COVID-19 Crisis: BPA Launches Employee Implications for UK Ports

963

  • BPA has launched a new information resource for UK ports to manage the COVID-19 crisis.
  • BPA asked the ports and maritime law firm Hill Dickinson to produce a short paper on the employment implications for UK ports.
  • It focuses on how can employees deal with the UK lockdown, sickness/self-isolation payments.
  • Gives an idea of continuing operations, furlough, and other business support mechanisms.

According to an article published in Saftey4sea, the British Ports Authority (BPA) launched a new information resource for the UK ports managing the COVID-19 crisis.

BPA’s efforts to mitigate the situation

Specifically, the BPA has been working flat-out to boost and support the industry amid the current situations, with regular calls and correspondence with the UK and devolved Governments on everything from business support and key workers to security and fishing.

BPA asked the ports and maritime law firm Hill Dickinson, an Associate Member of the British Ports Association (BPA), to produce a short paper on the employment implications for UK ports as the shipping industry addresses the global coronavirus pandemic.

It is stated that the paper is in line with BPA’s Port Futures Programme which is a series of papers considering emerging and innovative trends in the port sector.

Paper highlights

The paper focuses on how can employees deal with the UK lockdown, sickness/self-isolation payments and how to continue operations.

UK lockdown

To reduce the spread of COVID-19, on Monday 23 March 2020, the UK government introduced three measures:

  • Requiring people to stay at home, except for very limited purposes.
  • Closing certain businesses and venues.
  • Stopping all gatherings of more than two people in public.
  • Schools, nurseries, and colleges closed on Friday 20 March 2020 to all but the children of ‘key workers’ and those deemed vulnerable.

The Department for Education described ‘key workers’ as work which is critical to the COVID-19 response; or work in critical sectors, including:

Food and other necessary goods

This includes those involved in food production, processing, distribution, sale, and delivery, as well as those essential to the provision of other key goods (for example hygienic and veterinary medicines; and

Transport

Includes those who will keep the air, water, road and rail passenger and freight transport modes operating during the COVID-19 response, including those working on transport systems through which supply chains pass.

Sickness / self-isolation payments

  • The starting point for employers should be to minimize, so far as possible, the risk of workers bringing coronavirus infection with them to work.
  • If workers attend work whilst symptomatic, or when they ought to be self-isolating, then the chances of them infecting colleagues, particularly at a port, is significant.
  • Workers should be instructed to follow the government’s current self-isolation guidance, which is to self-isolate for seven days for those with a persistent cough or fever (or for the whole household to self-isolate for 14 days if any member has these symptoms).
  • If a worker meets this criterion attends work, they should immediately be sent home to self-isolate.

Currently, if a worker in England (although we understand that mirror regulations have now also been passed in Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales) is ordinarily eligible for statutory sick pay (SSP), it will be payable if they are:

  • Incapacitated due to injury or illness (i.e. symptomatic).

Deemed to be incapacitated despite being ‘capable’ of work because one of the following applies:

  • They are self-isolating for 7 or 14 days in accordance with the online self-isolation guidance.
  • NHS 111 or a doctor advises an employee to self-isolate due to coronavirus (this can be orally or in writing, but should be followed up with a self-isolation notice if oral).
  • A doctor states that the employee should not work for precautionary or convalescent reasons.
  • Excluded from work on a certificate from a medical officer for environmental health and are under medical observation because they are a carrier of, or have been in contact with, an infectious disease.

Continuing operations

With a likely increase in sickness absence levels amongst the workforce, employers at UK ports will need to consider:

    • Which roles can be performed remotely, and put measures in place to support agile and flexible working.
    • If working remotely is not possible, unaffected ‘key workers’ should be expected to perform their duties as normal (with reference to social distancing guidance and PPE if necessary).
  • If a business should continue to operate with a skeleton workforce only.
  • If home-working is not an option consider:
    • advising, or instructing, affected staff to use their annual leave during the period of emergency measures (which will also make them available to work later in the holiday year.
    • asking (or if contracts allow for temporary lay-offs, instructing) staff to take an agreed period of unpaid leave (‘layoff’).
    • ‘furloughing’.
  • Placing restrictions on annual leave for unaffected ‘key workers’ (within those permitted by any employment contract and Working Time Regulations 1988) will help to make staff available during the peak of coronavirus disturbances.
  • If the number of agency, temporary and casual staff can be reduced to cut costs.

Furlough and other business support mechanisms

On Friday 20 March 2020, the chancellor announced a new package of business support measures to help businesses during the economic crisis created by a coronavirus. An important part of the package is the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme (or ‘furlough leave’). Furlough Leave is a temporary leave of absence for economic reasons and is designed to save jobs.

At this stage, we only have limited details of the scheme, provided through HMRC guidance but the key features are:

  • An employee can be placed on ‘furlough leave’ instead of being dismissed or laid off.
  • The employee will remain on the payroll and continue to accrue continuous service/annual leave.
  • HMRC will reimburse 80% of furloughed workers’ wage costs (capped at £2,500 per month) plus employer’s NICs and minimum automatic enrolment employer pension contributions on that wage.
  • Fees, commission and bonuses should not be included in the 80% furlough reimbursement.
  • The employer can choose to top 80% up to full pay.
  • The furlough scheme is open to all UK employers that had created and started a PAYE payroll scheme on 28 February 2020.
  • The furloughed employee must have been on your PAYE payroll on 28 February 2020.
  • Payments can be backdated to 1 March (but reimbursement will not apply to periods of active work after that date).
  • The scheme will initially run until 31 May 2020 but may be extended.
  • The minimum period of furlough leave is three weeks (and it does not appear that an employer will be able to recall an employee during this time and reclaim payments as ‘furlough’).
  • Payments are expected to be available from the end of April (date not confirmed).
  • HMRC is working urgently to set up a system for reimbursement because their existing systems are not set up to facilitate payments to employers.

The employer must submit information to HMRC confirming which employees have been put on furlough leave and their earnings through a new online portal (HMRC yet to confirm details). Specialist employment advice should be taken before steps are taken to ‘furlough’ employees as employers need to be mindful of both their statutory and contractual obligations.

All businesses

What support?

  • Furlough leaves.
  • HMRC will reimburse 80% of furloughed workers’ wage costs, up to a cap of £2500 per month.
  • HMRC is working urgently to set up a system for reimbursement.
  • Deferred VAT.
  • Valued Added Tax (VAT) payments deferred for three months.
  • Time to pay service.
  • Deferral of any tax liability agreed with HMRC on a case-by-case basis.

Eligibility

  • Existing systems are not set up to facilitate payments to employers.
  • Must designate affected employees as ‘furloughed workers,’ (this will probably need to be agreed with the employee as temporary contract change).
  • Must submit information to HMRC about the employees that have been furloughed and their earnings through a new online portal (HMRC yet to confirm details).
  • All UK businesses are eligible.
  • For VAT, the deferral will apply from 20 March 2020 until 30 June 2020.
  • Automatic; no applications required. Do not need to make a VAT payment during this period.
  • Pay tax to the UK government and have outstanding liability.

SMEs (less than 250 staff) – any sector

What support?

  • SSP recovery for COVID-19 absence.
  • Up to two weeks’ SSP per eligible employee who has been off work because of COVID-19.
  • The eligible period for the scheme will commence the day after the regulations on the extension of SSP to those staying at home came into force.
  • Repayment mechanism to be announced.
  • Small business grant scheme.
  • Cash grants of up to £10,000 per business.
  • Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan.
  • A new temporary Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan Scheme, delivered by the British Business Bank, will launch soon to support primarily small and medium-sized businesses to access bank lending and overdrafts.
  • The government will provide lenders with a guarantee of 80% on each loan (subject to a per-lender cap on claims) to give lenders further confidence in continuing to provide finance to SMEs.
  • The government will not charge businesses or banks for this guarantee, and the Scheme will support loans of up to £5 million in value.

Eligibility

  • SMEs will have any SSP paid for sickness absence due to COVID-19 reimbursed. The eligibility criteria for the scheme will be as follows:
  • Size of an employer-determined as of 28 February 2020.
  • Employers should maintain records of staff absences, but employees will not need to provide a GP fit note.
  • Small businesses that pay little or no business rates and are eligible for small business rate relief (SBBR) or rural rate relief (RRR).
  • They will be contacted by their local authority – they do not need to apply. The funding will be provided to local authorities in early April.
  • Business is UK based.
  • Turnover of no more than £45 million per year.
  • Business meets the other British Business Bank eligibility criteria.

Larger firms and other sectors

What support?

  • Bank of England Loan Scheme.
  • Low cost and easily accessible.
  • Available early in the week beginning 23 March 2020.

Eligibility

  • 250+ staff UK business

Did you subscribe to our daily newsletter?

It’s Free! Click here to Subscribe!

Source: Safety4sea