Bridge HR articles
19 Mar Changes To Employment Law in 2024: An Overview For Employers
The specialist Employment Law Solicitors at BRIDGE composed this table to provide an overview of the changes to law due to come into effect in 2024.
The Law And What It Means |
When It Will Come Into Effect |
The Employment Rights Regulations 2023 A new Holiday Pay regime. Guidance was published in January allowing rolled-up holiday pay, defining workers to qualify for that, and setting out carryover rules and more. TUPE - changes to the minimum threshold required for individual as opposed to collective consultation. Businesses with:
…….can avoid collective consultation. |
Various between Jan to April 2024 |
The Protection from Redundancy (Pregnancy & Family Leave) Act 2023. Providing more protection from those returning from maternity/adoption/shared parental leave. |
6 April 2024 |
Carers Leave Act 2023 Rights, from day one, to a week’s unpaid leave per annum for employees caring for dependents who have long-term care needs. |
6 April 2024 |
Employment Relations Act 2023 Right to request flexible working from day one. Employees will be able to make two requests a year. Employees will no longer be required to explain the impact of the changes. Employers will need to make decisions within two months. |
6 April 2024 |
Workers (Predictable Terms & Conditions) Act 2023 New statutory regime for atypical workers (agency, fixed-term, zero-hours) to request more predictable terms of employment. |
September 2024 |
The Worker Protection Act 2023 New proactive duty on employers to take reasonable steps to prevent sexual harassment of their own employees. New statutory code of practice to help employers. Failure to fulfil the duty will attract an uplift in compensation in related cases. |
October 2024 |
Neonatal Care Act 2023 Provides parents of newborns who become hospitalised within the first 28 days of birth (for 7 days or more) the right to neonatal leave and pay for up to 12 weeks. |
Expected in April 2025 |
The specialist Employment Law Solicitors at BRIDGE will discuss all these changes in detail in a live webinar in April 2024. To be sent an invitation webinar, send an email which includes your name and organisation name to enquiries@bridgeehr.co.uk.
Posted by Lee Stephens
Lee Stephens heads up the team with the help of his co-Directors, Lee has practiced as a specialist employment Solicitor for almost 20 years now, formerly as a Partner with a leading UK law firm Lee Stephens advises SME’s to PLCs and he has a wealth of experience in successfully helping businesses with all aspects of employment law from the day to day to complex reorganizations, TUPE, senior executive removals and disputes through to Tribunal too. KEY AREAS OF WORK Lee has significant experience on:- Post termination and confidentiality breaches and injunctive relief work TUPE transfers and consultations; Senior executive disputes and removals Re-organizations and restructures in various sectors from healthcare, manufacturing to independent schools Agency and self-employed contracts and related claims Employment Tribunal defence and claims Lee has spoken on invitation on various aspects of employment law for various groups across the UK. Using his knowledge and experience Lee solves problems for clients and provides excellent service too. Lee also undertakes his own advocacy and delivers management training workshops and he has particular experience working with clients within the Private School, Veterinary, Care, Recruitment and Production, Logistics & Manufacturing sectors.