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STATUTORY INSTRUMENTS


2003 No. 1656

SEX DISCRIMINATION

The Equal Pay Act 1970 (Amendment) Regulations 2003

  Made 26th June 2003 
  Laid before Parliament 27th June 2003 
  Coming into force 19th July 2003 

The Secretary of State, being a Minister designated[1] for the purposes of section 2(2) of the European Communities Act 1972[2] in relation to measures relating to discrimination, in the exercise of the powers conferred by that section, hereby makes the following Regulations: - 

Citation, commencement and interpretation
     1.  - (1) These Regulations may be cited as the Equal Pay Act 1970 (Amendment) Regulations 2003.

    (2) These Regulations shall come into force on 19th July 2003 ("the commencement date").

    (3) In these Regulations "the Act" means the Equal Pay Act 1970[
3].

Application
     2.  - (1) The following provisions - 

apply for the purpose of determining whether an employment tribunal may make a determination in proceedings instituted on or after the commencement date (subject to paragraph (2) below).

    (2) Those provisions do not so apply if the last day on which the woman was employed in the employment falls more than six months before the commencement date.

    (3) If those provisions do so apply so as to enable an employment tribunal to make a determination in proceedings in a stable employment case (within the meaning given by virtue of regulation 4), the determination may not relate to any non-qualifying contract of employment forming part of the stable employment relationship.

    (4) For the purposes of paragraph (3) above a contract of employment is a non-qualifying contract of employment if it ended more than six months before the commencement date.

    (5) The following provisions - 

apply in relation to proceedings instituted on or after the commencement date.

    (6) The following provisions - 

apply for the purpose of determining whether an employment tribunal may make a determination on a complaint presented to it on or after the commencement date (subject to paragraph (7) below).

    (7) Those provisions do not so apply if the last day of the woman's period of service falls more than nine months before the commencement date.

Amendments to the time limits under section 2 of the Act
    
3.  - (1) Section 2 of the Act (disputes as to, and enforcement of, requirement of equal treatment) is amended as follows.

    (2) For subsection (4) substitute - 

    (3) For subsection (5) substitute - 

     4. After section 2 of the Act insert - 

     5. After section 2ZA of the Act (inserted by regulation 4) insert - 

Amendments to the time limits under section 7A of the Act etc.
    
6.  - (1) Section 7A of the Act (service pay and conditions) is amended as follows.

    (2) In subsection (2)(b), after "application)" insert "and subsection (13)".

    (3) For subsection (8) substitute - 

    (4) In subsection (9) for the words from "in respect of a time" to the end substitute - 

    (5) In subsection (12) after the words "this section" insert "and sections 7AA to 7AC below".

    (6) After subsection (12) insert - 

     7. After section 7A of the Act insert - 

     8. After section 7AA of the Act (inserted by regulation 7) insert - 

Meaning of "under a disability"
    
9. In section 11 of the Act (short title, interpretation and extent) after subsection (2) insert - 

Consequential amendment
     10. In section 1(13) of the Act (application of provisions to men and women) for the words "and 2A" substitute "to 2A".


Jacqui Smith,
Minister for Industry and the Regions and Deputy Minister for Women and Equality, Department of Trade and Industry

26th June 2003



EXPLANATORY NOTE

(This note is not part of the Regulations)


These Regulations amend the time limit within which a person must institute proceedings before an employment tribunal in respect of a breach of the Equal Pay Act 1970 ("the Act"). The Regulations also amend the time period in respect of which an employment tribunal or court is able to award any payment by way of arrears of remuneration or damages in such proceedings.

These changes are necessary to reflect requirements of European Community law, specifically Article 141 of the Treaty of Rome (equal pay), as applied in a number of recent cases before the European Court of Justice and the domestic courts[
6].

Regulation 3 amends the current rules which appear in sections 2(4) and 2(5) of the Act. Under the new rules, proceedings in the employment tribunal must be instituted on or before the "qualifying date". If proceedings are successful, the employment tribunal or court may award a payment in respect of any time when unequal pay was paid back to the "arrears date" (in proceedings in England and Wales) or in respect of any unequal pay within the relevant "period" (in proceedings in Scotland).

The rules for determining the "qualifying date", "arrears date" and "period" are contained in three new sections, which are inserted into the Act by regulations 4 and 5. The "qualifying date" in a standard case is the date falling six months after the last day of the employment in question. There are different rules where the employee and the employer had a stable employment relationship (even though one or more individual contracts of employment had ended), where the employer deliberately concealed relevant facts from the employee, or where the employee was under a disability.

For proceedings in England and Wales, the "arrears date" in a standard case is the date falling six years before the day on which the proceedings are instituted. There is a different arrears date where the employer deliberately concealed relevant facts from the employee, or where the employee was under a disability. For proceedings in Scotland, the relevant "period" is the period of five years ending on the day on which the proceedings are instituted. When calculating the five year period, any time when the employee was induced by the employer to refrain from commencing the proceedings by reason of fraud or error, or when the employee was under a disability, is ignored. However, the period may never exceed twenty years in total.

Section 7A of the Act contains separate rules for claims by service personnel in the armed forces. Regulations 6 to 8 make changes to the time limits and arrears periods which apply for such claims. The differences between the rules for service personnel and the rules described above are that the standard time limit for instituting proceedings is nine months rather than six, that there is no provision relating to stable employment relationships, and that the "arrears date" and "period" are generally calculated by reference to the day on which a complaint was made under the service redress procedures which members of the armed forces are usually obliged to follow before bringing proceedings.

The Regulations come into force on 19th July 2003. Regulation 2 makes provision for how the new rules will apply to proceedings or facts which already exist at that time.

A copy of the Regulatory Impact Assessment and the Transposition Note relating to these Regulations has been placed in the libraries of both Houses of Parliament, and can be obtained from the Women and Equality Unit, Department of Trade and Industry, Second Floor, 35 Great Smith Street, London, SW1P 3BQ.


Notes:

[1] See the European Communities (Designation) (No. 3) Order 2002 (S.I. 2002/1819).back

[2] 1972 c.68.back

[3] 1970 c.41; section 2 was amended by the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 (c.65) section 8(6), and Schedule 1, Part I, and the Employment Rights (Dispute Resolution) Act 1998 (c.8) section 1(2)(a). Section 7A was inserted by the Armed Forces Act 1996 (c.46) section 24(2) and amended by the Employment Rights (Dispute Resolution) Act 1998, section 1(2)(a).back

[4] 1980 c.58.back

[5] 2000 asp 4.back

[6] See the European Court of Justice's decisions in Levez v T.H. Jennings (Harlow Pools) Ltd (Case C-326/96, judgment of 1st December 1998) and Preston and others v Wolverhampton Healthcare NHS Trust Ltd and others (Case C-78/98, judgment of 16th May 2000); the decision of the Employment Appeal Tribunal in Levez v T.H. Jennings (Harlow Pools) Ltd (decision of 1st October 1999) and the ruling of the House of Lords in Preston and others v Wolverhampton Healthcare NHS Trust Ltd and others (ruling of 8th February 2001).back



ISBN 0 11 046787 6


 
© Crown copyright 2003
Prepared 15 July 2003


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