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Employment UK
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May 14, 2025
Eversheds Sutherland Rehires Tax Expert From DLA Piper
Eversheds Sutherland is welcoming back a tax expert in the U.K. who spent the last seven years at DLA Piper, the firm announced.
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May 14, 2025
FSCS OK To Fire Manager For Exposing Himself On Video Call
An employment tribunal has rejected claims of unfair dismissal and race discrimination brought by a former digital production manager who was sacked by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme after exposing his genitals during a video call with external contractors.
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May 14, 2025
Ex-Bevan Brittan Pro Loses Appeal Over Antisemitic Tweets
A former lawyer with Bevan Brittan LLP failed to overturn on Wednesday a disciplinary tribunal's decision to strike him off after a London court found that he had over a long period repeatedly posted grossly offensive and antisemitic tweets.
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May 14, 2025
Black Manager Called 'Slave' By Colleague Wins £360K
A Black security manager whose colleague allegedly called him his "slave" has won £361,000 ($480,000) after a tribunal ruled that his employer forced him to quit by penalizing him for raising a grievance.
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May 14, 2025
Pension Bosses Warn Gov't Over Mansion House Mandate
The government is likely to fail in its bid to oblige pension funds to invest in the U.K. without ensuring that there is a sufficient pipeline of viable assets, a panel of experts warned MPs on Wednesday.
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May 14, 2025
Pensions Watchdog Raises Alarm Over Lack Of Guidance
The Pensions Regulator urged savings plans on Wednesday to issue guidance — or what it called a sat-nav — for people approaching retirement, after a report found that most workers cash out as soon as they can.
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May 13, 2025
Victims Call For Punishment Of Post Office Lawyers In Report
Victims of the Post Office Horizon IT scandal have called for lawyers to be held to account for their roles in facilitating one of the biggest miscarriages of justice in English legal history, a study by academics has revealed.
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May 13, 2025
SSB Law Staff Let Go Without Consultation Win 90 Days' Pay
A group of former staff from SSB Group Ltd. are entitled to receive compensation after the business made them redundant without carrying out a formal consultation process, an employment tribunal has ruled.
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May 13, 2025
Only Half Of Mid-Retirees Expect Pensions To Last, Aviva Says
Only half of pension savers aged 65 to 75 are confident they are on track to make their retirement savings last for the rest of their life, insurance giant Aviva has said, calling for a tool that would help retirees in the middle of retirement gauge their financial prospects.
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May 13, 2025
MoJ Cleaner Loses Appeal In Race Bias Equal Pay Claim
The Ministry of Justice has persuaded a London appeals tribunal to toss a race discrimination claim from a contract worker, proving that it is not liable for the complaint that she earns less than staff who are employed directly.
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May 13, 2025
Pension Providers Agree To Invest £25B In UK Projects
The government said Tuesday that it has struck a deal with the pensions industry that could result in £25 billion ($33 billion) of investment in U.K. infrastructure and clean energy projects.
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May 12, 2025
NBC Unit Negligent In Discipline Of Director, Judge Rules
NBC's Working Title caused its former managing director emotional distress through a flawed disciplinary procedure that failed to tell him that part of the sexual harassment complaints against him had been dismissed, a London court ruled Monday.
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May 12, 2025
Immigration Reform Plan Creates New Headaches For Employers
The government's proposals to overhaul the U.K. immigration system, which it set out on Monday, is poorly targeted and will make it harder and more expensive for organizations to employ foreign nationals, lawyers say.
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May 12, 2025
Wells Fargo Whistleblower Claims Redundancy Was A Sham
A former compliance officer at Wells Fargo asked the Employment Tribunal on Monday to order the bank to reinstate him, based on what he described as clear evidence that he was dismissed after he blew the whistle on alleged market abuse.
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May 12, 2025
DWF Partner Must Shell Out £33K For Payment Error
A disciplinary tribunal ordered a real estate partner at DWF LLP Monday to cough up more than £33,000 ($44,000) after he failed to check whether a contract had been met before he authorized a related payment from the law firm's client account.
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May 12, 2025
Gaming Biz Asks Court To Stop Ex-CEO Starting Role At Rival
A game developer has asked a London court to block its former chief executive from starting work at a rival company, arguing that he can't start until October 2026 under the terms of an investment agreement struck in 2023.
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May 12, 2025
LCP Forecasts Pensions Bill 'Crammed' With Policy Changes
The U.K. government is likely to use forthcoming pensions legislation to include a number of reforms that have been planned for years, a consultancy said Monday.
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May 12, 2025
UK To Raise Bar For Migrant Workers In Immigration Overhaul
The U.K. will require migrant workers to have graduate qualifications and better English language skills to gain sponsorship from employers and will narrow the exceptions made for occupations with shortages of workers under an overhaul of immigration policy announced Monday.
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May 12, 2025
Mayer Brown, Gowling Guide £120M Charity Pension Deal
Pensions insurer Rothesay said Monday that it has secured retirement savings plan liabilities worth £120 million ($160 million) for a scheme sponsored by charity and exam board AQA Education, in a deal guided by Mayer Brown LLP and Gowling WLG.
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May 09, 2025
Brokerage Risk Pro Loses Early Battle In Whistleblowing Case
An employment judge has rejected a compliance manager's bid for interim relief in a row with her former employer because he did not consider it likely that a tribunal will decide she was fired from the brokerage for making protected disclosures.
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May 09, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen a subsidiary of State Street Corp. sue British sports betting giant Entain, Manolete Partners and HSBC tackle action just weeks after signing a £17 million revolving credit facility agreement, and a commercial fraud claim launched by EFG Bank against Mirabaud & CIE.
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May 09, 2025
Dyson Loses Bid To Take Forced Labor Claim To UK Top Court
Dyson will fight claims in England that it did nothing about allegations of forced labor at Malaysian factories making components for the appliance manufacturer after the U.K.'s highest court refused it permission to challenge jurisdiction in the case any further.
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May 09, 2025
Exec Fired For Sharing Info In Divorce 'Proxy War' Loses Case
A former executive at a green energy company has lost his claim that he was unfairly fired for sharing information about the finances of the business's owner with the owner's wife during the couple's divorce.
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May 09, 2025
Gov't Announces Overhaul Of £25B Welsh Pension Fund
The U.K. government said Friday that the £25 billion ($33.2 billion) public sector Wales Pension Partnership fund will be overhauled to invest more in local communities, as part of a wider effort to tap the retirement savings industry for growth in Britain.
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May 08, 2025
Lords Urge Limits On 'Vague' Guaranteed Work Hour Plans
Conservative U.K. lawmakers sought on Thursday to narrow the scope of a proposed right to guaranteed hours of work and pay, arguing the measure would result in fewer offers of assured work as employers try to avoid tying themselves to unaffordable arrangements.
Expert Analysis
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Pension Scheme Ruling Elucidates Conversion Issues
In Newell Trustees v. Newell Rubbermaid UK Services, the High Court recently upheld a pension plan's conversion of final salary benefits to money purchase benefits, a welcome conclusion that considered several notable issues, such as how to construe pension deeds and when contracts made outside scheme rules can determine benefits, say Ian Gordon and Jamie Barnett at Gowling.
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Workplace Bullying Bill Implications For Employers And Execs
In light of the upcoming parliamentary debate on the Bullying and Respect at Work Bill, organizations should consider how a statutory definition of "workplace bullying" could increase employee complaints and how senior executives would be implicated if the bill becomes law, says Sophie Rothwell at Charles Russell.
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Amazon's €32M Data Protection Fine Acts As Employer Caveat
The recent decision by French data privacy regulator CNIL to fine Amazon for excessive surveillance of its workers opens up a raft of potential employment law, data protection and breach of contract issues, and offers a clear warning that companies need coherent justification for monitoring employees, say Robert Smedley and William Richmond-Coggan at Freeths.
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Employers Can 'Waive' Goodbye To Unknown Future Claims
The Scottish Court of Session's recent decision in Bathgate v. Technip Singapore, holding that unknown future claims in a qualifying settlement agreement can be waived, offers employers the possibility of achieving a clean break when terminating employees and provides practitioners with much-needed guidance on how future cases might be dealt with in court, says Natasha Nichols at Farrer & Co.
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Why Investment In Battery Supply Chain Is Important For UK
The recently published U.K. battery strategy sets out the government’s vision for a globally competitive battery supply chain, and it is critical that the U.K. secures investment to maximize opportunities for economic prosperity and net-zero transition, say lawyers at Watson Farley & Williams.
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Ruling Elucidates Tensions In Assessing Employee Disability
An employment tribunal's recent decision, maintaining that dermatitis was not a disability, but stress was, illustrates tensions in the interaction between statutory guidance on reasonable behavior modifications and Equality Act measures, says Suzanne Nulty at Weightmans.
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ECJ Ruling Triggers Reconsiderations Of Using AI In Hiring
A recent European Court of Justice ruling, clarifying that the General Data Protection Regulation could apply to decisions made by artificial intelligence, serves as a warning to employers, as the use of AI in recruitment may lead to more discrimination claims, say Dino Wilkinson and James Major at Clyde & Co.
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Supreme Court Ruling Is A Gift To Insolvency Practitioners
As corporate criminal liability is in sharp focus, the Supreme Court's recent decision in Palmer v. Northern Derbyshire Magistrates' Court that administrators are not company officers and should not be held liable under U.K. labor law is instructive in focusing on the substance and not merely the title of a person's role within a company, say lawyers at Greenberg Traurig.
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More Remains To Be Done To Achieve Gender Parity In Law
Significant strides have been made over the years to improve gender diversity in the legal profession, but the pay gap, lack of workplace flexibility and uneven child care burden remain significant challenges to progress, says Caroline Green at Browne Jacobson.
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Key Employer Lessons From 2023 Neurodiversity Case Uptick
The rise in neurodiversity cases in U.K. employment tribunals last year emphasizes the growing need for robust occupational health support, and that employers must acknowledge and adjust for individuals with disabilities in their workplaces to ensure compliance and foster a neurodiverse-friendly work environment, says Emily Cox at Womble Bond.
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Pension Industry Should Monitor Evolving ESG Issues In 2024
ESG thinking in the pensions industry has substantially evolved from focusing on climate change and net-zero to including nature and social considerations, and formalizing governance processes — illustrating that, in 2024, continually monitoring ESG issues sits squarely within trustee fiduciary duties, says Liz Ramsaran at DWF.
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5 Key UK Employment Law Developments From 2023
Key employment law issues in 2023 suggest that topics such as trade union recognition for collective bargaining in the gig economy, industrial action and menopause discrimination will be at the top of the agenda for employers and employees in 2024, say Merrill April and Anaya Price at CM Murray.
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Emerging Trends From A Busy Climate Litigation Year
Although many environmental cases brought in the U.K. were unsuccessful in 2023, they arguably clarified several relevant issues, such as climate rights, director and trustee obligations, and the extent to which claimants can hold the government accountable, illustrating what 2024 may have in store for climate litigation, say Simon Bishop and Patrick Kenny at Hausfeld.
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2024 Will Be A Busy Year For Generative AI And IP Issues
In light of increased litigation and policy proposals on balancing intellectual property rights and artificial intelligence innovation, 2024 is shaping up to be full of fast-moving developments that will have significant implications for AI tool developers, users of such tools and rights holders, say lawyers at Mishcon de Reya.
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How Businesses Can Prepare For Cyber Resilience In 2024
With cybersecurity breaches one of the biggest threats to U.K. businesses and as legislation tightens, organizations should prioritize their external security measures in 2024 and mitigate risks by being well-informed on internal data protection procedures, says Kevin Modiri at Nelsons.