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Category Archives: Workers’ rights
Mind the (Gender Pay) Gap
While I don’t suppose it will protect me from accusations of ‘mansplaining’, I am going to preface this blog with two pre-emptive statements. Firstly, I am wholly committed to eliminating sex discrimination in the workplace, unequal pay, and the gender … Continue reading
Posted in Equality, Workers' rights
Tagged Discrimination, Equal pay, Gender pay gap
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NMW enforcement: 500% of nothing is still nothing
On 28 December, as I was travelling to Wet Wales for New Year, Sarah O’Connor of the Financial Times – surely the best employment correspondent of recent years, who has now moved on to a wider investigative brief – reported … Continue reading
Minimum wage, minimum shame?
On 8 December, the Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy (BEIS) named & shamed another 260 employers for non-compliance with the national minimum wage. Inevitably, press and media coverage of this round of naming & shaming – the 13th … Continue reading
Posted in Workers' rights
Tagged Enforcement, naming & shaming, National minimum wage, Primark, Sports Direct
3 Comments
Wish you were here, Minister
Batting for the ‘have nots’ rather than the ‘haves’, lefty policy wonks like me don’t get to claim many policy wins – we spend most of our professional lives banging our world-weary heads against very well constructed brick walls. I … Continue reading
Posted in Workers' rights
Tagged Enforcement, Paid holiday, Taylor Review, Unpaid Britain, Working Time Regulations
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To name & shame, or not to name & shame, that is the question
In August, the Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy (BEIS) named & shamed another 233 employers for non-compliance with the national minimum wage. Not surprisingly, press and media coverage of this round of naming & shaming – the 12th … Continue reading
ET fees: the backlash starts
The much belated but very welcome victory for common sense and the common law – the latter being a fairly straightforward legal concept seemingly long forgotten by the allegedly planet-sized brains in the High Court and Court of Appeal – … Continue reading
Posted in Justice, Workers' rights
Tagged Access to justice, ET claims, ET fees, Institute of Economic Affairs, Mark Littlewood, The Times
1 Comment
ET fees: Supreme Court dumps on Clarke, Cable & Grayling
🙏💻🙏📱🙏 👀💻👀📱👀 😀👀😄👀😃👀😆👀😝👀😂 🚫💷🚫 💥🎉👏🍸🍻🍷🎉🍺🎂🍸🍻 👏❤️💋 Supreme Court judges 💋❤️👏 👏👊😍 Adam Creme, Shantha David & Unison 😍👊👏 👏👊😎 Dinah Rose QC & Michael Ford QC 😎👊👏 👏👍😇 Caspar Glyn QC, Sean Jones QC, Darren Newman, Abi Adams & Jeremias Prassl 😇👍👏 😱⚠️ Ken Clarke, Vince Cable & … Continue reading
Posted in Justice, Workers' rights
Tagged Access to justice, Employment tribunals, ET fees
2 Comments
Give me six. Why not?
Extend the time limit for submitting an employment tribunal claim – from three months to six months – in cases of pregnancy or maternity discrimination. Hmmm. Yep, I was pretty sceptical when serious people – including Equality & Human Rights … Continue reading
Posted in Equality, Justice, Workers' rights
Tagged Employment tribunals, Equality, ET fees, Pregnancy discrimination
1 Comment
ET fees: lies, damn lies, and Ministry number-crunching
Previously on this blog, I had a pop at the Ministry of Injustice’s attempt – in its laughably poor report of its laughably poor internal review of the ET fees regime introduced in July 2013 – to put a figure on … Continue reading
Posted in Justice, Workers' rights
Tagged Acas, Early Conciliation, Employment tribunals, ET fees
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ET fees: a statistical injustice
The quarterly employment tribunal (ET) statistics issued by the Ministry of Injustice haven’t been terribly newsworthy since the figures became somewhat lacking in variability in mid-2014. So there was very little chance of the latest set – published at 9.30am … Continue reading
Posted in Justice, Workers' rights
Tagged Access to justice, Employment tribunals, ET fees
5 Comments