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There are currently no known outstanding effects for the Carer’s Leave Act 2023, Paragraph 2.
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2U.K.After section 80I insert—
(1)The Secretary of State must make regulations entitling an employee to be absent from work on leave under this section in order to provide or arrange care for a dependant with a long-term care need.
(2)For the purposes of subsection (1)—
(a)a person is a dependant of an employee if they—
(i)are a spouse, civil partner, child or parent of the employee,
(ii)live in the same household as the employee, otherwise than by reason of being the employee’s boarder, employee, lodger or tenant, or
(iii)reasonably rely on the employee to provide or arrange care, and
(b)a dependant of an employee has a long-term care need if—
(i)they have an illness or injury (whether physical or mental) that requires, or is likely to require, care for more than three months,
(ii)they have a disability for the purposes of the Equality Act 2010, or
(iii)they require care for a reason connected with their old age.
(3)The regulations must include provision for determining—
(a)the extent of an employee’s entitlement to leave under this section;
(b)when leave under this section may be taken.
(4)Provision under subsection (3)(a) must secure that where an employee is entitled to leave under this section the employee is entitled to at least a week’s leave during any period of 12 months.
(5)The regulations may make provision about how leave under this section is to be taken (including by providing for it to be taken non-continuously).
(6)The regulations may provide that particular activities are, or are not, to be treated as providing or arranging care for the purposes of this Part.
(1)Regulations under section 80J must provide—
(a)that an employee who is absent on leave under that section is entitled, for such purposes and to such extent as the regulations may prescribe, to the benefit of the terms and conditions of employment which would have applied but for the absence,
(b)that an employee who is absent on leave under that section is bound, for such purposes and to such extent as the regulations may prescribe, by obligations arising under those terms and conditions (except in so far as they are inconsistent with subsection (1) of that section), and
(c)that an employee who is absent on leave under that section is entitled to return from leave to a job of a kind prescribed by regulations, subject to section 80L.
(2)Regulations under section 80J may provide that where provision made by or under Part 8 provides for a reference to absence on leave under a section of that Part to include a reference to a continuous period of absence attributable—
(a)partly to leave under that section of Part 8, and
(b)partly to leave under another section of that Part,
absence attributable to leave under section 80J is to be ignored in any determination of the continuity or duration of such a period.
(3)In subsection (1)(a), “terms and conditions of employment”—
(a)includes matters connected with an employee’s employment whether or not they arise under the contract of employment, but
(b)does not include terms and conditions about remuneration.
(4)Regulations under section 80J may specify matters which are, or are not, to be treated as remuneration for the purposes of this section.
(5)Regulations under section 80J may make provision, in relation to the right to return mentioned in subsection (1)(c), about—
(a)seniority, pension rights and similar rights;
(b)terms and conditions of employment on return.
(1)Regulations under section 80J may make provision about—
(a)redundancy during or after a period of leave under that section;
(b)dismissal (other than by reason of redundancy) during a period of leave under that section.
(2)Provision by virtue of subsection (1) may include provision for the consequences of failure to comply with the regulations (which may include provision for a dismissal to be treated as unfair for the purposes of Part 10).
(1)Regulations under section 80J may—
(a)make provision about notices to be given and other procedures to be followed by employees and employers;
(b)make provision requiring employers or employees to keep records;
(c)make provision for the consequences of failure to give notices, to keep records or to comply with other procedural requirements;
(d)make provision for the consequences of failure to act in accordance with a notice given by virtue of paragraph (a);
(e)make provision about the postponement by an employer of a period of leave under section 80J;
(f)make special provision for cases where an employee has a right which corresponds to a right under section 80J and which arises under the person’s contract of employment or otherwise;
(g)make provision modifying the effect of Chapter 2 of Part 14 (calculation of a week’s pay) in relation to an employee who is or has been absent from work on leave under section 80J;
(h)make provision applying, modifying or excluding an enactment, in such circumstances as may be specified and subject to any conditions which may be specified, in relation to a person entitled to take leave under section 80J;
(i)make different provision for different cases or circumstances;
(j)make consequential provision.
(2)Provision under subsection (1)(a) may, in particular, provide that an employer cannot require an employee to supply evidence in relation to a request for leave under section 80J before granting that leave.
(3)Provision under subsection (1)(i) may, in particular, provide for the meaning of “a week’s leave” in section 80J (4) to be determined by reference to the number of days normally worked, or required to be worked, by an employee in a particular period.
(4)The cases or circumstances mentioned in subsection (1)(i) include an employee providing or arranging care for more than one dependant during any period of 12 months; and regulations may, in particular, make special provision regarding the applicability and extent of the entitlement to leave in such circumstances.
(1)An employee may complain to an employment tribunal that their employer—
(a)has unreasonably postponed a period of carer’s leave, or
(b)has prevented or attempted to prevent the employee from taking carer’s leave.
(2)The tribunal must not consider the complaint unless it is made—
(a)before the end of the period of three months beginning with the date (or last date) of the matter complained of, or
(b)within such further period as the tribunal considers reasonable in a case where it is satisfied that it was not reasonably practicable for the complaint to be made before the end of that period of three months.
(3)Section 207B (extension of time limits to facilitate conciliation before institution of proceedings) applies for the purposes of subsection (2)(a).
(4)The tribunal, if satisfied that an employer has acted as described in subsection (1)(a) or (b)—
(a)must make a declaration to that effect, and
(b)may award compensation to be paid by the employer to the employee.
(5)The amount of any compensation must be the amount the tribunal considers just and equitable in all the circumstances, including—
(a)the employer’s behaviour, and
(b)any consequential loss sustained by the employee.”
Commencement Information
I1Sch. para. 2 not in force at Royal Assent, see s. 3(3)
I2Sch. para. 2 in force at 4.12.2023 by S.I. 2023/1283, reg. 2
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