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On 12 June HMRC published updated guidance to reflect the changes to the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme to permit flexible furlough from 1 July and require increasing levels of employer contribution from 1 August. These changes were announced on 29 May and further guidance was promised by 12 June. In fact, many of the amendments to the guidance pages simply add the information already provided in the 29 May Fact Sheet but there are some further details which we have highlighted below. The legal framework for the revised scheme will require a further Treasury Direction as the current one only applies until 30 June; no date for publication of a revised Direction has been given.
In summary, the changes to the CJRS announced on 29 May 2020 are that:
These changes are reflected in the updated guidance.
All of the guidance notes have been updated, with the exception of the “Work out 80% of your employees’ wages” page, the text from which has effectively been updated and moved to two new pages entitled “Steps to take before calculating your claim” and “Calculate how much you can claim“. (The holiday pay section in the Work out 80% page has been moved, substantively unchanged, to the Check if you can claim page, so that the Work out 80% page is no longer relevant.) There is a helpful page with links to all the current guidance here and an overview focussing mainly on the changes to employer contribution levels here.
The updated guidance confirms the key eligibility conditions for claiming any type of furlough after 30 June as:
Where a TUPE transfer takes place after 10 June, the transferee would not be able to meet the first condition in relation to transferring employees even if the employees have been furloughed by the transferor. Helpfully, the “Check which employees you can put on furlough” guidance confirms that an exception is made in these circumstances where the transferor has submitted a claim for 3 weeks’ furlough prior to 30 June for the relevant employees. The number of relevant employees is also added to the transferee’s cap under (ii) above, enabling the transferee to continue to furlough these individuals without affecting its ability to furlough its existing workforce. Similar provisions apply for changes in ownership under PAYE succession rules, transfers from a liquidator, and consolidations of group company PAYE schemes.
The requirements for agreeing furlough are set out in the Check if you can claim for your employee’s wages guidance. This has been reworded and now notes that agreements to furlough should be consistent with equality and discrimination laws, as well as employment law, and that records of hours worked and furloughed should be kept. The guidance makes clear that flexible furlough will require specific agreement on the new furlough arrangement; there is a reference to a “written agreement” for flexible furlough, whereas full furlough only requires agreement and a written record of the agreement (so that the employee does not have to provide anything in writing). The difference is probably unintended and will hopefully be corrected. (HMRC may also want to correct the statement that when employees are on furlough, “you cannot ask your employer to do any work”… )
Flexible furlough can involve working for any amount of time and any work pattern; the employer must itself pay for the hours worked and can claim a grant for the furloughed hours (which will be subject to the same conditions as previously, eg not working during those hours). The guidance makes clear that employers can choose to furlough only part of their workforce and can also continue to fully furlough employees after 1 July if required.
An important point to note is that, if furlough periods start before 1 July, the furlough must still last 3 consecutive weeks (even though it will end after 1 July) in order for the wages to be claimed under the CJRS. Only furlough starting on or after 1 July can be for any duration (the restrictions being on the period for which claims are made (see below), rather than the period of furlough itself). However, the employer would need to make claims covering the days in June and the days in July in two separate claims as set out below.
The key document for employers making a claim under the CJRS in respect of periods on and after 1 July 2020 is the new Steps to take before calculating your claim guidance. This confirms that , from 1 July, claims can only cover days within one calendar month, but this does not prevent the furlough itself from overlapping months – there is no need for an employee’s furlough to be ended and restarted with each month-end. For some employers claim periods may well differ from pay periods. This will introduce aditional complexity.
In particular, the updated guidance provides that:
The Calculate how much you can claim guidance sets out how to do the rather complicated calculations required, including for flexible furlough and once the employer contributions increase in stages from August to October. A new example of calculating a claim for a flexibly furloughed employee has been published and the previous examples of calculations have been updated.
The Claim for wages guidance notes that the information required for a claim will include the number of “usual hours” the employee would work in the claim period, the number of hours they will or have worked, and the number of furloughed hours in the claim period. Records of this information and also the calculations required to calculate the usual hours should be kept. The guidance also includes some new text explaining how errors made in claiming will be addressed. If a further claim is being made, that will be adjusted to reflect a previous overpayment; a process is being worked on to recover overclaimed amounts if no new claims are planned. If there has been an underclaim, the employer should contact HMRC to amend the claim, as it will need to conduct additional checks.
The contents of this publication are for reference purposes only and may not be current as at the date of accessing this publication. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Specific legal advice about your specific circumstances should always be sought separately before taking any action based on this publication.
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