Buzzing About HR

HR Without the Headache: Decoding the Employment Rights Bill

Kate Underwood Season 1 Episode 24

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Feeling overwhelmed by the Employment Rights Bill landing in your inbox? Take a deep breath – you've got time. The latest legal roadmap outlines changes rolling out in stages between 2025 and 2027, not crashing down tomorrow.

This episode cuts through the complexity with a clear timeline of what's changing and when. We start with union-related measures at Royal Assent (likely late 2025), moving to the April 2026 changes including day-one rights to paternity leave, sick pay from day one with no lower earnings limit, and the establishment of the Fair Work Agency. By October 2026, we'll see bans on certain fire and rehire practices and a legal duty to prevent harassment, followed by day-one unfair dismissal protection and flexible working rights.

Rather than tackling everything immediately, I'm advocating for a "phased readiness" approach. Map your existing policies against future requirements, use August's quieter pace to review one area like sickness or harassment prevention, and set up a simple tracking system. Some businesses are managing this perfectly with basic spreadsheets or Trello boards that assign each change to the relevant quarter – creating a living plan rather than a last-minute scramble.

We bust common myths along the way (no, you don't need to implement everything now), answer pressing questions about the Fair Work Agency and policy updates, and share practical examples of businesses getting it right. August gives you the perfect opportunity to review, plan, and tackle easy wins before autumn's inevitable chaos arrives.

Download my 10-point employment rights readiness checklist from the show notes or kateunderwoodhr.co.uk – it's the simplest way to stay on track without the stress. Remember, small consistent actions now prevent expensive headaches later.

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Speaker 1:

Picture this it's mid-August, the 12th to be exact, and while half the country seems to be on holiday, my inbox has decided I need a little light summer reading. Otherwise known as the latest legal roadmap for the Employment Rights Bill, it sets out changes rolling in stages between now and 2027. But here's the thing this isn't a tidal wave crashing in tomorrow. It's more like a slow, steady tide and as a small business owner, you do not have to jump into full compliance overnight. In the next 20 minutes you'll get the dates to care about and a short checklist, my 10 point employment rights readiness checklist, so you can crack on this quarter without losing your head or your lunch break. So pour your brew, maybe sneak outside for a bit of sun and by the end of this episode you'll understand what's landing soon and when. What can wait until later, how to without panic. Hello, I'm Kate Underwood, your HR lifeline, workplace demystifier and champion of small businesses surviving compliance with grace. You've tuned in to Buzzing About HR, where big legislative changes become manageable steps even in the middle of the holiday season. Legislative changes become manageable steps even in the middle of the holiday season, and actually August is the perfect time to tackle the light prep jobs, the phones are quieter, half your team are in Cornwall or Spain and you've got a rare chance to look ahead before the September-October everything-all-at-once chaos arrives. The Employment Rights Bill Roadmap a phased rollout. On 1 July 2025, the Government published the Employment Rights Bill Implementation Roadmap setting a clear path for changes planned across 2026 and 2027. Here's the simplified timeline At Royal Ascent Likely late 2025.

Speaker 1:

Repeal of restrictive union laws. Simplified industrial action procedures. Protections against dismissal for taking lawful industrial action. April 2026. Day one rights to paternity and unpaid parental leave. Statutory sick pay from day one with no lower earnings limit. Establishment of the Fair Work Agency. Stronger whistleblowing protections. Simplified trade union recognition and digital balloting. Doubling redundancy protective awards October 2026. Ban on certain fire and rehire practices. Legal duty to take all reasonable steps to prevent sexual harassment, including from third parties. Extended tribunal time limits. Greater trade union rights and regulation of tipping practices Day 1. Protection from unfair dismissal probation periods to follow separately. Stronger, flexible working rights. New bereavement leave. Protections for pregnant workers. Limits on zero-hours contracts and required notice for shift cancellation. Regulation of umbrella companies and guaranteed hours for low-hours workers. Regulation of umbrella companies and guaranteed hours for low hours workers.

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What needs doing Now? A calmer approach. Phew, that's a lot, but you do not have to tackle it all at once. What you can do Now keep an eye on government consultations due out in the next six to nine months, particularly around unfair dismissal, zero hours and flexible working. Map your existing policies to the future changes so you know where the gaps will be. Block out time this quarter to review just one area like sickness absence or harassment prevention For April 2026. Update your sick pay and parental leave policies so they're ready for the changes. Decide who in your business will liaise with the new Fair Work Agency if you need guidance For October 2026. Start shaping a stronger harassment prevention framework, including third-party risks. Review your redundancy and fire and rehire processes for compliance.

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Myth busting and small biz strategy. Myth one I have to do everything now or I'll get fined. Nope, the roadmap gives you time. Stay informed, not panicked. Myth one I have to do everything now or I'll get fined. Nope, the roadmap gives you time. Stay informed, not panicked. Myth two if I delay, I'll lose credibility. Actually preparing and communicating thoughtfully builds trust internally and with your team. Mini drama one small cafe owner panicked after hearing about day one dismissal rights and scrapped probation clauses overnight. Result huge staff confusion and awkward conversations. It would have been better to wait for the official guidance and implement the change alongside training, alongside training.

Speaker 1:

Listener. Q and A. Q Do we need to start working with the Fair Work Agency now? A Number it's not operational yet. Keep watch for early 2026. Q Should I start unpaid parental leave policies now? A you can add a coming soon section in your handbook, but no rush, it's April 2026 before it's live. Q what if I don't have time for policy updates? A Prioritise, choose the one or two changes that matter most for your team this quarter, for your team this quarter.

Speaker 1:

Buzzword of the day Phased readiness, not panic. Break the changes into manageable chunks. Tie each to a quarter between now and 2027. You'll avoid overwhelm and you'll actually get things done. Part six who's getting it right? One local retailer has built a simple spreadsheet one column for the change, one for the date it comes into effect, one for the owner in their team and a tick box for when it's complete. Another client uses Trello, tagging each change to the relevant quarter. It's a living plan, not a last-minute scramble.

Speaker 1:

Final thoughts yes, the Employment Rights Bill is big. Yes, it's historic, but the phased rollout means you can adapt at a sensible pace. The phased rollout means you can adapt at a sensible pace. Use August to review, plan and tidy up the easy wins. Come autumn you'll be ready for the next steps without the stress. And remember small, consistent actions now. Save you from big, expensive headaches later. If you'd like my 10-point employment rights readiness checklist, you can grab it in the show notes or via kateunderwoodhrcouk. It's the simplest way to know what's next and when. That's it for this episode of Buzzing About HR. If it's helped calm the compliance jitters, share it with another business owner or save it for that moment in October when you think wait, when was that change again? Until next time, stay proactive, stay prepared and keep enjoying the summer while it lasts. Bye for now.

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