New
Fit Note unveiled
A
new medical 'fit note', which will be available
in paper or electronic format, is due to replace
the current 'sick note'. It is intended to
enable people to get the best advice about
staying in work and, if they can't work,
indicate what their employer can do to help them
return to work. Developed with the support of
healthcare professionals, employer
representatives and trade unions, the new fit
notes are due to roll out across Great Britain
in the spring of 2010.
The
introduction of the fit note forms part of the
Government's response to Dame Carol Black's
report into the health of Britain's working age
population, published in March 2008. The
Government has started a 12-week consultation, which
will end on 19 August 2009, on draft regulations
which will implement the proposed changes. These
include changing the format of the medical
statement to allow doctors to record whether a
patient is fit or not fit for work and include a
new option to allow a doctor to indicate where
someone "may be fit for some work now".
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Redundancy pay rise
– impact assessment published
The
Department for Business, Enterprise and
Regulatory Reform (BERR) has published a final
impact assessment
which indicates that the statutory weekly limit
for statutory redundancy pay and other
compensation payments (including the basic award
for unfair dismissal) will increase from £350 to
£380 on 1 October 2009. The relevant statutory
instrument (yet to be published) remains subject
to approval by Parliament.
The
impact assessment states that the Government has
considered a range of options, including doing
nothing and raising the weekly limit to £450
(the current average earnings). The preferred
option outlined in the impact assessment is to
raise the weekly limit for statutory redundancy
pay and other compensation payments from £350 to
£380 and suspend the annual increase in February
2010, so that the weekly limit will remain
unchanged until February 2011. This was deemed
to strike the right balance between helping
individuals who are made redundant without
placing undue burdens on business.
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Failure
to pay tribunal award may amount to
victimisation
The
Court of Appeal has confirmed that a former
employee can proceed with a victimisation claim
against a former employer for its failure to pay
a tribunal award.
In
Rank Nemo (DS) Ltd and others v
Coutinho, Coutinho was made redundant by
Vision Information Services (UK) Ltd in 2004.
Later that year, the undertaking in which he had
been employed was transferred to RN Ltd. In
2006, he won claims of automatic unfair
dismissal and race discrimination in relation to
his redundancy and was awarded compensation.
Liability for the award passed to RN Ltd by
virtue of the Transfer of Undertakings
(Protection of Employment) Regulations 2006.
Despite obtaining a county court order, Coutinho
did not receive any money. He subsequently
claimed that RN Ltd's failure to pay the award
was an act of victimisation contrary to the Race
Relations Act 1976. The tribunal considered that
this was a question of enforcement which it had
no power to interfere with. The matter reached
the Court of Appeal.
The
Court of Appeal confirmed that the tribunal did
have jurisdiction to accept Coutinho's claim.
Although RN Ltd argued that the claim should
fail on the ground that the tribunal has no
power to enforce an unpaid award, the Court
rejected this argument. The action was not
brought to enforce the award. The Court also
noted that the right not to be victimised for
doing a protected act was not excluded by the
legislation just because the employee is also a
judgment creditor with rights to invoke
enforcement procedures. It rejected the
proposition that Coutinho, as a judgment
creditor, had severed all possible links with
his past employment and that he has lost his
statutory protection from victimisation. RN
Ltd's failure to pay the judgment debt was only
one ingredient of Coutinho's right of action.
The action could, in principle, continue even if
the debt was paid.
The
case will now continue to a full hearing where
the tribunal will investigate the facts to
establish whether there is a sufficiently
substantial close or proximate connection
between RN Ltd's failure to pay the award and
Coutinho's expired employment to satisfy the
requirements of a post-termination victimisation
claim. Subject to considerations of double
recovery, the Court noted that there was no
reason in principle why Coutinho should not be
able both to enforce the tribunal award and
recover damages for victimisation.
It
is also worth noting, as reported in a previous
update, that since 1 April 2009, employers
who fail to pay tribunal awards will now be
"named and shamed" on the Register of Judgments,
Orders and Fines once enforcement proceedings
are brought against them in a county
court.
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Paternity leave extension plans on hold
It
has been reported that plans to extend paternity
leave, which would allow fathers to take six
months paternity leave and enable parents to
share leave, have been put on hold. Reports
state that the costs and benefits of the
proposals are being reviewed in light of the
current economic climate.
The reports have
been welcomed by the Chartered Institute of
Personnel and Development (CIPD). Mike Emmott,
Employee Relations Adviser at the CIPD,
said:
"While
pleased that this particular proposal has been
shelved, we do not believe it is sustainable for
this issue to be kicked into the long grass.
There is certain to be growing pressure for the
issue of paternity leave to be addressed. The
recession-inspired shelving of the existing
proposals must be used by politicians and
business leaders to come up with workable
proposals that balance competing demands in a
way that works for business."
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Cut
in pay, hours and benefits
Tackling stress
levels as the recession bites