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Zero-hours contracts

Employment Law Review Weekly Issue 849 07 December 2023

 

Research by Acas has found that three in five workers are not aware of the rights of people working under zero-hours contracts.

These are contracts where the employer does not have to give any minimum working hours and a worker does not have to take any work offered. The employment status of a zero-hours worker can vary depending on the exact nature of the working arrangement.

The advice from Acas is that someone on a zero-hours contract could be legally classed as an employee or a worker. Crucially it is their employment status that will determine their legal rights.

It also makes clear that the following rights always apply to anyone on a zero-hours contract, and employers must, therefore, grant all relevant statutory employment rights to people who work under these arrangements:

  • National Minimum Wage and National Living Wage
  • paid holiday
  • rest breaks
  • protection from discrimination
  • receiving payslips

 

Acas is currently consulting on a new draft statutory Code of Practice on handling requests for a predictable working pattern (ELR 844). The aim is to ensure that requests are handled in a reasonable manner so that a worker’s request is fully understood and considered.

This follows the introduction of a new law – the Workers (Predictable Terms and Conditions) Act - which aims to give eligible workers, including agency workers and people on zero-hours contracts, a new statutory right to request a more predictable working pattern (ELR 840).

The legislation states that if a worker’s existing working pattern lacks certainty in terms of the hours they work, the times they work or if it is a fixed term contract for less than 12 months, they will be able to make a formal application to change their working pattern to make it more predictable.

To access the consultation, which closes on 17 January 2024, click here.

To read Acas advice on zero-hours contracts, click here.

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