@pinkpig1
I'm on mat leave currently. I'm due to return in a couple of months. Do I have to return to doing my full time hours as I am planning only doing part time due to the lack of childcare. Do they have to allow this?
Dear pinkpig1
Thank you for your question.
(a) Flexible working requests
Provided you are an employee with at least 26 weeks’ continuous service, you are entitled to request flexible working (s80F Employment Rights Act 1996). This can be for any reason including e.g. to help with childcare. Flexible working requests can include e.g. requests to work from home, to reduce your hours, to change your start or end working times, or to work compressed hours.
We recommend that you ask for a copy of your employer’s flexible working policy or see if you can locate it e.g. within the staff handbook or on the intranet. We will provide some general information about the statutory application process below.
You can only make a statutory flexible work application once every 12 months. You must include the following information in your statutory flexible work application:
· State that it is an application for flexible work under s80F of Employment Rights Act 1996.
· State the working pattern you are asking for and the date you want it to start
· Explain what effect, if any, you think the new working pattern would have on your employer and how you think it could be dealt with (e.g. how they could ensure workload is being covered that you would not be able to do within your newly proposed working pattern)
· State whether you have asked before and, if so, when
· Sign and date the application
After you have submitted your formal application, your employer should consider your application and arrange to meet with you to discuss it in more detail. Your employer should allow you to be accompanied by a work colleague or representative to any meeting to discuss your request and any appeal (para 5 ACAS Code of Practice). It’s a good idea to bring someone with you even if you feel confident about the meeting, as they can help you take notes and act as a witness.
Your employer must deal with your request in a reasonable manner (which would include, for example, considering your views on any counterproposals they make). They should notify you of the outcome of your request (including their response to any written appeal you make) within a 3-month period (although this decision-making period can be extended by agreement). Given it can take up to 3 months to receive a final answer from your employer, if you are due to return from maternity leave in the next few months we recommend you put in any request for flexible working as soon as possible.
While you have the right to ask for flexible working, you do not have the right to get the arrangement you want. However, your employer can only refuse your request for one of the following reasons:
- There would be a burden of additional costs;
- It would have a detrimental effect on their ability to meet customer demand;
- They are unable to reorganise the work among existing staff;
- They are unable to recruit additional staff;
- It would have a detrimental effect on quality;
- It would have a detrimental effect on performance;
- There is not enough work during the periods you want to work; or
- Your employer is planning structural changes or reorganising work and the request will not fit with these plans.
If they reject your proposal, they should explain their rationale for doing so, and which of the 8 refusal reasons their decision falls under.
If your employer refuses your request for flexible working, there is no statutory right to appeal. However, para 12 ACAS Code of Practice states that it is best practice to allow appeals. If you appeal your employer’s decision, you should follow any workplace policy on appeals. You will have their reason for refusing your application and you can use this as an opportunity to rebut their reasons, or to propose further alternative working patterns.
Finally, if your employer refuses a perfectly reasonable, workable request out right; seriously mishandles the procedure; or has insufficient justification for their refusal, you may be able to challenge their decision under sex discrimination laws (depending on the circumstances, including the reasons given for refusal). It is generally accepted by Employment Tribunals that women tend to have more caring responsibilities than men, and therefore women tend to be more disadvantaged by having flexible working requests refused. For guidance on bringing an Employment Tribunal claim for discrimination, please check the Maternity Action and ACAS websites.
We recommend that you take a look at the following resources for further information on flexible working requests:
· Maternity Action advice on child friendly working hours: maternityaction.org.uk/advice/child-friendly-working-hours/
· ACAS Code of Practice on flexible working requests:
(b) Using accrued annual leave to work part time on a short-term basis
Whilst not a long-term solution, please note that you continue to accrue annual leave whilst on maternity leave, which you may not yet have taken. Check your contract of employment for your annual leave entitlement (by law, it should be a minimum of 28 days per year, which can include public holidays). Some parents choose to take this accrued annual leave all in one go at the end of their maternity leave, to effectively extend the time they have off to care for their child by around 1 month (but on a fully paid basis). However, other parents choose to spread the taking of this accrued annual leave out (e.g. taking 1-2 days per week for several months) to allow them to essentially work on a part time basis whilst continuing to earn a full time salary. This can often assist new parents financially whilst allowing them to ease back into the workplace (and may be a useful short-term solution if any formal flexible working request is still being considered by your employer). Booking annual leave must be done with your employer’s agreement so please follow your employer’s policy in this regard.
Good luck, I hope this goes well for you.