On the same day as the Bill was published, the Government also released a policy document called 'Next Steps to Make Work Pay', which partly explained the content of the Bill but also reiterated the Government's commitment to implement the pledges made in the 'Make Work Pay' document. Many of the pledges will require substantial consultation before they can move forward, and the timeline for some of these measures is unclear. Some will be implemented by way of statute or secondary legislation; others may be brought about by Codes of Practice. However, employers should watch out for the following:
Equality (Race and Disability) Bill
This makes a number of changes to current issues relating to race and disability. It will establish a regulatory and enforcement unit, but also promises to introduce mandatory ethnicity and disability pay gap reporting, in addition to gender pay gap reporting. This could be extraordinarily difficult to manage: it remains to be seen how granular the detail of the ethnic pay gap report needs to be – whether it is based on a "white British" / non "white British" distinction, or whether an employer needs to separate out different ethnicities. This could be particularly challenging for those relatively small employers based in parts of the country with low levels of ethnic diversity, as preserving the anonymity of their worker's pay levels may be challenging. When the idea of ethnicity pay reporting was first proposed many years ago, there was some discussion as to whether to increase the size threshold of employers who needed to report. However, this appears to have been set at 250, as for gender pay gap reporting.
Similar challenges arise with regard to disability pay gap reporting. In addition, many disabilities are not visible, and assessing whether an individual meets the legal test of disability under the Equality Act 2010 is a nuanced process, often requiring expert support and advice from both medical and legal professionals. It remains to be seen what steps, if any, employers will need to take to flush out whether their employees identify as disabled when compiling their report.
As well as closing the loophole on businesses who seek to avoid equal pay claims by outsourcing some of their workforce to third parties, the Equality (Race and Disability) Bill will contain a more fundamental and wide ranging change: the introduction of enhanced ethnic and disability equal pay rights. The current system of equal pay is, to most observers and practitioners, broken. It therefore seems surprising that the Government appears to be proposing to use the current legal model used to regulate the law relating to equal pay on the grounds of sex as a base for arguably the even more complicated areas of ethnicity and disability.
Other measures
These include:
- the extension of time limits in the Employment Tribunal – possibly allowing claimants to start the process of bringing claims within six months of the incident complained of (rather than the current three months);
- the right to 'switch off’ (probably via a Code of Practice), preventing employers contacting workers after hours (possibly 6pm) with non-urgent requests or enquiries;
- limiting potentially invasive surveillance for those working from home, to protect the privacy of workers;
- the Low Pay Commission has been tasked with setting a minimum wage that reflects the cost of living (thereby probably leading to a significant increase), and the Government has confirmed it intends to remove the current age bands that mean that teenagers and young adults receive a lower rate than those over 21;
- making it harder for employers to operate unpaid internships – a practice that is already quite highly regulated;
- bringing in some enhancements to carers' leave – presumably by introducing the right to be paid while taking the leave;
- reforming family friendly leave, such as maternity, paternity, adoption and shared parental leave;
- making it easier for employees to bring collective grievances against their employer and using the services of Acas in resolving those grievances;
- introducing the right for workers to be paid the national minimum wage on travel time;
- lifting the cap on protective awards in redundancy situations, particularly in circumstances where the employer has behaved particularly egregiously. It is not clear whether 'lifting the cap' means that the Government plans to abolish it altogether, or simply to increase it;
- reforming TUPE – it is unclear what the Government is intending in relation to this, but commentators are hoping for clarity as to whether workers (rather than just employees) will be in scope to transfer when a business is sold or a service provision change occurs, and what happens when a business is fragmented on transfer;
- more digitisation in the Employment Tribunals; and
- a reform of worker status, removing the distinction between 'workers' and 'employees'.
Of the above list, the last two are particularly significant. The Government's ambitious plans will create additional rights and bolster existing entitlements for workers. However, the means by which people are able to enforce those rights are severely limited by the pressures faced by the Employment Tribunals and the Court system in general. When claimants are sometimes waiting for more than two years before their claims can be heard, a priority must be to restore access to justice in order to allow justice to exist at all. Digitising the Employment Tribunal service may help to clear the backlog of cases, but many are not convinced: recent 'improvements' to the IT in use by the Tribunal have proved unsatisfactory. More will almost certainly need to be done.
The other significant plan is the reform of worker status. This is phenomenally complicated and some have queried whether this should instead have been the Government's first priority: employers will struggle to assimilate the raft of new changes that have already been proposed without having to then apply these to members of staff who previously have not been covered by the regulations. For instance, seeking to apply unfair dismissal protection for a casual worker who has only come in for a few hours' work will be administratively unworkable and may lead to a further reassessment of the applicable legislation, relatively shortly after the changes described above have been implemented. This could lead to considerable uncertainty and confusion for employers and employees alike.