Statutory Instruments
2010 No. 156
Employment And Training
The Employee Study and Training (Eligibility, Complaints and Remedies) Regulations 2010
Made
25th January 2010
Laid before Parliament
1st February 2010
Coming into force
6th April 2010
The Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills, in exercise of the powers conferred by section 63E(4)(c), 63E(5)(a), 63I(3)(b), 63J(3) of the Employment Rights Act 1996( 1 ), makes the following Regulations:
Citation and commencement
1. These Regulations may be cited as The Employee Study and Training (Eligibility, Complaints and Remedies) Regulations 2010 and come into force on 6th April 2010.
Interpretation
2. β(1) In these Regulationsβ
βthe 1996 Actβ means the Employment Rights Act 1996;
βthe Procedure Regulationsβ means The Employee Study and Training (Procedural Requirements) Regulations 2010( 2 ).
Further information which the application must contain
3. β(1) An employee must set out in the section 63D applicationβ
(a) the date on which the employeeβs last section 63D application (if any) was submitted to their employer; and
(b) the method by which that application was submitted.
(2) For the purposes of paragraph (1) an employee submits a section 63D application by sending, delivering or otherwise transmitting it to their employer.
Form of the application
4. A section 63D application mustβ
(a) be made in writing; and
(b) be dated.
Breaches of the Procedure Regulations by the employer entitling an employee to make a complaint to an employment tribunal
5. The breaches of the Procedure Regulations which entitle an employee to make a complaint to an employment tribunal under section 63I of the 1996 Act notwithstanding the fact that the employeeβs section 63D application has not been disposed of by agreement or withdrawn areβ
(a) failure to hold a meeting in accordance with regulation 4(1) and 10(1) of the Procedure Regulations;
(b) failure to notify a decision in accordance with regulations 5 or 11 of the Procedure Regulations.
Compensation
6. β(1) The maximum amount of compensation that an employment tribunal may award under section 63J of the 1996 Act where it finds a complaint by an employee under section 63I of the Act well-founded is 8 weeksβ pay.
Kevin Brennan
Minister for Further Education, Skills, Apprenticeships and Consumer Affairs
Department for Business, Innovation and Skills
25th January 2010
1996 c.18 ; sections 63E, 63I and 63J were inserted by section 40 of the Apprenticeships, Skills, Children and Learning Act 2009 (c.22) .