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Employment UK
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April 29, 2025
Pensions Watchdog Issues Covenant Warning Amid Tariffs
The U.K.'s retirement savings watchdog warned pension schemes on Tuesday to be mindful of the impact of global trade tariffs as it said it had found that more than half have a funding surplus.
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April 29, 2025
Fiber Network Biz Fired Exec For Raising Trespass Concerns
A fiber broadband network provider made its chief technical officer redundant after he repeatedly raised concerns that the company was trespassing on private land, an employment tribunal has ruled.
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April 29, 2025
Council Must Reinstate Union Rep Fired For Private HR Chat
An employment tribunal has ruled that Middlesbrough Council must reinstate a union representative to his role as senior transport officer after it botched an investigation into a confidential conversation he had while performing protected trade union duties.
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April 29, 2025
Part-Time Status Not Sole Cause For Worker's Overtime Denial
A part-time London Underground worker who claimed to have been treated unfairly after his overtime requests were canceled failed Tuesday to overturn a ruling that his employment status was not the sole cause for the denial.
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April 29, 2025
Fruit & Veg Biz Wins Shot At Cropping Worker's £130K Payout
A fruit and vegetable supplier has won the chance to trim parts of a former employee's discrimination payout of £130,000 ($174,100), persuading an appeals judge that a lower tribunal had misjudged the compensation bill.
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April 28, 2025
Firefighter Wins Shot To Amend Sex, Disability Bias Claim
A male firefighter who was demoted after a complaint about his conduct toward a female colleague has won a chance to amend his sex and disability discrimination case, after an appeal tribunal ruling Monday that a judge's decision to reject the changes was flawed.
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April 28, 2025
UK Targets Fake Immigration Lawyers With £15K Fines
Fake lawyers fraudulently posing as immigration advisers will face fines of up to £15,000 ($20,100) under new powers to toughen up the U.K.'s asylum system against rogue law firms, the Home Office has said.
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April 28, 2025
Removals Biz To Pay £5.5K For Workers' Homophobic Slurs
An employee at a Scottish removals company who was called a homophobic slur and excluded by colleagues has won £5,500 ($7,380) after a tribunal accepted his claim that he was harassed and victimized because of his sexuality.
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April 28, 2025
Gov't Urged To Act On Critical Pension Switching Delays
The government must step in to mandate faster retirement saving transfers, a pensions provider warned Monday, saying that in some cases customers have been left waiting three years for the process to complete.
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April 28, 2025
Fire Brigade Victimized Firefighter After Bullying Complaint
London's fire service victimized a firefighter after he faced disciplinary allegations from his former manager over a social media post that discussed hiring an assassin amid a long-running feud between the pair, a tribunal has ruled.
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April 28, 2025
Teaching Union Reopens Leadership Race After Court Dispute
A teachers' union told a London court on Monday that it had agreed to reopen leadership nominations after it was challenged by a would-be candidate who said the organization broke rules by deeming him ineligible and appointing someone unopposed.
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April 28, 2025
Airbus To Acquire Assets Of Aircraft Parts Maker For $439M
Airbus SE said Monday that it has finalized a deal for the global components operations of Spirit AeroSystems as part of a $4.7 billion takeover of the parts maker by aircraft manufacturing giant Boeing.
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April 28, 2025
Compensation Program Declares Pensions Adviser In Default
A pensions adviser has been declared in default after receiving five claims against it, the Financial Services Compensation Scheme confirmed Monday.
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April 25, 2025
Unisex Is Best To Avoid Toilet Trouble After Sex Ruling
The best approach for employers after the U.K. Supreme Court's seismic ruling on the legal definition of a woman is to make all enclosed single-user washrooms unisex and consult staff for their thoughts on making further facilities gender-neutral, lawyers and experts say.
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April 25, 2025
M&S Worker Fired Upon Disclosing Pregnancy Wins Claim
A former Marks and Spencer worker has won her discrimination case after a tribunal concluded that she was dismissed because she disclosed she was pregnant.
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April 25, 2025
Management Co. Denies Claims By Angus And Julia Stone
London-based music management company HNOE Ltd. has hit back at an AU$1.1 million ($690,000) counterclaim by Australian indie pop duo Angus and Julia Stone in their dispute over management agreement commission payments, saying that the band's case was "plainly false."
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April 25, 2025
Unite Blocks Anglican Group's TM Bid As Filed In Bad Faith
Unite the Union has dashed a group's trademark hopes amid an ongoing discrimination dispute, convincing U.K. officials that the organization filed its "Unite Faith Workers' Fellowship" application in bad faith.
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April 25, 2025
Tribunal Dismisses Bias Claim Of Chinese-Born Job Applicant
A Chinese council staffer in central Scotland couldn't convince an employment tribunal that her bosses passed her over for two jobs because she had publicly protested against the Tiananmen Square massacre.
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April 25, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen pub operator Stonegate sue insurance broker Marsh, a human rights lawyer sued for defamation by Russian businessman Ovik Mkrtchyan, and British toy-maker The Character Group reignite an employment dispute with a former finance director. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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April 25, 2025
Gov't Repaid £1.4B In Pension 'Overtaxation' Since 2015
The U.K. government was forced to pay back £44 million ($58.6 million) in the first quarter to people who have been charged too much tax on pension withdrawals, bringing the total repaid to date to £1.4 billion.
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April 25, 2025
Fashion Firm Beats Unfair Dismissal Claim From Ex-Employee
A judge tossed an unfair dismissal claim on Friday brought by a former employee of a luxury fashion recruitment consultancy, saying the business made a fair decision to fire her based on poor performance.
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April 25, 2025
Aegon Defeats Worker's Contract Claim After Work Transfer
Aegon has beaten an unfair dismissal claim brought by a former Nationwide employee who resigned after his job transferred to the insurer, arguing that changes to his work conditions left him no choice but to quit.
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April 25, 2025
MoD Supplier Says Ex-Worker Leaked Classified Warship Info
An engineering firm has accused a former employee of handing a rival classified data linked to its supply of components for warships to the Royal Navy, telling a London court that his actions have damaged its relationship with the Ministry of Defence.
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April 25, 2025
Gov't Pays Out £805M Over Historical State Pension Shortfalls
The government has said that the amount it has paid out so far in state pension shortfalls has risen to £804.7 million ($1.1 billion), in what experts describe as a scandal that has shaken public confidence in the benefits system.
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April 24, 2025
Bollywood Film Unit To Pay £84K To Ex-Exec Forced To Quit
Bollywood media conglomerate Eros International Ltd. must pay its former chief strategy officer over £84,000 ($112,000) after an employment tribunal upheld his claim for constructive dismissal.
Expert Analysis
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UK Employment Law Risks In Cross-Border M&A
U.K. employment law has developed in myriad ways and continues to do so. The acquisition of U.K.-based companies or assets will therefore often give rise to employment law considerations that are unfamiliar to U.S. buyers, says Richard Moore of Lewis Silkin LLP.
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4 Questions About Whistleblowing In The UK And Beyond
Following the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's announcement of its biggest-ever Dodd-Frank whistleblower awards, Chris Warren-Smith of Morgan Lewis & Bockius LLP discusses whistleblowing in financial service industries in different jurisdictions with other Morgan Lewis attorneys based all around the world.
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Revamping Contracts For GDPR: 3 Ways To Prepare
The EU's General Data Protection Regulation requirements — which take effect May 25 — create a substantial hurdle for thousands of companies worldwide and affect millions of vendor contracts, which now need to be reviewed, amended and potentially renegotiated, say Mathew Keshav Lewis and Zachary Foreman of Axiom Law.
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Keys To Corporate Social Responsibility Compliance: Part 1
2018 may be the year that corporate social responsibility compliance becomes a core duty of in-house legal departments. Not only have legal requirements proliferated in recent years, but new disclosure requirements and more regulation are on the horizon, say attorneys with Ropes & Gray LLP.
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A Guide To Anti-Trafficking Compliance For Food Cos.
Despite the 2016 dismissal of federal human rights cases against food companies in California, a similar class action — Tomasella v. Hershey Co. — was recently filed in Massachusetts federal court, and it’s one that companies in the sector should watch closely, says Markus Funk of Perkins Coie LLP.
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Human Rights Benchmarks: A Primer For In-House Counsel
A number of corporate institutions and nongovernmental organizations have partnered together to “benchmark” how peer companies compare to each other in the area of human rights compliance. The reputational damage that these studies can cause should not be underestimated, say Viren Mascarenhas and Kayla Winarsky Green of King & Spalding LLP.
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Basic Human Rights: Whose Job Is Enforcement?
The cases of Jesner v. Arab Bank and Doe v. Cisco Systems pose different legal tests under the Alien Tort Statute. But these decisions could hold major consequences for environmentalists, human rights activists and even individuals who have turned to ATS to go after transnational corporations, says Dan Weissman of LexisNexis.
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Cos. Should Note Guidance From Gov'ts On Human Rights
Recent legislative and courtroom developments in the U.K., the U.S. and further afield may have a significant impact on human rights compliance requirements for companies doing business internationally, say attorneys with Covington & Burlington LLP.
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Preparing For UK Litigation As A US Lawyer
Counsel fees, issue fees, risk of loss and the “additional” cost of a barrister mark significant differences between the U.K. and U.S. legal processes. The good news is that the bond between the U.K. and the U.S. arising out of our common history and law renders retaining and working with U.K. counsel seamless and rewarding, says Richard Reice of Hoguet Newman Regal & Kenney LLP.
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Whistleblower Protection: When Private Turns Public
In Chesterton v. Nurmohamed, a U.K. appeals court recently found that disclosing a breach of a worker's contract may satisfy the public interest requirement for whistleblower protection if a sufficiently large number of other workers are affected. This decision may cause some concern for well-known employers, say Emma Vennesson and Katherine Newman of Faegre Baker Daniels LLP.
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Uber May Have Met Its Waterloo In Europe
Recent developments in Europe suggest that Uber’s business model — built on its claims that it is a digital platform between consumer and driver, not a transportation company, and that its workers are merely independent contractors, not employees governed by local labor laws — may be approaching collapse on the continent sooner than anticipated, says Thomas Dickerson of Herzfeld & Rubin PC.
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Harmonizing US And UK Workplace Dress Codes
Given recent publicity surrounding workplace dress codes for women in both the U.S. and U.K., it's likely the issue will be subject to greater scrutiny going forward. Companies with an international reach must exercise particular caution when seeking to coordinate workplace dress codes across the business as considerations may differ widely, says Furat Ashraf of Bird & Bird.
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Top 5 Business And Human Rights Concerns For Companies To Monitor
Businesses are being bombarded with information about their responsibilities toward global human rights and other nonfinancial efforts. According to Covington & Burling LLP attorneys Christopher Walter and Hannah Edmonds, U.K. businesses should be actively monitoring five key developments.
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FCA's Work In Progress: Individual Accountability
In the case of the U.K. accountability regime, the sea change seems to have been more about the Financial Conduct Authority sending a message to firms, leaders and the public that things would be different — rather than replacing an ineffective regime. We anticipate a change within the financial services sector, as individuals are likely to want to eat more carrots and feel fewer sticks, say members of Taylor Wessing LLP.
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Conflict Minerals Compliance: What To Do Now
In the final part of a three-part series on conflict minerals compliance, Michael Littenberg at Ropes & Gray LLP discusses practical compliance tips for this cycle and the next in light of past and expected trends in conflict minerals compliance.