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This book is now Out of Print.
A new edition has been published, the details can be seen here:
IDS Handbook: Working Time 2019 isbn 9780414067066

IDS: Working Time 2013

Edited by: IDS Employment Law Brief Team

ISBN13: 9780414030367
New Edition ISBN: 9780414067066
Previous Edition ISBN: 9781847039828
Published: July 2013
Publisher: Incomes Data Services Ltd
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback
Price: Out of print



Before 1998, the regulation of working time and related issues in the United Kingdom was primarily a matter for the individual contract of employment - there was little statutory regulation, and what few provisions did exist were confined to certain sectors of industry or related to specific groups of workers.

This all changed with the introduction of the Working Time Regulations 1998, which implement the EU Working Time Directive and lay down minimum conditions relating to weekly working time, rest entitlements and annual leave. They also make special provision for working hours and health assessments in relation to night workers. Since their introduction, the Regulations have been amended a number of times, and have been the subject of several significant and far-reaching decisions by the European Court of Justice and the House of Lords.

Maior points at issue have been whether 'on-call' time counts as working time; whether workers absent on long-term sick leave are entitled to benefit from paid annual leave; whether workers who fall sick while on holiday are entitled to have their holiday reallocated to another time; and whether a claim for non-payment of statutory holiday pay must be brought under the Regulations, or may be brought as an unlawful deduction from wages claim under the Employment Rights Act 1996.

This IDS Employment Law Handbook provides a detailed examination of the scope and coverage of the Working Time Regulations as they now stand, from the definition of 'working time' and the different types of agreement that may be used to supplement or modify the Regulations, through to the substantive provisions contained therein.

Subjects covered in depth include the 48-hour limit on average weekly working time; the right to daily and weekly rest periods and rest breaks; the right to paid annual leave; and the special provisions concerning working time, health assessments and transfer to day work that apply to night workers. Also explained are the various exclusions and derogations from the Regulations, and the circumstances in which they apply.

Finally, the Handbook examines the arrangements for enforcement of the limits and entitlements contained in the Regulations, and the remedies available to workers denied their statutory entitlements.

Subjects:
Employment Law
Contents:
Scope and coverage
Working time
Agreements

The 48-hour week
Average weekly hours
Ensuring compliance
Opt-out agreements

Rest periods and rest breaks
Preliminary matters
Daily rest
Weekly rest
Rest breaks
Monotonous work
Compensatory rest

Annual leave
Right to paid annual leave
Notice requirements
Holiday pay

Night work
Definitions
Length of night work
Health assessments
Transfer to day work
Ensuring compliance

Exclusions and derogations
Excluded sectors
Partially excluded sectors
Domestic staff
Unmeasured working time
‘Special case’ exemptions
Shift workers
Mobile workers
Workers in the armed forces
Young workers
Collective and workforce agreements

Enforcement and remedies
Health and safety enforcement
Complaints to tribunals
Enforcement in the civil courts