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InFocus

Legal health check – is your practice in order?

From employment contracts and holiday pay to regulatory requirements, there are several essential legal areas that you should ensure you are in compliance with

In a busy veterinary practice, it can be difficult to find the time to consider whether you have in place all that is required by law to run your veterinary practice. The following article provides a brief summary of the key areas to perform a legal “health check” on.

Employment contracts

All employers are required to set out key information in writing to employees under employment legislation (known as a “section 1 statement of terms and conditions”). But the importance of written employment contracts goes far beyond legal compliance – it demonstrates the terms which govern the employee–employer relationship, entitlements and obligations. The requirement to provide a contract is now a “day one” requirement, and failing to do so attracts compensation payable by the employer of up to four weeks’ pay per employee.

But the importance of written employment contracts goes far beyond legal compliance – it demonstrates the terms which govern the employee–employer relationship, entitlements and obligations

In an industry where locum usage and self-employment often feature, the absence of an employment contract (or alternative document detailing self-employed arrangements) can cast doubt over employment status and lead to protracted questioning around how the relationship operates in practice. For instance, are the staff “pay as you earn” (PAYE)? Do they enjoy employment entitlements? Clear, accurate and up-to-date written particulars will enable a swift assessment.

Holiday pay

Holiday pay has been a hot topic in employment law for a number of years, with high-profile litigation concerning how to treat overtime and commission-based pay arrangements and their impact on a “normal week’s pay”. Where staff work fluctuating hours, holiday pay must be calculated with reference to an averaging exercise of pay over the previous 52 weeks. Adding in the complexities of calculating entitlements for part-time workers, many practices find holiday entitlement and pay difficult to perfect. Against the backdrop of the ability for holiday not taken during the pandemic to be carried over into successive years, and the impossible task of rota management and capacity for leave to be granted, many practices find holiday pay a minefield.

Ensuring the correct [holiday] entitlement is available (and taken) and paid accurately are key components in both retaining your staff and promoting adequate breaks

However, for employees to operate at their best and to ensure high productivity levels, annual leave is essential to health and well-being. Ensuring the correct entitlement is available (and taken) and paid accurately are key components in both retaining your staff and promoting adequate breaks from the busy practice schedule.

Employment – right to work checks

Conducting simple right to work checks is mandatory for all UK employers to prevent illegal working. If checks are carried out correctly and in accordance with the codes of practice in the Home Office guidance, then a “statutory excuse” against liability for a civil penalty (£20,000) can be relied upon if an employee does not have the right to work.

The following methods can be used to establish a “statutory excuse”:

  1. Manual right to work checks
  2. Identity documentation validation technology (IDVT) via the services of an identity service provider (IDSP) – this can be used by carrying out a digital identity verification check for British and Irish citizens who hold a valid passport (including Irish passport cards)
  3.  The Home Office online right to work check

Regulatory requirements

The ways in which vets and veterinary practices can fall foul of regulatory requirements are many and varied. Health and safety, fire or environmental breaches are criminal offences in themselves. Practising without registering with the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons (RCVS) or dispensing veterinary medicine without registering their premises on the Register of Veterinary Practice Premises are severely punished.

Straying beyond a simple discussion of insurance products into arranging insurance for clients would take a vet into the highly regulated financial advice arena

Equally important, in view of the high fines that can be imposed, veterinary practices should make sure that they are registered with the Information Commissioner’s Office before they handle clients’ data. Straying beyond a simple discussion of insurance products into arranging insurance for clients would take a vet into the highly regulated financial advice arena. By doing this without proper accreditation, a vet risks sanction by the Financial Conduct Authority.

Statutory registers

If your veterinary practice is a limited company, then it is required by law to have a set of statutory registers, which consists of the following:

  • Register of members
  • Register of directors and secretaries
  • Register of directors’ residential addresses, which will not be available for public inspection
  • Register of people with significant control
  • Register of charges

Failure to keep statutory books is an offence by the officers of the company and the company itself. The register of members is also evidence of who the members of the company are.

Summary

The author hopes the above helps provide some useful guidance as to some of the key areas for our veterinary clients when it comes to complying with the law. Practices or individuals with any uncertainties should take the time to undertake a full legal health check to ensure their compliance with any legislation that may affect them.

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