Providing a service? The new TUPE Regulations. Stephen Cavalier Richard Arthur Thompsons Solicitors.

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Providing a service? The new TUPE Regulations. Stephen Cavalier Richard Arthur Thompsons Solicitors

Transcript of Providing a service? The new TUPE Regulations. Stephen Cavalier Richard Arthur Thompsons Solicitors.

Page 1: Providing a service? The new TUPE Regulations. Stephen Cavalier Richard Arthur Thompsons Solicitors.

Providing a service? The new TUPE Regulations.

Stephen Cavalier

Richard Arthur

Thompsons Solicitors

Page 2: Providing a service? The new TUPE Regulations. Stephen Cavalier Richard Arthur Thompsons Solicitors.

Controversy, Confusion and Litigation• When is there a TUPE transfer?

• Can employers change terms and conditions?

• Which employees transfer?

• Which employer is liable for a failure to inform or consult?

• Do collective agreements transfer?

• Can employees object to transferring?

Page 3: Providing a service? The new TUPE Regulations. Stephen Cavalier Richard Arthur Thompsons Solicitors.

When is there a TUPE transfer?• “Standard transfers”;• New definition of “service provision

changes”;• TUPE applies to public and private

sectors; • Exclusion of “administrative

reorganisations of public administrative authorities”; and

• Share transfers still excluded.

Page 4: Providing a service? The new TUPE Regulations. Stephen Cavalier Richard Arthur Thompsons Solicitors.

“Standard Transfers”

• Transfer of an undertaking (or part) situated immediately before the transfer in the United Kingdom;

• Where there is “a transfer of an economic entity which retains its identity”;

• Encapsulates existing case law.

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“Economic Entity”

• “An organised grouping of resources which has the objective of pursuing an economic activity, whether or not that activity is ancillary or central”;

• Needs to be stable;

• Doesn’t need to be separate from the rest of the old employer’s undertaking.

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“Retains its identity”

• Type of operation;

• Whether assets transfer;

• Whether or not a majority of the workforce is transferred; and

• The extent to which activities carried out before the transfer are the same as those carried out after.

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Contracting-out

• ECJ rulings that the Directive applied to the transfer of ancillary services, and contracting-out;

• Similar cases won by the unions in the UK – eg Dines;

• Uncertainty from Ayse Suzen case;• Distinction drawn in the ECJ between

asset-reliant and labour-intensive undertakings.

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“Service Provision Changes”

“Activities cease to be carried out by”:

• The client and are instead carried out by a contractor (contracting-out);

• A contractor and are instead carried out by a new contractor (second generation contracting); or

• A contractor and are instead carried out by the client (contracting-in).

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Condition 1: Organised Grouping of Employees

• “..Organised grouping of employees…which has as its principal purpose the carrying out of the activities…”;

• “Organised grouping of employees” does not need to retain its identity;

• No exemption for “innovative bids”; and

• Includes a single employee.

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Condition 2: Exclusion of “One-off Events or Tasks”

• The client must intend that the activities will be carried out “other than in connection with a single specific event or task of short term duration”.

• DTI example-contracts for security for the Olympic games.

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Condition 3: Exclusion of Contracts for Supply of

Goods or Services• The activities must not “consist wholly or

mainly of the supply of goods or services”.

• DTI example – staff canteen/contract to provide sandwiches and drinks.

• No exclusion of “professional business services”.

Page 12: Providing a service? The new TUPE Regulations. Stephen Cavalier Richard Arthur Thompsons Solicitors.

Public Sector: Government Policy

• TUPE will usually apply;• Cabinet Office Statement of Practice:

“Staff Transfers in the Public Sector”;• Case-specific legislation;• “Staff Transfers from Central Government:

a Fair Deal for Staff Pensions”;• NHS Retention of Employment Model; and• Code of Practice on Workforce Matters in

Local Authority Service Contracts 2003.

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Public Administrative Authorities

• TUPE does not apply to “an administrative reorganisation of public administrative authorities or the transfer of administrative functions between public administrative authorities”.

• Exclusion to be interpreted narrowly.

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What Happens When TUPE Applies? (1)

• “Assigned” employees transfer automatically;

• Rights and liabilities under or in connection with the contract transfer;

• Continuity of employment is preserved;• Relaxation of automatic transfer provisions

in the event of insolvency;• Dismissals: automatically unfair (ETO

reasons).

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What Happens When TUPE Applies? (2)• Variations to terms and conditions (ETO

reasons);

• Information and consultation;

• Recognition and collective agreements transfer; and

• Notification of “employee liability information”.

Page 16: Providing a service? The new TUPE Regulations. Stephen Cavalier Richard Arthur Thompsons Solicitors.

Who Transfers (and When)?

• Employees “assigned” to organised grouping of employees or resources;

• “Assigned” “other than on a temporary basis”;• Includes those who would have been employed

if they had not been unfairly dismissed for a reason connected with the transfer;

• Date on which “responsibility as employer” transfers.

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The Right to Object to Transfer• If the employee refuses to transfer, without

more, she is treated as having resigned;• Where the transfer “…involves a substantial

change in working conditions to the material detriment…” the employee can treat herself as dismissed;

• DTI examples: major relocation of workplace;• No need for fundamental breach of contract;• No right to pay in lieu of notice.

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Transferring rights and obligations

• Continuity of employment;

• Rights and liabilities under or in connection with the contract;

• Personal injury claims;

• Collective agreements;

• Not pensions.

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The Werhof case

• Unions’ success in arguing for transfer of entitlements to pay awards;

• Werhof: “static” interpretation. Only applies to collective agreements in force at the date of transfer;

• Werhof not conclusive.

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Changes to Terms and Conditions: New Mechanism (1)

Where the reason for the variation is:

• The transfer itself; or• A reason connected with the transfer that is not

an “ETO” reason

the variation is void.

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Changes to terms and conditions: new mechanism (2)

Variations are permitted where the “sole or principal reason for the variation” is:

• A reason connected with the transfer that is an “ETO” reason; or

• A reason that is not connected with the transfer.

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“ETOs”

“Economic, technical or organisational reason entailing changes in the workforce”;

• Change in job description or headcount;

• Harmonisation itself not permitted;

• Query whether variations for ETO reasons permitted by the Directive.

Page 23: Providing a service? The new TUPE Regulations. Stephen Cavalier Richard Arthur Thompsons Solicitors.

Transfer-Connected Dismissals: New Mechanism

• Mirrors scheme for permitted variations to terms and conditions;

• When is the reason for a dismissal or variation “the transfer itself” as opposed to “connected with the transfer”?

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Insolvency (1)

Where the employer is subject to insolvency or bankruptcy proceedings “instituted with a view to the liquidation of the assets..”

• Rights in connection with the contract do not transfer; and

• There is no protection from dismissal.

Page 25: Providing a service? The new TUPE Regulations. Stephen Cavalier Richard Arthur Thompsons Solicitors.

Insolvency (2)

Where the employer is subject to “relevant insolvency proceedings”:

• The new employer is exempted from inheriting debts up to the limits which would have been payable under the statutory schemes if the employee had been dismissed; and

• An employer can agree “permitted variations” to terms and conditions.

Page 26: Providing a service? The new TUPE Regulations. Stephen Cavalier Richard Arthur Thompsons Solicitors.

Pensions

• Not transferred by TUPE (but see Cabinet office Statement of Practice);

• Limited protection in Pensions Act 2004;

• Employees can not resign and claim constructive dismissal; and

• The Beckmann and Martin cases: enhanced redundancy payments.

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Information and Consultation (1)

Information to be provided:• The fact of the transfer, when and why;• The legal, economic and social implications for

affected employees;• The measures the transferor envisages it will

take in relation to affected employees; and• The measures which the transferor envisages

the transferee will take in relation to affected employees.

Page 28: Providing a service? The new TUPE Regulations. Stephen Cavalier Richard Arthur Thompsons Solicitors.

Information and Consultation (2)

Two further changes:

• Liability rests with the employer in default; and

• Joint and several liability for transferor’s default.

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Employee Liability Information

The transferor must provide “employee liability information” to the transferee.

No right for the union to receive that information.

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Interface with Other Employment Legislation and the Future

• Equalities Legislation;

• Industrial action;

• Statutory recognition;

• Territorial scope;

• Beware: the Government will attempt to amend the Directive to permit harmonisation.