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Whereas a draft of the following Regulations was laid before Parliament in accordance with section 236(3) of the Employment Rights Act 1996[1] and approved by a resolution of each House of Parliament: Now, therefore, the Secretary of State, in exercise of the powers conferred on her by sections 47C(2), 75A(1) to (3), (6) and (7), 75B(1), (2), (4) and (8), 75C(1) and (2), 75D(1), 80B(1), (2) and (5), 80C(1) and (6), 80D(1), 80E and 99(1) of that Act[2], hereby makes the following Regulations: Citation and commencement 1. These Regulations may be cited as the Paternity and Adoption Leave (Adoption from Overseas) Regulations 2003 and shall come into force on 6th April 2003. Interpretation 2. In these Regulations -
Application of the Leave Regulations to adoptions from overseas
(b) in the appropriate places in alphabetical order insert -
"enter Great Britain" means enter Great Britain from outside the United Kingdom in connection with or for the purposes of adoption, and cognate expressions shall be construed accordingly;"
"official notification" means written notification, issued by or on behalf of the relevant domestic authority, that it is prepared to issue a certificate to the overseas authority concerned with the adoption of the child, or has issued a certificate and sent it to that authority, confirming, in either case, that the adopter is eligible to adopt and has been assessed and approved as being a suitable adoptive parent;" and
"relevant domestic authority" means -
(3) For paragraph (4) substitute -
Application
(2) The provisions relating to paternity leave under regulation 8 below have effect only in relation to a person who is married to or the partner of an adopter whose child enters Great Britain on or after 6th April 2003.".
(3) In paragraph (3), for "8th December 2002" substitute "6th April 2003".
8. - (1) An employee is entitled to be absent from work for the purpose of caring for a child adopted from overseas or supporting the child's adopter if he -
(b) has complied with the notice requirements in regulation 10 and, where applicable, the evidential requirements in that regulation.
(2) The conditions referred to in paragraph (1) are that -
(b) the employee has been continuously employed for a period of not less than 26 weeks either -
(ii) commencing with the week in which the employee's employment with the employer began;
(c) the employee is either married to or the partner of the child's adopter, and
(3) In paragraph (2)(b), "week" means the period of seven days beginning with Sunday.
(2) The leave may only be taken during the period of 56 days beginning with the date on which the child enters Great Britain.
(b) a predetermined date, specified in a notice under regulation 10, which is later than the date on which the child enters Great Britain.
(4) In a case where the adopter received an official notification before 6th April 2003 and the adopter's child enters Great Britain on or after that date, the employee may choose to begin a period of paternity leave only on a predetermined date, specified in a notice under regulation 10, which is later than the date of entry and, unless the employer agrees to an earlier commencement of the leave period, is at least twenty-eight days after the date on which that notice was given.
(b) the date on which the child is expected to enter Great Britain; (c) the date which the employee has chosen as the date on which his period of paternity leave should begin, and (d) the date on which the child enters Great Britain.
(2) Notice provided for in -
(b) paragraph (1)(c) must be given to the employer at least 28 days prior to the date which the employee has chosen as the date on which his period of paternity leave should begin, and (c) paragraph (1)(d) must be given to the employer no more than 28 days after the date on which the child enters Great Britain.
(3) Where the employer requests it, an employee must give his employer, within 14 days of receipt of a request, a written declaration, signed by the employee, to the effect that his partner or spouse has received an official notification and that he satisfies the conditions of entitlement in regulation 8(2)(c) and (d).
Commencement of leave under regulation 8
15. - (1) An employee is entitled to ordinary adoption leave in respect of a child if he -
(b) has complied with the notice requirements in regulation 17 and, where applicable, the evidential requirements in that regulation.
(2) The conditions referred to in paragraph (1) are that the employee -
(b) has been continuously employed for a period of not less than 26 weeks either -
(ii) commencing with the week in which the employee's employment with the employer began.
(3) In paragraph (2)(b), "week" means the period of seven days beginning with Sunday.
(b) a predetermined date, specified in a notice under regulation 17, which is no later than twenty-eight days after the date on which the child enters Great Britain.
(2) In a case where the employee receives an official notification before 6th April 2003 and the adopter's child enters Great Britain on or after that date, the employee may choose to begin a period of ordinary adoption leave only on a predetermined date, specified in a notice under regulation 17, which is later than the date of entry, and, unless the employer agrees to an earlier commencement of the leave period, is at least twenty-eight days after the date on which that notice was given.
(b) the date on which the child is expected to enter Great Britain; (c) the date which he has chosen as the date on which his period of adoption leave should begin; and (d) the date on which the child enters Great Britain.
(2) Notice provided for -
(b) in paragraph (1)(c) must be given to the employer at least 28 days prior to the date which the employee has chosen as the date on which his period of adoption leave should begin, and (c) in paragraph (1)(d) must be given to the employer no more than 28 days after the date on which the child enters Great Britain.
(3) Where the employer requests it, an employee must also provide his employer with a copy of the official notification together with evidence of the date of the entry of the child into Great Britain.
(b) where the variation is to provide for the employee's period of leave to begin on a predetermined date (or a different predetermined date), at least 28 days before that date,
or, if it is not reasonably practicable to give notice 28 days before whichever date is relevant, as soon as is reasonably practicable.
(b) where the employer is given notice under paragraph (4), within 28 days of the date on which the employee's ordinary adoption leave period began.
(9) Where it becomes known to the employee that the child will not enter Great Britain, he shall notify the employer of the fact as soon as is reasonably practicable."
Duration and commencement of ordinary adoption leave
(b) ceases to live with the adopter."
(3) For paragraph (3), there shall be substituted -
(b) in a case falling within paragraph (1)(b), the week during which the child ceased to live with the adopter."
(This note is not part of the Regulations) These Regulations provide new rights to paternity and adoption leave in the case of adoptions from overseas. The Regulations are made under powers contained in the Employment Rights Act 1996, as amended by the Employment Act 2002 and, in the case of section 80B, as further modified by the Employment Rights Act 1996 (Application of Section 80B to Adoptions from Overseas) Regulations 2003. These Regulations apply the Paternity and Adoption Leave Regulations 2002 ("the Leave Regulations") to overseas adoptions with the modifications described below. An adoption from overseas is the adoption of a child who enters Great Britain from outside the United Kingdom in connection with or for the purposes of adoption, which does not involve the placement of a child for adoption under the law of any part of the United Kingdom. Regulation 7 substitutes new regulations 8-10 of the Leave Regulations, concerning entitlement to paternity leave. The new regulation 8 provides that the right is available to an employee if the child's adopter has received an official notification of his suitability to adopt, the employee has been continuously employed for a period of not less than 26 weeks, the employee is the spouse or partner of the child's adopter and the employee has, or expects to have, the main responsibility (apart from the responsibility of the child's adopter) for the upbringing of the child. The new regulation 9 gives an employee the option of taking either one week's leave or two consecutive weeks' leave, and also options concerning the date on which the employee's period of leave will begin; however, leave may only be taken within 56 days of the child's entry into Great Britain. The new regulation 10 requires an employee to notify his employer of the date on which the adopter of the child received official notification, the date on which the child is expected to enter Great Britain, the date which the employee has chosen to be the start date of the paternity leave and the date on which the child enters Great Britain. This regulation also requires the employee, if requested by the employer, to provide his employer with a written declaration that his partner or spouse has received an official notification, that he satisfies the conditions contained in regulation 8(2)(c) and (d) as to his relationship with the adopter and his responsibility for the upbringing of the child. Regulation 9 substitutes new regulations 15-17 of the Leave Regulations, concerning the right to adoption leave. The new regulation 15 sets out the conditions for entitlement to ordinary adoption leave. An employee must be the child's adopter and have been continuously employed for a period of not less than 26 weeks. Only one person may take adoption leave in respect of a child at any time; accordingly, when a couple propose to adopt a child jointly, the person who has elected to be the child's adopter may take adoption leave but the other person may only take paternity leave. The new regulation 16 enables an employee to choose when his period of leave should begin. The new regulation 17 imposes notice requirements similar to those applicable in relation to paternity leave. Notes: [1] 1996 c. 18; section 236(3) was amended by paragraph 42 of Part 3 of Schedule 4 to the Employment Relations Act 1999 (c. 26) and paragraph 49 of Schedule 7 to the Employment Act 2002 (c. 22).back [2] Section 47C of the Employment Rights Act 1996 was inserted by paragraph 8 of Part 3 of Schedule 4 to the Employment Relations Act 1999 and amended by paragraph 26 of Schedule 7 to the Employment Act 2002; sections 75A to 75D were inserted by section 3 of the Employment Act 2002, and sections 80A to 80E by section 1 of that Act; section 99 was substituted by paragraph 16 of Part 3 of Schedule 4 to the 1999 Act and amended by paragraph 33 of Schedule 7 to the Employment Act 2002. The word "prescribed" in section 47C of the 1996 Act is defined in subsection (2) of that section; the same word in sections 75A and 75B of the 1996 Act is defined in section 75D(2), inserted by section 3 of the 2002 Act; in section 99 of the 1996 Act it is defined in subsection (2) of that section. Section 80B of the Employment Rights Act 1996 is, by regulations made under section 80B(8) of that Act, namely the Employment Rights Act 1996 (Application of Section 80B to Adoptions from Overseas) Regulations 2003 (S.I. 2003/920), applied to cases which involve adoption, but not the placement of a child for adoption under the law of any part of the United Kingdom, with the modifications prescribed by those Regulations. The sections cited in the preamble that are so modified are sections 80B(1) and (5).back
ISBN 0 11 045506 1
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