Five things we learnt in employment law this week (1 June 2018)

James Rhodes

4th June 2018
Five things we learnt in employment law this week
employment law five things April
James Rhodes, Partner at DAC Beachcroft LLP.
  1. A trade union has been found vicariously liable for the discriminatory conduct of two of its workplace union officials (Unite the Union v Nailard, Court of Appeal)

2. Pupil barristers are set to receive at least the National Living Wage, following a recommendation by the Bar Council.

3. A recent study found that 6% of full time permanent employees have plans to leave their current job to join the gig economy over the next 12 months and 28% of employees would like to make the transition, but don’t have the confidence to do so.

4. A Government adviser, in a speech to the European Congress on Obesity, has recommended that obese workers should be allowed to miss the rush hour commute, demand an extra-large chair and work from home.

5. A former hotel manager has won an Employment Tribunal claim after a Judge ruled that her dismissal by email for “looking after her dog too often” was neither conduct nor capability related and hopelessly flawed.

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