LRD guides and handbook May 2018

Law at Work 2018

Chapter 12

12. Business transfers and contracting out — TUPE 




[ch 12: page 414]

Business transfers and outsourcing, and their effect on the employment relationship, are regulated by the Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 2006 (TUPE). TUPE was originally enacted in 1981 to comply with a European Union (EU) Directive known as the Acquired Rights Directive.



TUPE is intended to safeguard the jobs and rights of employees when the identity of their employer changes as a result of a transfer such as a business sale or merger, or the retendering of a service contract. TUPE is also supposed to help prevent the “race to the bottom” that would take place if competing businesses were free to cut costs following a transfer by sacking staff or cutting their wages.



In brief, where is applies, TUPE operates automatically. It means that the new employer automatically takes on transferring employees and must honour their wages and other contract terms.



TUPE law was modified in January 2014 by the Collective Redundancies andTransfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) (Amendment) Regulations 2014 (CRTUPEAR). Their purpose was to make transfers easier and quicker for employers and to lessen the protection available to affected employees, in preparation for government plans to further expand the outsourcing of public services to the private sector. These new regulations only apply in England, Scotland and Wales, not Northern Ireland, where the law remains as it was before 31 January 2014.



Government guidance, A guide to the 2006 TUPE Regulations (as amended by the Collective Redundancies and Transfer of Undertaking (Protection of Employment) (Amendment) Regulations 2014), can be downloaded from the website of the Department for Business, Innovation, Energy & Skills (BEIS). The guidance is non-statutory, meaning that tribunals do not have to follow it. Acas has also produced guidance for employers: Handling TUPE transfers. Unions have also published their own guidance for reps on TUPE in the light of the new regulations.