CIPP Payroll: need to know 2019-20

Consultation on confidentiality clauses 7 March 2019

A consultation has been published on measures to prevent misuse in situations of workplace harassment or discrimination.

The rules around non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) and confidentiality clauses are set to be tightened under new legal proposals announced by Business Minister Kelly Tolhurst.

Many businesses legitimately use NDAs and confidentiality clauses in agreements to prevent disclosure of confidential information. However, in recent months there has been increasing evidence to suggest that NDAs and confidentiality clauses are being abused by a very small minority of employers to intimidate whistleblowers, conceal harassment and discrimination incidents – including sexual assault, physical threats and racism.

The proposals in this consultation will help put an end to the unethical use of these agreements and encourage good practice from employers and lawyers. They include:

• clarifying in law that confidentiality clauses cannot prevent people from speaking to the police and reporting a crime (or prevent the disclosure of information in any criminal proceedings) • requiring a clear, written description of rights before anything is signed in confidentiality clauses in employment contracts or within a settlement agreement • extending the law that means a worker agreeing to a settlement agreement receives independent advice; the advice must cover the limits of any confidentiality clauses in the settlement agreement so a person is in full possession of all the relevant facts; this will help to prevent employees from being duped into signing gagging clauses which they were unaware of

The plans are part of the government’s ambition to create a fairer workplace as part of the modern Industrial Strategy (published in 2017).

The consultation will run until 29 April.

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Neurodiversity in the workplace 22 March 2019

Acas has made new guidance available to help employers learn about neurodiversity and how to take steps to better support it in the workplace.

Acas describe neurodiversity as being a relatively new term that many people may not yet know much about. It refers to the different ways the brain can work and interpret information and lists neurodivergence as including: • Attention Deficit Disorders; • Autism; • Dyslexia; and • Dyspraxia. The guidance from Acas highlights that people naturally think about things differently and that we all have different interests and motivations, and are naturally better at some things and poorer at others. Most people are neurotypical, meaning that the brain functions and processes information in the way society expects.

However, it is estimated that around 1 in 7 people (more than 15% of people in the UK) are neurodivergent, meaning that the brain functions, learns and processes information differently.

The Chartered Institute of Payroll Professionals

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