The Scotsman

Looking forward to life after furlough

Elizabeth Bremner hopes 2021 will bring more for employment lawyers to talk about than the CJRS and its ever-changing forms

- Elizabeth Bremner is an Employment Associate with Gillespie Macandrew

The global pandemic dominated most aspects of our lives in 2020 and employment law was no exception. The introducti­on of the Coronaviru­s Job Retention Scheme (CJRS) and its subsequent variations was undoubtedl­y the most talked about legislatio­n in employment law circles as ‘furlough’ became a regular household word.

While the CJRS will continue to be part of our lives until at least the end of April 2021( for now ), here is a summary of how 2020 finished up and what we canexpect in2021.

A Brexit agreement was finally reached and from 1 January 2021, new working arrangemen­ts for EU nationals began. Decisions of the European Court of Justice made prior to 1 January will continue to be binding on UK courts andtribu na ls.uk courts will not be bound by future decisions.

From 26 December, mainland Scotland was placed into level 4 restrictio­ns and on 5 January a new lockdown came into effect. While many businesses and employees returned to or commenced furlough arrangemen­ts, the Government continued to resist demands for the legal right to furlough for working parents while school closures are in place.

On 26 January 2021, and then on a monthly basis from February 2021, HMRC will publish the details of employers who have made claims under the CJRS for any month from December 2020 onwards.

A Private Members’ Bill seeking to require the Government to assess and report gap sin support during the pandemic is due to have its second reading on 29 January. Areas of concern include support for the newly selfemploy­ed who do not qualify for support under current rules and support for those who are self-isolating.

In December 2020, the UK Government launched a consultati­on seeking views on a proposal to extend the ban on exclusivit­y clauses beyond zero hours contracts, to contracts where the workers’ guaranteed weekly income is less than the Lower Earnings Limit, currently £120 a week. The consultati­on closes this month.

The second reading of The Pregnancy and Maternity( Redundancy Protection) bill 2019-21 is scheduled to take place in March. If passed, this Bill will see an extension of redundancy protection currently offered to women on maternity leave to staff on other types of parental leave, those who have returned from maternity leave within six months and those who have told their employer they are pregnant.

Changes to the IR35 rules are due to come into force on 6 April 2021, after having been delayed from April 2020.

On 1 april 2021, there will be increases to the National Minimum Wage.

The CJRS is due to end on 30 April. Employers should keep this date in mind, particular­ly if they are required to conduct any collective consultati­on in relation to large scale redundanci­es prior to the end of the CJRS.

Although no date has been confirmed, Parliament is set to hold a debate on mandatory ethnicity pay gap reporting. there is already mandatory gender pay gap reporting which, unless the Government announces otherwise, will be obligatory for employers with more than 250 employees again this year. 2019/2020 reports were not mandatory as a consequenc­e of the Covid-19 outbreak in March 2020.

It remains to be seen whether there will be an increase in dismissal cases relating to redundancy, furlough and furlough fraud, whether we will see any disputes relating to returns to workplaces and ongoing health and safety concerns, or even whether any cases emerge involving a requiremen­t to be vaccinated. There may be a number of issues that arise in respect of the vaccinatio­n and while the answer is still typically “no, you cannot require employees to get a vaccine”, we will continue to watch that space.

We hope 2021 will see a return to something closer to normality for businesses, with more to talk about than the CJRS and its ever-changing forms. In the short term, the UK’S departure from the EU should not cause any major changes to obligation­s and entitlemen­ts under current employment law.

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 ??  ?? There may be a number of issues that arise out of the vaccinatio­n of employess, predicts Gillespie Macandrew’s Eizabeth Bremner
There may be a number of issues that arise out of the vaccinatio­n of employess, predicts Gillespie Macandrew’s Eizabeth Bremner

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