- BIS Guidance on the Sunday Trading (London Olympic Games and Paralympic Games) Act, which suspends restrictions on Sunday trading hours for large shops in England and Wales for the duration of the London Olympic and Paralympic Games and shortens the usual notice period that must be given by employees to opt out of Sunday working.
- Guide on apprentices, including how an employer should go about finding funding, recruiting, developing and evaluating apprentices, published by the Chartered Insurance Institute.
- Acas guide on how to handle difficult conversations.
- HMRC has published its risk assessment guidelines used to check compliance with IR35. It has also published a joint consultation paper with HM Treasury proposing that organisations which engage "controlling persons" (persons with control over a significant proportion of the organisation's employees and/or budget) should be required to deduct tax and national insurance contributions under PAYE from payments to such persons. The consultation ends on 16 August 2012.
- A new HS client briefing on boardroom diversity and positive action is available here. On the same topic, the Equality and Human Rights Commission has this week published a report produced by Cranfield University on the board appointment process, the role of executive search agencies and gender-related obstacles.
Key contacts
Samantha Brown
Managing Partner, Employment, Pensions and Incentives, UK and EMEA, London
Steve Bell
Managing Partner, Employment, Industrial Relations and Safety, Asia and Australia, Melbourne
Emma Rohsler
Partner, Head of Employment, Pensions and Incentives, EMEA, Paris
Tim Leaver
Partner, London
Andrew Taggart
Partner, London
Fatim Jumabhoy
Partner, Head of Employment & Workplace Investigations, Asia, Singapore
Barbara Roth
Partner, New York
Christine Young
Partner, London
Disclaimer
The articles published on this website, current at the dates of publication set out above, are for reference purposes only. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Specific legal advice about your specific circumstances should always be sought separately before taking any action.