EMPLOYMENT
LEGISLATION
MATERNITY
LEAVE – CHANGES
A basic summary (PL507 Rev 3)
The Government is committed to helping working parents.
Changes to maternity leave rights benefit women whose expected week of childbirth (EWC) begins on
or after 6 April 2003.
At the same time, the Government
is introducing rights to paid adoption and paternity leave, and the right for
parents of young children to apply to work flexibly. These rights, together with existing rights to
parental leave and time off for dependants, provide parents
with more opportunities than ever before to balance work and
family life, whilst being compatible with, and beneficial to,
business efficiency.
This
document provides only basic information on the key
changes to maternity leave – many maternity-related rights and
obligations remain unchanged, including the right to time
off for antenatal care, the two- week period of compulsory
maternity leave after the birth, the maternity health and safety
suspension provisions, and the right to protection from
detrimental treatment on grounds of maternity. This document does
not attempt to describe the detail of the changes and should not
be taken as an authoritative statement of the law.
Detailed guidance on
both the existing and the new rights is given in Maternity
rights (PL958), which is available from the DTI website.
Women whose babies are due on or
after 6
April 2003,
and their employers, will benefit from revised, simplified rights to
maternity leave.
Start
dates
Women
whose expected week of childbirth (EWC) begins on or after 6
April 2003 benefit from the new maternity leave provisions.
Women
whose EWC is on or after 6 April 2003 benefit from the new
leave rights even if their babies are born earlier than
expected.
The
changes to maternity leave provisions do not apply to
women whose EWC is before 6 April 2003, even if their babies are
born later than expected on or after 6 April 2003.
Length of maternity leave
The
length of ordinary maternity leave is increased and
pregnant employees are entitled to 26 weeks’ ordinary
maternity leave, regardless of how long they have worked for
their employer.
Ordinary
maternity leave is normally paid leave.
Women
who have completed 26 weeks’ continuous service with their
employer by the beginning of the 14th week before their EWC can take additional
maternity leave. Additional
maternity leave starts immediately after ordinary maternity
leave and continues for a further 26 weeks.
Additional maternity leave is usually unpaid although
a woman may have contractual rights to pay during her period of
additional maternity leave.
Notice of intention to take maternity
leave
A
pregnant employee must notify her employer of her
intention to take maternity leave by the end of the 15th week before her
EWC, unless this is not reasonably practicable. She
must tell her employer:
A
woman can change her mind about when she wants to
start her leave providing she tells her employer at least 28
days in advance (unless this is not reasonably practicable).
Employers are
required to respond to a woman’s
notification of her leave plans within 28 days unless the woman
has varied that date, in which case the employer must respond
with 28 days of the start of maternity leave.
An employer must write to his employee, setting
out the date on which he expects her to return to work if she
takes her full entitlement to maternity leave. A model letter
for employers to use (if they wish to do so) is available in Maternity
rights (PL958).
There
is no change to how early a woman is able to start her
maternity leave – the earliest date
continues to be the
beginning of the 11th week before her baby is due.
Returning to work after maternity leave
There
is no longer provision for an employer to write to a woman
before the end of her ordinary maternity leave period to ask the
date on which her child was born and whether she intends to
return after her additional maternity leave period. This means
that a woman who intends to return to work at the end of her
full maternity leave entitlement is not required to give
any further notification to her employer.
An
employee who wants to return to work before
the end of her maternity leave needs to give her employer 28
days' notice of the date she wants to return to work.
Sickness trigger
A
woman’s maternity leave starts automatically if she is
absent from work for a pregnancy related illness during the four
weeks before the start of her EWC, regardless of when she has
said she actually wants her maternity leave to start.
Other
changes
Statutory Maternity Pay and
Maternity Allowance
The
Department for Work and Pensions is making changes to
Statutory Maternity Pay (SMP) and Maternity Allowance (MA). The
most important of these increase the length of time covered by
SMP or MA and increase the amount paid.
Women
who are entitled to SMP or MA and whose EWC begins on or after 6
April 2003 receive SMP or MA for 26 weeks.
Women who are entitled
to SMP or MA and whose EWC begins on or after 6 April 2003 but
who give birth prematurely, are entitled to receive
SMP or MA for 26 weeks.
From
6 April 2003, the standard rates of SMP and MA are increasing from the current £75 a week to £100 a week (or 90%
of the woman's average weekly earnings if this is less than £100
a week). There is no change to the current earnings-related
rate of SMP (90% of average weekly earnings) which applies for
the first six weeks of the pay period.
The
new standard rates apply from 6 April 2003 to all women getting
SMP or MA at that point regardless of when they expect their
baby, or whether they qualify for the new extended pay period.
The current standard rate of £75 applies up to 5 April 2003.
When
the changes are fully in place, women either get:
Or
Full
details of the revised SMP and MA schemes can be found in the
leaflet NI17A (October 2002 version) which is available from
your local Jobcentre Plus/social security office. Details are
also available from the
Department for Work and
Pensions website.
Full details of the existing SMP
and MA schemes can be found in the leaflet NI17A (April 2001
version) which is available from your local social security
office or Jobcentre Plus office.
Details are also available on the Department
for Work and Pensions website.
Further
information about the SMP scheme for employers is additionally
available from the Inland Revenue's helpbook E15 Pay and time
off work for parents (copies available on 08457 64 66 46). For
additional help, employers may phone the employers' helpline on
08457 14 31 43
Employers’ recovery of payments
Existing
arrangements for employers to recover Statutory Maternity Pay
(SMP) continue – employers are able to claim back 92% of
the payments they make, with those eligible for small
employers’ relief able to claim back 100% plus an additional
amount in compensation for the employer’s portion of National
Insurance contributions paid on SMP.
In
addition, under the new arrangements, employers who need to, can
get funding in advance for payments of SMP
from the Inland Revenue.
Other
Family Friendly Rights
Right to apply to work flexibly
A
right for parents of young, or disabled,
children to request flexible working is being introduced. From 6 April 2003
eligible employees who are parents of children aged under six,
or of disabled children aged under 18, will have the right to
apply to work flexibly. Their employers will have a duty to
consider such requests seriously. See Flexible working
– the
right to apply (PL516)
Right to paid paternity leave
A
right to paternity leave and
pay is being introduced. Eligible employees can take
up to two weeks’ paid leave to care for their new baby and
support the mother. The right is available to employees whose children are expected
to be born, or are born, on or after 6 April 2003. See
Paternity
leave and pay
(PL514).
Rights to paid leave for adoptive parents
A
right to adoption leave and pay is being
introduced. The right
is available to individuals who adopt, or one partner
of a couple where the couple adopt jointly. A right to
paternity leave and pay for the other member of the couple, or
an adopter’s partner, is also being introduced. Employees whose children are placed with
them on or after 6 April 2003 benefit from these adoption
and paternity leave and pay rights.
See Adoptive parents
– rights to leave and pay (PL515).
Rights
to parental leave and time off for dependants
Employees
– both mothers and fathers – who have completed one year’s service with their
employers are entitled to 13 weeks’ (unpaid) parental leave to care
for their child. Parental leave can usually be taken up to five years from the date
of birth or in cases of adoption five years from the date of placement (or the
child’s 18th birthday, if that is sooner).
Parents
of disabled children are entitled to 18 weeks’ parental leave (previously 13
weeks) up to the child’s 18th birthday, providing they have the
qualifying length of service. See Parental
leave
(PL509) (228Kb).
All
employees are also entitled to take a reasonable amount of (unpaid) time off
work to deal with an emergency or unexpected situation involving a dependant.
See Time off for dependants
(96Kb).
Further
information
Both
employers and employees can use the DTI website
and its interactive guidance
site - TIGER
to work out entitlements to paternity and maternity leave
and pay.
Employers
can get more information on SMP from the Inland Revenue.
For additional help, employers may phone the employers’ helpline on 08457 14 31 43.
Further
advice on employment law matters, including the new rights, as well as good practice guidance is available from
offices of Acas.
Small
businesses can register at businesslink to receive reminders and
updates about changes to employment law. Information is also available on a wide
range of help for small businesses.
Information on all aspects of employment legislation can usually be
provided by accountants, citizens advice bureaux, employer organisations, legal
advisers, low pay units, trade unions and a number of private sector and
voluntary bodies.
|