2023 will likely see employment lawyers and HR professionals (in the UK and further afield) grappling with a number of key employment-related legal and policy developments. In this alert we highlight some of the most important ones.

  1. Brexit: The Employment Law Fallout

When the UK left the European Union on 31 December 2020, a “snapshot” of existing EU law was retained to prevent a legal vacuum. To accelerate the UK’s decoupling from the EU, the government introduced the Brexit Freedoms Bill in September 2022. The Bill provides that many EU-derived laws will be revoked (“sunset”) by default on 31 December 2023 (although there is an option to extend this deadline for specific laws until June 2026). 

Since many of the laws that protect workers are derived from the EU, this could have a huge impact on some of the UK’s employment laws. The government may elect to revise key laws or, in theory, remove them in their entirety. These include the Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 2006 (“TUPE”), the Maternity & Paternity Leave Regulations 1999 and the Working Time Regulations 1998 (which dictate maximum weekly working hours among many others). It is currently unclear what approach the government will take – we will be keeping a close eye on developments.

  1. Flexible and Hybrid Working

Employers will need to consider new rules surrounding the right to request flexible work. In its response to its “Making Flexible Working the Default” consultation, which closed in December 2021, the UK government has said it will pass secondary legislation to give employees the right to request flexible working from their first day of employment (rather than requiring them to meet a 26 week service criteria). 

In addition, the Employment Relations (Flexible Working) Bill, which is expected to become law sometime this year, proposes to allow employees to make one flexible working request every six months (as opposed to once a year). Employers currently have three months to provide employees with their response – the Bill would reduce this to two months, and impose a new duty on employees to discuss alternatives to the request (if rejected). 

In a post-pandemic world, many employers are making policy decisions about working practices and flexible or hybrid working arrangements. Particularly when it comes to assessing risks of remote working arrangements, there are a number of key considerations to be borne in mind, including tax implications, immigration requirements, potential indirect discrimination risk and health and safety obligations. (For more on this, see our recent alert.)

  1. Diversity and Inclusion Initiatives: Tensions with Existing Laws and Standards

Employers face calls from a range of stakeholders – governments and regulators, shareholders, civil society and workers themselves – to strengthen efforts to foster diverse workplaces. While the UK government no longer appears to be pursuing mandatory ethnicity pay gap reporting requirements, it is expected to publish guidance on voluntary reporting, for example. Outside of the UK, U.S. shareholder activism is driving audits of workplace racial equality measures by a number of companies. 

As this pressure mounts, lawyers and human resources professionals are required to navigate some interesting tensions, including, for example, putting in place actions to promote diversity without falling foul of the fairly narrow scope of “positive discrimination” permitted by the Employment Act 2010. The UK government is also grappling with these tensions. On January 24, 2023, for example, the government rejected proposals from the Women and Equalities Committee (in July 2022 report) to consult on making menopause a “protected characteristic” under the Equality Act 2010 (rather than women having to present themselves as suffering from a disability in order to make an effective discrimination claim). This was reportedly due to a fear this could discriminate against men.

  1. Workforce as a Key Component of the “ESG” Movement

Compliance with national and international standards surrounding treatment of a company’s direct workforce and workers within the supply chain is central to a number of rapidly evolving legal and enforcement trends. In many jurisdictions, we are seeing a range of laws relating to prohibition of forced labour and other labour rights, including import bans and due diligence laws. As companies bolster compliance efforts to meet evolving requirements and best practice, in-house employment and human resource departments, both within the UK and further afield, are likely to be called on to assist in implementing workplace policies and procedures.

Further, new reporting laws, including the EU’s recently approved Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (“CSRD”) are going to require subject companies to report on a number of “social” standards, including the treatment of workers both in a company’s direct workforce and within the supply chain (see our recent post). For companies subject to the requirements (which will include certain, large UK companies with a significant EU presence), it is likely that employment law and HR experts will be asked to advise on the social aspects of these reports.

  1.  A Myriad of Other Legislation, Consultations and Guidance to Watch

Consultation on holiday calculation:  On 12 January, 2023, the government opened a consultation on calculating holiday entitlement for part-year and irregular hours workers. The consultation is in response to last year’s Supreme Court judgment in Harper Trust v Brazel, the consequence of which was to entitle part-year workers to a larger annual paid holiday entitlement than part-time workers who work the same total number of hours across the year. It proposes introducing a holiday entitlement reference period to ensure that holiday entitlement and pay is directly proportionate to time spent working. The consultation will remain open until 9 March, 2023.

Sexual harassment: A new law will require employers to go further to protect their employees from instances of sexual harassment. The Worker Protection (Amendment of Equality Act 2010) Bill proposes to re-instate potential liability (which was repealed in 2013) for employers in instances where their employees are sexually harassed by third parties. In addition, the Bill will subject employers to a positive duty to take all reasonable steps to prevent sexual harassment of their employees in the course of their employment. Employees need not always bring these claims themselves: if there is a suspected breach of this duty, the Equality and Human Rights Commission may undertake strategic litigation, investigation and enforcement activity regardless of whether an individual has submitted a legal claim to the employment tribunal. Tribunals will be allowed to uplift employees’ compensation by up to 25 percent in cases where it is shown that the employer failed to uphold this duty.The Bill is currently at the report stage in the House of Commons, to be discussed in Parliament on 3 February, 2023.

Data privacy guidance: The Information Commissioner’s Office (“ICO”) recently published draft guidance on two key employee data issues. Consultations are closing in January and we can expect finalised guidance to be published in the coming months. 

  • Employee monitoring: The draft guidance suggests that employers should, among other things, consult with employees where monitoring is being introduced (unless there are good reasons for not doing so); conduct impact assessments relating to the carrying out of that monitoring (even where there is no strict requirement to do so); and asks that employers expect the bar for privacy to be higher when monitoring employees’ home working (as opposed to working in the office).
  • Health information: The draft guidance aims to provide practical guidance about handling the health information of workers in accordance with data protection legislation. Its advice covers topics such as handling sickness and injury records, obtaining information from medical examinations and guidance as to when sharing health information may be permissible. This guidance should be particularly useful for employers given that health information is among the most sensitive personal information they will process for workers.
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Photo of Chris Bracebridge Chris Bracebridge

Chris Bracebridge specialises in advising multinational employers on international employment and global mobility matters, including complex transactional issues and senior employee retention and termination arrangements. He co-heads a Global Workforce Solutions team providing the employment, benefits, tax and immigration advice required in these…

Chris Bracebridge specialises in advising multinational employers on international employment and global mobility matters, including complex transactional issues and senior employee retention and termination arrangements. He co-heads a Global Workforce Solutions team providing the employment, benefits, tax and immigration advice required in these complex situations. A keen advocate for increasing the diversity of the legal profession, Chris also leads the London office’s diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts.

Chris’ UK domestic practice comprises contentious, commercial and advisory employment experience. He advises on the HR aspects of company and business acquisitions and disposals, and outsourcing transactions, represents major employers in dismissal, discrimination, and whistle-blowing cases, and advises corporate clients on the full range of day-to-day employment issues (in particular, listed company executive departures), as well as data privacy and pensions matters.

Covington’s Employment team was shortlisted for three UK national awards in 2014/2015. Mr. Bracebridge was shortlisted for Assistant Solicitor of the Year 2009 by The Lawyer magazine. He has gained valuable in-house experience whilst on secondment to two global financial institutions – a major U.S. investment bank and a leading UK bank.

Chris regularly trains and presents to clients and external organizations and writes articles for both the legal press and client publications. He has spoken at events and conferences in the UK, U.S., and Europe on a range of issues such as global mobility, executive departures, redundancy, gender pay gap reporting, data protection and transfers of undertakings.

Photo of Helena Milner-Smith Helena Milner-Smith

Helena Milner-Smith helps companies navigate complex international HR-legal compliance issues.

Helena advises clients across a range of industries on all aspects of UK and international employment law, including the HR aspects of privacy compliance and human rights regulation.

Helena has particular expertise advising…

Helena Milner-Smith helps companies navigate complex international HR-legal compliance issues.

Helena advises clients across a range of industries on all aspects of UK and international employment law, including the HR aspects of privacy compliance and human rights regulation.

Helena has particular expertise advising on the HR-legal aspects of multi-jurisdictional transactions. She also regularly assists clients seeking to protect their business and increase international compliance by designing and implementing global policies, employment contracts and restrictive covenants.

Helena has been recognised by Legal 500 UK for her “exceptional service” and “responsive and practical” advice.

In addition, Helena has gained valuable in-house experience while on secondment at three large multinational corporations – a pharmaceutical company, an oil company and a leading investment bank.

Photo of Antonio Michaelides Antonio Michaelides

Antonio Michaelides advises clients in heavily regulated sectors on a broad range of cross-border regulatory and compliance matters, with a particular focus on Europe and the Middle East. He has particular expertise in helping clients navigate international HR-legal compliance issues—including labor laws, international…

Antonio Michaelides advises clients in heavily regulated sectors on a broad range of cross-border regulatory and compliance matters, with a particular focus on Europe and the Middle East. He has particular expertise in helping clients navigate international HR-legal compliance issues—including labor laws, international equity compliance and immigration matters—and frequently helps multinationals find solutions to their most complex global employment and benefits challenges.

Antonio is a member of our Global Workforce Solutions team, which brings together various practice areas to provide the employment, employee benefits, tax, immigration and other advice required in these complex situations, and advises clients across a range of industries on both larger strategic projects arising out of company restructures and global mobility arrangements, and day-to-day HR-legal matters.

Antonio has extensive experience with government affairs and regulatory matters in the Middle East—advising government entities, as well as private companies, on a variety of regulatory infrastructure and compliance issues. He previously advised free zone authorities in the Emirate of Dubai on employment and immigration matters, including amendments to the DIFC Employment Law and the application of the DMCC Employment Regulations, and is currently advising on the development of legal and regulatory infrastructure for a number of government-led projects in Saudi Arabia.

Given his EU law expertise, particularly in the areas of free movement of people and establishment, Antonio is a member of the firm’s Brexit Taskforce which is advising a range of clients on the impact and implications of Brexit.

Clients appreciate his responsiveness and business-focused advice, and benefit from his cultural awareness and extensive language skills in the context of managing international projects.

In addition, Antonio has presented, and provided training, to clients and external organizations on the challenges of international assignment management and other common global mobility issues.

Photo of Hannah Edmonds-Camara Hannah Edmonds-Camara

Hannah Edmonds-Camara advises on a range of both international and domestic employment issues including drafting and implementation of policies and compliance programmes, international employment aspects of global transactions and contentious employment matters.

She also has particular expertise in helping businesses navigate the evolving global…

Hannah Edmonds-Camara advises on a range of both international and domestic employment issues including drafting and implementation of policies and compliance programmes, international employment aspects of global transactions and contentious employment matters.

She also has particular expertise in helping businesses navigate the evolving global regulatory and best practice landscape surrounding the corporate responsibility to respect human rights. Her experience includes advising on: the development and implementation of global human rights due diligence and ethical sourcing compliance programmes, including in response to pressure from NGOs, investors and regulators; human rights due diligence in an M&A context; global risk assessments; transparency and reporting requirements; design of project-specific human rights frameworks and stakeholder engagement strategies; assessment of downstream human rights risk; and conflict minerals compliance.

Hannah gained valuable experience while on secondment to a large pharmaceutical client. She is a member of the firm’s Diversity Committee, Public Service (pro bono) Committee, and Africa Initiative.