Nearly half of HR professionals don’t feel up-to-speed on changing legislation

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New law passed for Apprentices by the government.

New research from identity data intelligence specialists GBG has revealed a startling amount of HR professionals (41 per cent) are struggling to keep up with ever-changing legislation.

The changes to UK law, such as those made to the Right To Work in the Immigration Act and Modern Day Slavery Act are met with anxiety by 34 per cent of respondents. Only 26 per cent feel prepared and just four per cent feel optimistic that the changes will be advantageous for their organisation.

Despite half of HR professionals not feeling prepared to handle legislation changes, 62 per cent believe it’s their primary responsibility. Almost one in five (18 per cent) said it was their manager’s obligation and nine per cent believed the Board should be in charge of monitoring for change.

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Mark Sugden, sales & business development director, at GBG said:

“Legislation changes are evidentially making HR professionals feel unprepared. We still don’t know what the full impact of Brexit will be, which will add further complexity to the situation,”

“HR professionals may have to report on the nationalities of every member of the workforce, and manage multiple country legislation requirements to ensure compliance. The Home Office is now targeting larger organisations with adherence audits and issuing civil penalties for employing someone without the right to work in the UK. The consequences post-Brexit should only reinforce what businesses should already be doing and highlight why the need to know your people is critical more so now, than ever before.”

Ongoing monitoring

Many respondents to the survey cited employment screening as their number one priority. However, when asked how often they ran employee checks, less than one in five (17%) ran multiple checks throughout the year. A fifth of respondents said they didn’t undertake any checking throughout the year, with 11% only running checks when an incident triggered the process.

Sugden added:

“The changing landscape around employment screening, legislation and requirements to monitor employees more stringently is becoming increasingly difficult to keep up with. However, the consequences of not doing so opens a business up to employee fraud, reputational risk, reduced turnover and fines. Businesses need to recognise the importance of not just completing the Right To Work checks from a recruitment and on-boarding perspective, but also throughout their employment.”

“Last year saw employee fraud account for 32% of all reported cases of fraud in the UK, costing businesses more than £46m. The ongoing checking of staff to determine their honesty, integrity and financial soundness is not only critical to an organisation’s adherence to regulation, but also imperative to the security of a business’ IP and bottom line.”

Rebecca joined the HRreview editorial team in January 2016. After graduating from the University of Sheffield Hallam in 2013 with a BA in English Literature, Rebecca has spent five years working in print and online journalism in Manchester and London. In the past she has been part of the editorial teams at Sleeper and Dezeen and has founded her own arts collective.

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