Back to Basics: Day One Rights Of An Employee

Published

24th October 2019

Let's get 'Back to Basics' and no I don't mean the song by Shapeshifters. I mean Employment Law stripped back in a series of short but informative blogs. I guess the most logical place to start would be by covering the primary rights that an employee will acquire within the first 28 weeks of their employment.

Perhaps the most important right for employers to remember is that employees have a right not to be discriminated against. In general terms, an employee can bring a discrimination claim on the basis of their age, disability, gender reassignment, marriage and civil partnership, race, religion or belief, sex, sexual orientation or pregnancy or maternity. A successful claim for dismissal on the basis of one of these characteristics triggers an automatic unfair dismissal regardless of length of service. The value of this claim is up to 52 weeks’ pay for the unfair dismissal element and potentially unlimited for the discrimination element.

Similar rules apply where an employer dismisses an employee for attempting to enforce their statutory and employment rights. Examples of statutory rights include requests for flexible working, auto enrolment into a pension scheme or payment of the national minimum wage. If an employee is dismissed because they attempted to enforce these rights then they can bring an unfair dismissal claim.

An employee is also protected by their rights under an employment contract. If a term in the contract is breached then they will be entitled to claim for this in the employment tribunal. An example of this is where the employee might not have been paid for their notice period or they have had amounts deducted from their payslip unlawfully (keep an eye out for my future blog on unlawful deductions). 

Employees also have the right to*:

The right

Employment Tribunal Award

Be provided with a written statement of particulars;

2-4 weeks’ pay

Be accompanied to a disciplinary meeting;

Up to 2 weeks’ pay

request flexible working after 28 weeks continuous employment;

Up to 8 weeks’ pay

be paid national minimum wage;

The loss

auto enrolment in a company pension scheme;

N/A

Trade union membership;

N/A

be informed and consulted in a TUPE transfer

Up to 13 weeks’ pay

Notice after one week

The notice

An itemised payslip

N/A

Holiday pay

The loss

A right to Statutory Sick Pay

The loss

Not have unauthorised deductions of wages

The loss

Maternity and paternity leave

Unlimited

Unpaid leave to deal with unexpected emergencies involving family members or people who rely on them for their care.

The loss

Paid time off for study leave for employees up to the age of 18

The loss

claim against the national insurance fund for arrears of pay in insolvency situation

N/A


Blackadders LLP


Employment

Duncan Milne, Solicitor
*This list is not exhaustive.

@EmpLawyerDuncan

www.blackadders.co.uk

Listen and subscribe to Employment Lawyer in Your Pocket Podcast free on iTunes.

Blackadders LLP

Blackadders is one of the leading law firms in the East of Scotland. Legal expertise, professional support staff and technical resources help to create a first class legal service for both business and individual clients.

Back to news