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BrexitRight to workLatest NewsImmigration

‘Impossible’ to determine EU nationals’ right to work during Brexit transition period

by Ashleigh Webber 31 Oct 2018
by Ashleigh Webber 31 Oct 2018 Kirsty O'Connor/PA Wire/PA Images
Kirsty O'Connor/PA Wire/PA Images

Employers will be expected to check EU nationals’ right to work in the UK post-Brexit, the immigration minister has told MPs, though there will be a period where it will be “impossible” for employers to differentiate between somebody who has applied for settled status and somebody who has recently arrived in the UK.

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Caroline Nokes told the Home Affairs Select Committee that employers will be expected to carry out right to work checks when recruiting an EU national.

However, she admitted that there will be a challenge around how EU citizens evidence their right to work, particularly if they have not yet applied for, or are going through the process of achieving, settled status during the transition period.

New arrivals in the UK may also struggle to provide evidence about their eligibility to work, and MPs pointed out that during the transition period there will be no way to differentiate between someone who has recently relocated and someone who has lived in the UK for 10 years, for example.

Committee chair Yvette Cooper repeatedly asked Nokes to explain how employers could make such checks or how they could differentiate between new arrivals and long-term residents, but she was unable to clarify how this would work in practice. She was later asked to clarify her position in writing to the committee.

‘Impossible’ to differentiate

Nokes said: “The reality is that we have 3.5 million EU citizens whose rights we are determined to protect, so it is likely that there will be a period during which it is impossible for employers to differentiate between them and somebody who is newly arrived.

“But it is important that all those here for more than three months will be required to register and go through the mandatory registration scheme, so that once they have been here for three months it will be possible for somebody to differentiate.”

She said that any enforcement around the settled status scheme would not be overly rigorous early on, because it is “one of the conundrums that employers will face”, though employers will be expected to make reasonable checks.

“It will be an enormous challenge both for employers and for EU citizens who have the right to work here to make sure that we get them through the settled status scheme as efficiently as we possibly can, which is why we opened it up to private beta testing over the summer and why phase two opens in November,” Nokes said.

She said the government and employers did not wish to discriminate against EU nationals who have the right to live and work in the UK, but conceded that it will at first “pose a challenge to government and, indeed, employers” in differentiating between those who are and are not eligible.

Settled status applications

Around a quarter of the 4,000 people who were eligible to apply for settled status in the first testing phase had done so, she revealed.

Any issues around the right to work in the UK have to be resolved now – otherwise employers could easily deem EU nationals too risky to employ” – Sally Gilson, FTA

Those that arrive during the Brexit transition period (by 31 December 2020) will need to apply for settled or pre-settled status by 30 June 2021, the government has previously stated. Settled status will be granted to those who have lived in the UK for five years.

Sally Gilson, head of skills at logistics industry representative body Freight Transport Association (FTA), said it was unacceptable that with only five months to go until Brexit the government did not have a system in place for checking right to work status.

She said Nokes’ comments created further concern about whether the logistics industry can continue to employ EU nationals, whom make up 12% of its workforce.

“Despite asking for clarification on this issue since Article 50 was triggered, it seems incredible that the government has let the clock run down to this point without giving business the answers it has been requesting,” Gilson said.

“Asking employers to prove the right to work status of their workforce, despite assurances in the summer that this would not be needed, is simply unacceptable.

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“While logistics as a sector is notoriously good at adapting to change, this additional burden will make it very difficult indeed to keep the supply chain running smoothly at a time when there will be added pressures from new trading conditions, declarations and other processes to adopt.

“Any issues around the right to work in the UK have to be resolved now – otherwise employers could easily deem EU nationals too risky to employ.”

Ashleigh Webber

Ashleigh is a former editor of OHW+ and former HR and wellbeing editor at Personnel Today. Ashleigh's areas of interest include employee health and wellbeing, equality and inclusion and skills development. She has hosted many webinars for Personnel Today, on topics including employee retention, financial wellbeing and menopause support.

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