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Revised Statutory Payments |
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It's that time of year again. From 6 April 2011:
- Statutory Sick Pay (SSP) will increase from £79.15 to £81.60 per week.
- Lower Earnings Limit (LEL) will increase from £97 to £102 per week.
And from 3 April 2011:
- Statutory Maternity Pay (SMP), Statutory Paternity Pay (SPP), Statutory Adoption Pay (SAP) all increase from £124.88 to £128.73 per week (or 90% of weekly earnings if lower).
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Annual Compensation Limit Increase |
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The Employment Rights (Increase of Limits) Order 2010 has been published, and identifies compensation increases that will take place from 1 February 2011. Among these are:
Guarantee Payments up from £21.20 to £22.20
Compensatory Award for Unfair Dismissal up from £65,300 to £68,400
Maximum amount of “a week’s pay” for the purpose of calculating a redundancy payment or for various awards including the basic or additional award of compensation for unfair dismissal up from £380 to £400
Full Order |
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New Maternity/Paternity/Statutory Sick Pay Rates for April 2011 |
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In a written ministerial statement today Steve Webb (MP) for the Government said that the standard rates of statutory maternity, paternity and adoption pay will increase from £124.88 to £128.73 per week from 3 April 2011. Statutory sick pay will also increase from £79.15 to £81.60 per week from 6 April 2011.
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How long does a tribunal take? |
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I claim no credit for this table as I came accross it while doing some research. It's taken from Hansard on 9 November 2010 and the full entry can be found here. It makes for interesting reading.
The following table gives the overall average time taken, in minutes, for a hearing at an employment tribunal, and a jurisdictional average. This information is management information and is used for internal purposes only; it has not been validated and relies on manual data input.
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Read more...
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What's happening on 1 October 2010? |
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Equality Act Provisions we now know will come into force
We now know the following provisions will apply from 1 October 2010:
The basic framework of protection against direct and indirect discrimination, harassment and victimisation in services and public functions; premises; work; education; associations, and transport.
Changing the definition of gender reassignment, by removing the requirement for medical supervision.
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Read more...
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Can Britain's Got Talent be sued? |
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Many will have heard of (as opposed to just heard for which be thankful!) Emma Amelia Pearl Czikai who sang on Britain's Got Talent in May of 2009; not because of her singing but because she is suing the producers of the show for discrimination in an employment tribunal. She calls the show “backdoor modern slavery“, guilty of “modern-day barbarism” and acts of “atrocity” against wannabe stars.
What employment lawyers are waiting to see is whether Czikai is entitled to make that claim. To do so she needs to establish herself as an employee and if she fails to do so the tribunal will have no have jurisdiction to hear the claim. Czikai seems to be suggesting that the auditions were a recruitment process in which candidates competed for short-term employment contracts for a road show. As bizarre as this may seem there is a precedent for such a claim in France.
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Read more...
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