Furloughed workers can return part-time from this week – how that could affect you
THE government’s furlough scheme is set to change from Wednesday, allowing employers to bring back some workers for part of the week.
From July 1, bosses can bring furloughed employees back to work for any amount of time and shift pattern, and still claim furlough payments for the time they are not working.
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That means if you have been furloughed during the last three months, you could be heading back to work, at least for some of the week.
It is a change to the previous rules, under which staff weren't allowed to work for the same company while on furlough, and had to be furloughed for three weeks at a time.
From Wednesday, employers can claim for any amount of time, but they can only receive the money in seven-day blocks.
When you are working as normal, your employer will be responsible for paying your wages.
But if you are still furloughed for part of the week, the government will pick up the bill for your wages for those hours.
To be eligible for the scheme from July 1 onwards, workers must have been furloughed for at least three consecutive weeks between May 1 and June 30.
They must also have already been enrolled on the scheme before June 10, which is when the chancellor closed it to all new applicants.
The furlough scheme, officially called the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme, was launched in March to help companies to continue to pay their staff even while their businesses were shut.
The government promised to cover 80 per cent of a worker's salary up to a cap of £2,500 each month - and this will still be the case in July if you are off work.
As over the last three months, your employer can choose to top-up your payments so that you get paid your full monthly wage, although they do not have to.
What is furlough?
THE aim of the government’s job retention scheme is to save one million workers from becoming unemployed due to the coronavirus crisis.
Under the scheme, furloughed workers receive 80% of their wages, up to £2,500 a month, if they can't work because of the impact of coronavirus.
One of the main benefits of the scheme is that it allows workers to be kept on the payroll rather than being laid off.
Furlough is available to all employees that started a PAYE payroll scheme on or before March 19, 2020, although it closed to new entrants in June.
The scheme has been extended to run until October 31, 2020, and can be backdated to March 1, 2020.
Previous rules meant that staff couldn't undertake any work for their employers while on furlough.
But from July 1, staff members were allowed to go back part-time and they must be paid in full for the hours that they work.
From September 1, employers will have to start contributing 10% of wages, with the government paying the remaining 70%.
And from October 1, employers need to foot 20% of the bill, with the government making up the remaining 60%.
The government also paid the associated employer national insurance contributions and minimum automatic enrolment employer pension contributions on top, although employers started paying these costs from August 1.
But July will be the last month that the government covers other employer contributions, such as National Insurance and pension contributions.
From August, the government will pay 80 per cent of wages up to a cap of £2,500 for the hours an employee is on furlough and employers will have to pay the extra contributions for that time.
Then from September, the amount the government pays will drop to 70 per cent of wages up to a cap of £2,187.50, with employers meeting the difference to bring the pay up to 80 per cent of wages.
In October, the government contribution will reduce again, to 60 per cent of wages up to a cap of £1,875 for the hours the employee is on furlough.
Again, companies will need to pay workers so that they receive at least 80 per cent of their normal wage.
At the end of October, the furlough scheme will end completely, chancellor Rishi Sunak has said.
Earlier this month, nine million workers who are currently furloughed were warned that a "significant" number of employees could be made redundant in the coming days.
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Meanwhile, here's all you need to know about claiming furlough payments.
And here's what to do if your employer won't furlough you.
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