRegulations, statutory amendments, and case law continue to push forward developments in employment law
Compensation rates rise, first shared parental leave babies are born, and ‘vaping’ reaches the tribunal system
Tribunal awards
New tribunal…

Holiday pay back in the spotlight, collective redundancy consultation rules assessed, and statutory pay rates rise
Employment Law
Holiday pay back in the spotlight, collective redundancy consultation rules assessed, and statutory pay rates rise
The Lock case returns to a UK tribunal and the European advocate general decides on the meaning of ‘establishment’ in…

Politicians shouldn’t focus on regulation to make our labour market work better, says CIPD
Employment LawPoliticians shouldn’t focus on regulation to make our labour market work better, says CIPD
New report suggests that either more or less employment regulation is likely to have little impact on UK labour market outcomes
With less than 100…

‘Fit for work’ website and helpline goes ‘live’
Employment Law‘Fit for work’ website and helpline goes ‘live’, prohibition on forced subject access requests is delayed, and no appeal yet on holiday pay overtime case
Fit for work
Assessment and advice service aimed at speeding…

Appeal tribunal – Overtime & Holiday Pay Rules
Employment LawAppeal tribunal rules that non-guaranteed overtime should be included when calculating holiday pay
Employers given favourable interpretation on how far back claims can stretch but may see this overturned by higher courts
Compulsory overtime
In…
