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Employment UK
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April 07, 2025
Hospitality Exec Sues Law Firm Curwens For Botching Claim
The former director of a restaurant business has accused London law firm Curwens LLP of mishandling legal action brought against his fellow directors, alleging that his claim was marred by the firm's numerous errors and lack of competent advice.
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April 07, 2025
UK Parents Win Up To 12 Weeks' Paid Neonatal ICU Leave
Parents can now take up to 12 weeks off with pay on top of maternal or paternal leave if their babies are in neonatal intensive care, part of wide-reaching employment reforms that took effect on Sunday.
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April 04, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen Russian industrialist Oleg Deripaska target the intelligence arm of CT Group with a commercial fraud claim, Big Technologies sue its former CEO for allegedly concealing interests in several shareholders, and an investment firm tackle a professional negligence claim by Adidas. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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April 04, 2025
Court Denies Whistleblower Protections To Job Applicant
An applicant to an Isle of Wight Council job can't benefit from whistleblowing protections, the Court of Appeal said Thursday, because she didn't qualify as a worker and Parliament had expressly omitted people in her situation.
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April 04, 2025
Pension Protection Fund Says 'Time Is Right' To Review Rules
Britain's pensions compensation fund has said the "time is right" to review a range of key areas of its governing legislation, including how it sets its levy and rules determining how benefits for older pensioners rise.
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April 04, 2025
Extended Visa Checks Put Companies At Risk, Lawyers Warn
The government's plan to bring in right-to-work checks on self-employed gig economy workers is unlikely to trouble, say, Deliveroo and Uber Eats. But lawyers tell Law360 that they are concerned that the change will create confusion and legal uncertainty for smaller companies.
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April 04, 2025
TUI Pilot Wins Pension After Losing Forced Retirement Claim
An employment tribunal has ruled that a former TUI Airways pilot is entitled to almost £15,000 ($19,500) in pension contributions, despite tossing his claim for age discrimination and unfair dismissal the year before.
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April 04, 2025
Pension Members 'Afraid' Of Gov't Surplus Extraction Plans
Nearly all members of defined benefit pension schemes in Britain do not want politicians interfering in their operations, polling reveals, as policymakers move to relax retirement savings rules to allow schemes to invest billions of pounds tied up in surpluses.
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April 04, 2025
UK Gov't Urged To Tackle Pensions Advice Gap In Review
The government must use the next phase of its pension review to address why so few workers take advice on their retirement options, a trade body said Friday.
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April 04, 2025
UK Pension Funds Braced To Weather Bond Market Turmoil
British pension schemes are most likely sufficiently hedged to withstand the current volatility in bond markets, experts said, amid growing concern over a global trade war.
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April 04, 2025
Engineering Biz Challenges Ex-Director Over Shares Transfer
An engineering company has urged an appeals court to side with it in a shareholding dispute, saying a former director should be deemed to have transferred his shares to the company when he was fired as an employee, despite the fact that he stayed on as director.
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April 03, 2025
Lloyds Dodges Contractor's Blacklisting And Equal Pay Claim
An employment tribunal has dismissed a racial discrimination and blacklisting claim against Lloyds Bank and a consultancy recruitment agency, ruling that the contractor filed his claim too late and lacked evidence to support his allegations of secret hiring bans and unequal pay.
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April 03, 2025
Staley Told No 'Deliberate' Epstein Lies, Lawyer Says In Close
Former Barclays CEO Jes Staley was honest about the nature of his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, his lawyer reiterated in closing submissions at trial Thursday, arguing that Staley told no "direct or deliberate" lies.
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April 03, 2025
Antique Shop To Pay £56K For Mistreating Part-Timer
An employment tribunal has ordered an antiques shop to pay £56,022 ($73,816) to a sales assistant after it wrongly refused to give her employment rights because she was a part-time worker.
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April 03, 2025
Pensions Watchdog Issues £98K In Fines Over 'Value' Reports
The retirement savings watchdog said Thursday that it has fined small pension plans almost £98,000 ($129,000) for breaches of governance regulations introduced in 2021.
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April 03, 2025
UK Trustee Firms Face New Regulatory Oversight
Britain's retirement savings watchdog has unveiled plans formally to regulate professional trustee firms amid significant growth in the sector.
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April 03, 2025
GP Surgery Must Rehire Clinician Fired After Whistleblowing
A National Health Service doctors' surgery must reinstate a clinician who lost her job soon after she blew the whistle on the surgery for offering some services without authorization, a tribunal has ruled.
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April 02, 2025
ONS Staff Extend Action Over Office Attendance Policy
Union members at the Office for National Statistics said Wednesday they have again voted to strike over its workplace attendance policies, as the statistics body faces government scrutiny of its performance and organizational culture.
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April 02, 2025
Hospital Operator To Pay £54K For Firing Disabled Worker
An employment tribunal has ruled that U.K. hospital operator Circle Health must pay its former pathology coordinator over £54,000 ($70,000) after it found that her former employer sacked her without attempting to accommodate her postpartum health condition.
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April 02, 2025
Enablers In The Spotlight As First Al-Fayed Claims Emerge
Employers that allow sexual misconduct to go unpunished in the workplace are increasingly likely to be held liable, lawyers warn, as five women who worked for the late billionaire Mohamed Al-Fayed launch claims against his estate.
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April 02, 2025
Ex-Ryanair Pilot Fights 'Fiction' Of Contractor Status In Appeal
A former pilot for Ryanair told the Court of Appeal on Wednesday that his contractor status was a "fiction" as he fought efforts from the airline and a staffing company to overturn rulings that he is entitled to equal conditions with Ryanair's directly employed staff.
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April 02, 2025
Management Biz. Loses Costs Bid Over Consultant's Theft
An employment tribunal has refused to force a director to pay the £12,060 ($15,645) that a workforce management firm incurred in defending his claims of unfair dismissal, ruling he didn't sue vexatiously.
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April 02, 2025
Ankle Tag Maker Sues Sacked CEO Over Ties To Shareholders
A company which makes technology for monitoring people remotely has brought legal action against its ousted chief executive, alleging that she lied about her interest in the company's shareholders and stole funds from the business.
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April 02, 2025
FCA 'Thinking Radically' On Savings Welcome, LCP Says
The Financial Conduct Authority "thinking radically" about allowing savers to use accrued pension pots for house deposits is "very encouraging," Lane Clark & Peacock LLP has said.
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April 02, 2025
Gov't Told To Reform PPF On Pension Surplus Extraction Plan
The government must extend the safety net of the Pension Protection Fund if it wants retirement schemes to release up to £160 billion ($207 billion) in surpluses to the wider economy, a think tank warned Wednesday.
Expert Analysis
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ITV Scandal Offers Important Considerations On HR Policies
The recent resignation of former ITV host Phillip Schofield after admitting to an affair with a younger staff member raises questions on employers' duty of care and highlights the need for not only having the right internal policies in place but also understanding and applying them, says Hina Belitz at Excello Law.
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What The Italian Whistleblowing Decree Means For Employers
The new Italian whistleblowing decree, guidelines to which must be adopted by authorities this week, represents a major milestone in protecting employees by broadening employers' obligations, and it is essential that multinational companies with an interest in Italy verify their compliance with the more stringent requirements, say lawyers at Studio Legale Chiomenti.
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What TPR's Guidance On DEI Means For Pensions Industry
The Pension Regulator is one of the first regulators to issue guidance on equality, diversity and inclusion, and employers and trustees should incorporate its advice by developing policies and monitoring progress to ensure that improvements are made regularly, say lawyers at Linklaters.
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10 Tips On Drafting A Company Code Of Ethics
In light of a recent report that less than 50% of companies on the FTSE 250 and 350 indexes have a code of ethics, it is clear that more organizations should be informed of the reasons for having one, like reducing risk and solidifying commitment to integrity, and how to implement it, says Shiv Haria-Shah at Fieldfisher.
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Breaking Down Germany's New Whistleblower Protection Act
Germany recently passed a whistleblowing law, which will bring new obligations for companies, and businesses with more than 50 employees must now check whether they have adequate reporting lines in place and properly staffed functions to handle whistleblower reports, say Mark Zimmer and Katharina Humphrey at Gibson Dunn.
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UK Case Shows Risks Of Taking Shortcuts In Fund Payments
While the High Court recently reversed a decision in Floreat Investment Management v. Churchill, finding that investors routing funds into their own accounts was not dishonest, the case serves as a cautionary tale on the dangers of directing investment funds other than as contractually provided, say lawyers at Dechert.
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How The UK Employment Court Backlogs Jeopardize Justice
While employment tribunal case delays may not top the agenda of new Secretary of State for Justice Alex Chalk, recent data reveals deep and long-term issues, including a staggering half a million current or former employees waiting for their case to trudge forward in the queue, says Heather Wilmot at ARAG.
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A First Look At UK's Reform Approach To EU Employment Law
The U.K. government's recent proposal on EU employment laws is relatively modest, retaining the post-Brexit law in areas such as recording working hours and holiday pay calculations, and assuaging predictions of a bonfire of EU employment rights, say Sally Hulston and James Davies at Lewis Silkin.
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How The UK Noncompete Cap Proposal May Affect Employers
Following the U.K. government's plan to limit noncompete clauses to three months, employers will undoubtedly look at other options to prevent post-employment competition, such as use of garden leave, but this may keep employees out of the talent pool, say David Samuels and Tarun Tawakley at Lewis Silkin.
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Employers Should Welcome UK Guidance On Positive Action
Recent guidance from the U.K. government clarifies the often overlooked and misunderstood concept of positive action under the Equality Act 2010, and may help employers feel more confident in using permitted conduct to promote equality, say lawyers at Fieldfisher.
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Lessons For Businesses From The Raab Bullying Report
In light of the inquiry into workplace bullying that led to last month’s resignation of U.K. government minister Dominic Raab, businesses must ensure that they and their managers adhere to company policies, procedures and processes, and remain vigilant in stamping out and preventing such behaviors, says Suzy Blade at Setfords.
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What The Ethnicity Pay Gap Guidance Means For Employers
In light of the U.K. government's recent guidance on measuring ethnicity pay differences, which could become mandatory, employers should consider ethnicity pay gap reporting and the complexities unique to it, in order to support a truly diverse workforce, say Catherine Shepherd and Kath Sadler-Smith at Osborne Clarke.
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How The EU Pay Transparency Directive Will Affect Employers
The newly adopted EU Pay Transparency Directive aims to strengthen the principle of equal pay between men and women by way of mandatory gender pay gap reporting, and employers should prepare for the significant changes this will bring by closing any existing gaps and establishing a transparent compensation system, says Ulrike Conradi at Ogletree.
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3 Employee Protection Issues To Watch In UK Gov't
The recent U.K. harassment proposals, autism employment review and artificial intelligence white paper demonstrate that employee protection and well-being are high on the government's agenda, and could lead to changes in employers' support and hiring processes, say Catherine Shepherd and Kath Sadler-Smith at Osborne Clarke.
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Tips On Implementing Menopause Support Policies At Work
1 in 10 women have left a job due to menopausal symptoms, highlighting that employers must find ways to support and retain affected employees, especially amid the growing drive to boost the numbers of older people in the workforce and oft-cited war for talent, say Ellie Gelder and Kelly Thomson at RPC.