Paternity Leave (Bereavement) Act 2024 passed before Parliament went into recess

  • Employment Contract
paternity leave act passed
Peninsula Logo

Peninsula Team, Peninsula Team

(Last updated )

The sudden announcement of a general election to be held on 4 July left only a few days before Parliament closed down and gave the Government the problem of which items of legislation to quickly push through the adoption process.

One that was saved was the Paternity Leave (Bereavement) Act 2024 which has now been published.

Extending to England and Wales and Scotland, it will come into force when the relevant Secretary of State decides to introduce the necessary regulations.

Under the law as it currently stands, paternity leave only lasts for a maximum of two weeks and bereaved partners can only take statutory paternity leave if they satisfy minimum service requirements.

The new Act amends the Employment Rights Act 1996 after a Labour MP, Chris Elmore, put forward a Private Members’ Bill when he was approached by Aaron Horsey, from Nottingham, who found that he did not qualify for shared parental leave when his wife, Bernadette, died while giving birth to their son.

He had recently changed jobs and had not been working for the new company for the required length of time.

Under the Act, which was passed with cross-party support, bereaved fathers or non-birthing partners will automatically get the right to day-one paternity leave if the mother, or a person with whom a child is placed or expected to be placed for adoption, dies.

The condition preventing bereaved partners who have already taken shared parental leave from taking paternity leave is removed and, where both the mother and child die, bereaved partners will still be able to take leave.

Visit BrAInbox today where you can find answers to questions like Is there a time limit on when paternity leave has to be taken?

Related articles

  • tackling long-term sickness

    Blog

    How to tackle the UK's long-term sickness rates

    Greater childcare provision is the key to reducing economic inactivity, employers have told the Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC) when it surveyed them to ask what steps the next government should take to reduce long-term sickness rates in the UK.

    Peninsula TeamPeninsula Team
    • Employment Contract
  • pay rise

    Blog

    Starting pay for candidates rose again during May

    Delayed decision-making and a lack of demand amongst companies have weighed on recruitment activity according to the latest Report on Jobs survey carried out by KPMG and the Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC).

    Peninsula TeamPeninsula Team
    • Pay & Benefits
  • Tax rises

    Blog

    Taxes rise regardless of who enters No.10

    As both the Labour Party and the Conservative Party have pledged not to increase income tax it is likely the vast majority of people will experience tax hikes anyway.

    Peninsula TeamPeninsula Team
    • Pay & Benefits
Back to resource hub

Try Brainbox for free today

When AI meets 40 years of Peninsula expertise... you get instant, expert answers to your HR and health & safety questions

Sign up to our newsletter

Get the latest news & tips that matter most to your business in our monthly newsletter.