Updated Covid-19 Considerations for UK Employers

NOTE: This article was updated on July 7, 2020.

As the Covid-19 pandemic stretches on, employers continue to face significant challenges to their business and their workforce. Employers are faced with numerous employment law changes – from changes to statutory sick pay to furlough – and many are now turning their minds to how they can get their workforce back into the workplace. 

It is essential for employers to plan appropriately both to discharge legal duties to employees and the public and to minimise business disruption.

1. What steps should employers be taking?

It is important for employers to:

  • Where practicable, continue to facilitate home working. Current guidance states that homeworking should remain standard wherever possible and employees in vulnerable groups should be 'strongly advised to work from home, if possible, and should be supported in doing so.' Make sure that employees have all the necessary equipment and that contact details are up to date.
  • Start planning for the return to work for those roles that cannot be done effectively from home. Consult with employees and trade unions to ensure 'buy in' to plans. Implement measures to make the workplace 'Covid-19 secure.'
  • Plan how you will deal with future absences caused by employees contacted by the UK Government ‘test and trace’ system and required to self-isolate for 14 days. Consider pay entitlements, notification requirements, how to facilitate a return to home working for the affected employee (if they are well enough to work), and workforce management to ensure resourcing continuity. Communicate these policies and decisions to your staff. 
  • If you need to have a physical workplace open, consider steps to make the workplace safer for employees. This might include encouraging physical distancing where possible (such as by rearranging desks to allow for 2m between workstations or temporarily suspending ‘hot desk’ polices), providing additional pop-up handwashing stations or facilities if possible, providing soap, water, hand sanitizer and tissues, or limiting the number of people in the workplace at any one time.
  • Implement adequate health and safety measures, including undertaking a risk assessment. Additional measures may be needed for pregnant employees or those with existing health vulnerabilities.
  • Designate a person or team responsible for the Covid-19 response and for implementing emergency measures such as workplace closure.
  • Keep on top of the latest UK Government guidance as it evolves.
  • Communicate clearly and regularly with staff.
  • Decide on an approach to home working and sick pay and notify staff of the government’s recent business support measures if work is temporarily suspended.
  • Plan how they will handle employees who are high-risk or subject to quarantine.
  • Keep business travel planned for the coming months under review.

Some of these measures are considered in more detail below.

2. What health and safety measures should employers take?

Risk levels for Covid-19 will vary for different work environments and employers should conduct a risk assessment to identify and implement appropriate risk mitigation measures.

Employers may need to consider ways to physically rearrange workplace set ups to maintain social distancing, such as moving desks to maximise space between workstations and enable back to back working. Employers may also want to provide additional cleaning materials in the workplace (tissues, hand-sanitizer, cleaning wipes, and so on) to encourage employees to take preventative steps.

It is sensible to remind staff of basic steps that can be taken to guard against illness, such as Public Health England’s "Catch it, Bin it, Kill it” method of preventing influenza and other communicable illnesses (“Catch” any sneezes in a tissue, “Bin” any tissues immediately and “Kill” the virus by washing hands with soap and warm water).

You can read GQ|Littler’s guidance on health and safety obligations as workspaces reopen here.

Vulnerable Workers

Additional considerations apply where employers are aware that particular employees may have increased vulnerability to Covid-19, such as pregnant workers or those with pre-existing respiratory problems or compromised immune systems. In these cases, a specific risk assessment should be undertaken and reasonable protective steps taken, in consultation with the staff involved and with occupational health input where appropriate.

For pregnant employees, where changes to working conditions cannot adequately mitigate risk, the employer may need to offer temporary alternative employment or suspend the worker on medical grounds (with full pay). 

You can read GQ|Littler’s guidance on the health and safety issues employers should consider in respect of vulnerable employees, particularly when planning the return to work here.

3. How should employers be preparing for the return to work?

As the UK begins to make tentative changes to ease lockdown, a wider range of employees are permitted to return to physical workplaces.*

The default position under current government guidance is that homeworking should still be standard where possible. If your employees have been working effectively from home thus far, there should be no immediate rush to make changes. 

However if there is a business need to reopen a physical workspace, there are some key points to consider.

  • Stay on top of government guidance, in particular the 'Working safely during coronavirus' guidance.
  • Conduct a risk assessment to determine what steps are needed to comply with government guidance and make the workplace 'Covid-19 secure.'
  • Make the necessary changes to the workplace and working patterns.
  • Communicate with employees (including union representatives and health and safety representatives ) early and often – it is important to get employee buy in to your plans, both to minimise the risk of any morale issues but also to minimise the risk of legal claims from disgruntled employees.
  • Be flexible – it may be appropriate to bring some teams backs into the office but others may be able to continue with homeworking.
  • Consider your data protection obligations carefully, in particular in relation to any monitoring of employee health.
  • Be conscious of the differing needs of vulnerable employees – you may need to be flexible in continuing to permit homeworking or temporary changes to job duties.
  • For more detailed guidance on the issues employers should be considering when planning the return to work, please see GQ|Littler’s guidance on health and safety, data protection, and handling employees who refuse to return to work. All of GQ|Littler’s ‘Back to the Workplace’ materials are available on our website.

* Please note that this guidance refers primarily to businesses in England – lockdown measures are being eased at varying timeframes across the UK’s four nations.

4. Do employers have to pay staff who are off work due to Covid-19?

In many instances of absence due to Covid-19, employees will be entitled to statutory sick pay (SSP), set at £95.85 a week from 6 April 2020. A number of changes to SSP have been implemented which, in broad terms, relax the rules to encourage employees to stay at home if they are at risk of spreading Covid-19.

The changes to SSP in response to the Covid-19 pandemic include:

  • The normal requirement for three 'waiting days' before SSP becomes payable has been temporarily waived for sickness absence after 13 March 2020, meaning SSP will be payable from the first day of absence from work. This is a blanket change and applies to sickness absence for non-Covid-19 related illness.
  • From 13 March 2020, everyone who is either (i) self-isolating because they or someone in their household have Covid-19 symptoms (however mild) or (ii) shielding after receiving written notification from the government and in both cases, is unable to work from home, will be eligible to receive SSP.
  • From 28 March 2020, anyone notified by the UK Government’s ‘test and trace’ system that they have had contact with a confirmed Covid-19 case and therefore required to isolate at home for 14 days will be eligible to receive SSP. 
  • Individuals who are self-isolating because they or someone in their household has Covid-19 or are shielding are able to obtain an 'isolation note’ from the NHS website or NHS 111, rather than being required to visit their doctor in person, which will act as evidence for employers in relation to sick pay entitlement. Isolation notes are not available to those who have been told to isolate by the ‘test and trace’ system. Instead employees should provide evidence of the notification received from the ‘test and trace’ system if the employer requires evidence of sick pay entitlement.
  • Businesses with fewer than 250 employees will be able to claim back from the government the cost of providing SSP for up to 14 days to any employee absent from work due to Covid-19 (including if they are required under current guidance to self-isolate) where the first day of absence fell on or after 13 March 2020. The Coronavirus Statutory Sick Pay Rebate Scheme opened for claims on 26 May 2020. Details are available on the government website here. Entitlement to any sick pay in excess of SSP will be determined by the contract of employment of the relevant employees.

Other Covid-19 related absences fall outside the scope of SSP. If an employee is unable to work because of a lack of childcare they may be placed on furlough or they may be entitled to take unpaid time off for dependants or parental leave. As workplaces reopen, there is an increased risk that an employee will refuse to return to work on grounds that they do not feel it is safe to do so – even if the employer has put in place measures to minimise risk. Whether the employee is entitled to pay in such circumstances is tricky and will depend on the individual facts.

The position is summarised in the table below.

Aside from strict legal entitlements, employers will be wise to consider broader policy objectives in determining whether to pay staff. While press coverage indicates a wide divergence in practice between large employers, strict adherence to the legal rules may prove to be a false economy compared to the cost of losing talent or endangering the rest of your workforce and risking a further office shutdown.

*The position may be different in parts of the UK outside England.

5. Can employers continue to use the furlough scheme? 

Yes. The furlough scheme has been extended until the end of October 2020. The furlough scheme will change from 1 July 2020 and the scheme will close to new entrants from 30 June 2020 (save for very limited exceptions). 

Those who have previously been placed on a qualifying period of furlough leave will remain eligible until 31 October 2020 and can be moved on/off furlough as needed. The cut off date means that employees who had not previously been furloughed needed to be placed on furlough by 10 June at the latest in order for the employee to have a valid claim by the 30 June deadline.

The Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme was introduced in March and allows employers to place employees on “furlough”, a temporary suspension of all work due to Covid-19, and the UK Government will contribute up to 80% of the employee’s wages, up to a maximum of £2,500 per month. Only employees who (i) were on payroll as at 19 March 2020 and (ii) who have completed a qualifying three-week period of furlough as at 30 June 2020 are eligible for furlough. A limited exception to the second requirement applies to those returning from statutory maternity or paternity leave after 10 June 2020. Up to and including 31 July 2020, employers can also claim for reimbursement of employer National Insurance Contributions and mandatory employer auto enrolment pension contributions associated with that 80% of wage costs. The employer can choose to top-up wages in part or full if they wish. Employers have been encouraged to consider furlough instead of making redundancies if they are experiencing a business downturn.

  • From 1 July, employers will be able to use ‘flexible furlough’, allowing employees to return to work part time but remaining on furlough (and in receipt of the government subsidy) for the remainder of normal working hours.
  • From 1 August, employers will need to pay all employers NICs and minimum employer auto-enrolment pension contributions. These payments will no longer be covered by the government subsidy.
  • From 1 September the amount of government subsidy will reduce to 70% (capped at £2,187.50) with employers required to pay 10% (capped at £312.50).
  • From 1 October, the amount of government subsidy will reduce further to 60% (capped at £1,875) and employers will be required to pay 20% capped at £625). 

The standard position in UK law is that employees cannot be “laid-off” without pay unless specific provisions are contained in their contract of employment. It is rare that contractual provisions of this type are in place and there are statutory constraints on how they can be used.

Employers may nevertheless be able to make use of the government’s Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme to place employees on ‘furlough’ but should be conscious that employee consent will be required in most cases if employment contracts do not include specific “lay off” clauses.

You can read GQ|Littler’s full guide to the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme here.

6.  What should employers be doing if they need to make redundancies?

Unfortunately, as the dust settles from lockdown and Covid-19 continues to impact on businesses, many employers will be thinking about redundancies in the coming months.

At GQ|Littler we have published guidance on the key aspects of large-scale redundancies and collective consultancy that employers need to be aware of.

7.  Should employers cancel or defer business travel?

Foreign Office (FCO) guidance on travel should be checked regularly here. At the time of writing the FCO advice is to avoid overseas travel unless essential. There are certain areas where the FCO advises against all travel.

For the areas where the FCO is advising against all travel, business trips obviously should be cancelled or postponed. Failure to do this is likely to breach duties to the employee in question and potentially the broader workforce and others.

For the areas where the FCO is advising against all but essential travel, business trips should be cancelled or postponed, if possible. This decision will require a balancing of all relevant factors, including the destination, business needs and an individual employee’s circumstances and concerns. Employees should be directed to follow self-isolation guidance in all cases.

Employers should take particular care in respect of travel if the employee (or someone they live with) is at higher risk of becoming seriously ill if they are exposed to Covid-19 because of age, pregnancy, or a pre-existing medical condition such as respiratory problems. A list of those considered to be particularly vulnerable to Covid-19 is included in government guidance here. Employers should consult with the individual, their doctors, and in some cases, an occupational health specialist to assess whether travel can safely proceed.

Employers should consider the requirement for the vast majority of travellers to quarantine on entering the UK for 14 days, which came into effect on 8 June 2020. Failing to comply with these rules can lead to fines of up to £1,000. The quarantine rules apply to travellers arriving in the UK from any country and by any means (i.e., road, plane, boat, train), other than a number of countries that are exempt. This includes Ireland, the Isle of Man, and the Channel Islands as well as a wider range of countries announced on 3 July, including France and Spain. There are certain limited exemptions to the requirement to self-isolate for certain jobs, including road haulage workers and pilots. These rules will be reviewed every three weeks. Full details are available here.

8. How should employers communicate with staff?

Employers should consider in advance and notify staff of their general approach to company sick pay including self-isolation within UK Government guidance. Additional communications on the approach to office closures, home working and absence through school closures may also be sensible.

Employers should communicate with staff in an accurate and even-handed way. This may be a stressful situation for some employees and employers should avoid unnecessarily causing undue anxiety. In particular:

  • Employers should stay informed of official UK Government guidance from the Department of Health and Social Care and the FCO;
  • Managers and HR should not provide medical opinions about the effects and spread of Covid-19; and
  • In most cases, communications and advice should reflect only the UK Government or occupational health guidelines and other official sources. Misinformation should be corrected promptly if it arises.

9. Can employers send home employees who are at high risk of carrying COVID-19?

Employees should be sent home if their circumstances fall within current UK Government guidance triggering self-isolation (see UK Government Guidance for Employers) or who are otherwise advised by PHE, a doctor, or by the Government’s ‘test and trace’ system to self-isolate for a certain period. There is a theoretical risk that sending an employee home when they are medically fit to work may be a breach of contract or even constructive dismissal. However, the practical risk of a successful claim being established is outweighed by the risks of allowing the employee to attend work.

Sending employees home in circumstances where UK Government guidance does not currently recommend self-isolation carries a higher risk and further advice should be sought.

10. What personal information can employers collect and share about employees who may be carrying COVID-19?

Collecting and sharing information about the health of a worker is highly regulated under UK and EU law, including under the General Data Protection Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (GDPR).

Of course, if an employee is suspected of carrying Covid-19 then risks of immediate harm to your employees and public health, and of breaching the duties of care that you owe to prevent that harm, may need to take precedence over data protection considerations. But advance consideration of the issues may help you mitigate risk.

Employers should take heed of recent guidance from the UK Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) stating that the ICO will be taking an "empathic and pragmatic" approach (within reason) to enforcement of GDPR in the UK as the Covid-19 pandemic continues. In particular, the ICO will relax the timeframes necessary to respond to information requests such as data subject access requests. Though this pragmatic approach by the ICO is welcome, it does not give employers a free pass to ignore data protection laws entirely and a reasonable approach should be taken. 

As more employees begin to return to physical workplaces as lockdown eases, a whole host of new data protection concerns will arise in relation to health screening and the collection of.

Employers should continue to consider these headline points on GDPR compliance during the Covid-19 outbreak:

  • A complete exemption from certain provisions of GDPR applies where serious harm to a person is likely and a health care professional has indicated that processing the health information is necessary to prevent that harm. This may apply if, for example, Public Health England is involved in tracing the contact chain of a carrier.

In other cases:

  • Processing of health information which is necessary to prevent harm to employees and the public will be lawful under specific rules covering monitoring of epidemics and the discharge of legal duties.
  • The usual requirements for processing data will apply, including as to proportionality and the existence of appropriate documents such as privacy notices, a data protection policy and data retention policies. Compliant employers will already have these documents in place.
  • A risk assessment should be conducted and appropriate to mitigate the privacy impact should it be implemented. In some urgent cases, this may simply be impracticable but could be performed now in advance of need.
  • In all cases, information should be anonymised, or a pseudonym used, if at all possible, i.e. where this does not defeat the purpose of the processing. In cases such as precautionary office shutdown, it will not usually be necessary to identify the carrier publicly and it is important not to do so.
  • GQ|Littler’s full guidance on the key data protection issues employers should be considering is available here.

11. Can employers take action if employees do not perform their duties without good reason?

It is likely that some employees will be unwilling to attend work or undertake business travel, due to fears about Covid-19. Where these actions are outside the recommendations of UK Government guidance, they potentially amount to a breach of contract by the employee and grounds for disciplinary action.

However, knee-jerk reactions by employers are still likely to attract legal liability. In all cases, employers should speak to staff, try to understand and address their concerns and reach a sensible compromise. Consideration should be given to whether any special factors exist relevant to that employee that merit different treatment.

Any disciplinary action should involve an appropriate process in line with ACAS guidance.

Read our overview of the risks employers face when disciplining employees for refusing to return to work here.

12. Can employers stop employees from taking holidays to high-risk areas?

This is a grey area. Employers do not have a clear right to restrict travel to high-risk areas outside working time. However, employees can be required to notify travel to these areas to their employer and could potentially be required to take extra holiday or unpaid leave to cover any consequent self-isolation period. If the resultant extended period of leave is more than the employer can accommodate, then it may be possible to refuse the leave.

Consideration will need to be given to whether implementation of any such policy is indirectly discriminatory (see question 13 below).

13. Does Covid-19 present discrimination risks?

Employers should be conscious of the risks of discrimination in how both they and employees respond to Covid-19.

There have unfortunately been reports across the world of racist abuse being directed at those perceived to be Chinese. Employers may be liable for the discriminatory acts of employees and should be vigilant. If needed, employers should remind employees of their equality obligations by reference to appropriate policy documents and should take swift action if problems arise.

Any policies in response to Covid-19 should apply to all employees and be based on potential risks, as assessed in line with official guidance, otherwise employers risk direct discrimination claims. For example, if an employer were to target Chinese employees for additional precautions, rather than those with recent travel links to affected areas, this would be a very significant discrimination risk.

A policy requiring employees without symptoms who have recently travelled to certain countries to remain at home for 14 days may be indirectly discriminatory. This will be the case if it disproportionately affects staff of a particular ethnic origin (such as those whose nationality or ethnicity is linked to those countries). The same may be true of policies described at question 11 above). It will however be open to an employer to argue that the policy was a justifiable and reasonable step to take. Where policies are in line with UK Government recommendations, employers are very likely to be able to succeed in this argument. However, precautionary measures that exceed UK Government guidance should be carefully scrutinised to ensure that they are legitimate and proportionate.

Employers will also need to ensure that their decisions are consistent and proportionate in respect of home working, sick pay and action in respect of employees who do not attend work for reasons other than actual or suspected infection.

14. Where can employers find additional information?

 

Information contained in this publication is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or opinion, nor is it a substitute for the professional judgment of an attorney.