Explanatory Notes

Agricultural Sector (Wales) Act 2014

6

30 July 2014

Commentary on Sections

Section 1 – Overview

2.This section sets out what the Act is doing. It highlights 3 key aspects:

3.The commentary below explains each of these provisions in greater detail.

Section 2 – Agricultural Advisory Panel for Wales

4.Under this section, the Welsh Ministers must establish a panel to be known as the Agricultural Advisory Panel for Wales (“the Panel”). To do so, Welsh Ministers must make an order which will have to be passed by the National Assembly for Wales.

5.The Panel’s functions as set out by the Welsh Ministers in an order will, at the least, include—

6.This range of functions will enable the Welsh Ministers to task the Panel with considering many issues around the agricultural sector such as the recruitment and retention of workers into the sector and the how the sector can be encouraged and supported.

7.In the order establishing the Panel, the Welsh Ministers may also specify such other functions as they consider necessary to support the sector.

8.The membership of the Panel must include a member to chair the Panel and at least three, but not more than ten, additional members.

9.The Welsh Ministers must seek to ensure that the membership of the Panel:

10.In any order made establishing the Panel, the Welsh Ministers may stipulate how the Panel is constituted, how it will carry out proceedings, how its members will be appointed and its general powers. The Welsh Ministers may also add, amend or remove functions of the Panel.

11.Before establishing the Panel, or making any changes to it once established, the Welsh Ministers must carry out appropriate consultation. This might include, for example, farming unions and other sector representatives, farmers and agricultural workers.

Section 3 - Agricultural wages orders

12.An agricultural wages order will set out the terms and conditions of employment which must be offered to agricultural workers in Wales.

13.In particular, it can specify—

14.Any rates of pay specified in an agricultural wages order must not be less than national minimum wage set by the UK government for all workers.

Section 4 – Agricultural wages orders: powers of the Welsh Ministers

15.This section enables the Welsh Ministers to make an agricultural wages order after receiving a draft order from the Panel. The Welsh Ministers also have the power to refer the order back to the Panel for further consideration and resubmission by the Panel, if this is felt necessary.

16.The Welsh Ministers may also make agricultural wages orders on their own initiative, until the Panel is established. This enables the Welsh Ministers to account for any changes made to the National Minimum Wage, where those changes occur before the Panel has been established. This power could be used, for example, to set higher minimum agricultural wages, where the National Minimum Wage would otherwise increase beyond the minimum agricultural wage.

17.Should the Welsh Ministers decide to make an order under their own initiative, prior to doing so, they must consult the persons or bodies that they think are likely to have an interest in the order. In practice this is likely to include farming unions and other sector representatives, farmers and agricultural workers themselves.

Section 5 - Enforcement of minimum rates

18.This section creates the enforcement regime for the provisions contained in agricultural wages orders which relate to the minimum rates of pay which agricultural workers must receive. It does so primarily by applying (with some modifications) the regime set up by the National Minimum Wage Act 1998 (“the 1998 Act”) for enforcing compliance with the national minimum wage.

19.There are several aspects to this enforcement regime.

Records

20.The application of sections 10 and 11 of the 1998 Act confer upon agricultural workers the right to inspect their employers’ records to ensure they are being paid at least the minimum rate that applies to them by virtue of an agricultural wages order. The worker can only do so if the worker has reasonable grounds to suspect that he or she is not being paid the correct amount. The worker must follow the procedure set out in section 10 of the 1998 Act (as applied by this Act) to be able to access the records.

21.Where an employer does not allow the worker access to the records, the worker may complain to an employment tribunal. If the employment tribunal finds the complaint well-founded, it must make a declaration to that effect and award the worker a financial sum.

Powers of officers

22.The application of section 14 of the 1998 Act confers powers on the officers appointed by the Welsh Ministers (see section 8 of this Act below) to ensure compliance with the enforcement regime. In particular, the officers have a range of investigative powers to require the production of information and records.

23.It is an offence (by virtue of the application of section 31(5) of the 1998 Act), for a person to delay or obstruct an officer from carrying out his or her duties. It is also an offence for a person to refuse to answer an officer’s questions or to supply information that the officer is entitled to require the person to provide.

Entitlement to additional remuneration in the event of underpayment

24.The application of section 17 of the 1998 Act means that, where an agricultural worker is paid at a rate below the minimum rate which that the worker is entitled to receive by virtue of the Act, then the worker becomes entitled to additional remuneration for the period which the worker was underpaid.

25.The additional remuneration to which the worker is entitled is calculated on a different basis from that in the 1998 Act by virtue of modifications in section 5(6) of this Act. The worker is entitled to the higher of either:

Notices of underpayment

26.The application of sections 19, 19C, 19D, 19F, 19G and 19H of the 1998 Act provide the mechanism for enforcement officers to serve notices on employers who, in the opinion of the officer, may have underpaid a worker or workers. The notice requires the employer to pay the sum due to the worker (calculated in accordance with section 17of the 1998 Act, as applied by this Act) within 28 days of being served with a notice.

27.An employer who has been served with a notice of underpayment can appeal to an employment tribunal.

28.If a notice is not complied with (completely or otherwise), an officer can make a complaint on behalf of the worker to an employment rights tribunal.

29.Unlike the 1998 Act, this Act does not provide for the imposition of financial penalties (over and above an additional remuneration due) on employers.

Right not to suffer detriment

30.The application of sections 23 and 24 of the 1998 Act confer a right on a worker not to suffer detriment by his employer for:

31.Where an employer does subject the worker to detriment as a result of enforcing the worker’s rights, the worker can make a complaint to an employment tribunal.

Offences

32.The application of sections 31 to 33 of the 1998 Act provide for the offences in relation to:

The penalty for these offences is an unlimited fine.

33.An enforcement officer may, if authorised by the Welsh Ministers, conduct the proceedings for an offence before a magistrate’s court.

Restrictions on contracting out

34.The application of section 49 of the 1998 Act prevents agricultural workers and their employers from agreeing to a contract which would circumvent the minimum terms and conditions contained in an agricultural wages order.

35.This does not apply in relation to agreements entered into in relation to certain agreements prepared in order to resolve or avoid employment tribunal proceedings.

Unfair dismissal

36.Section 5(8) of this Act provides that an agricultural worker is to be regarded as having been unfairly dismissed if the reason (or the main reason) for the worker’s dismissal relates to:

Section 6 - Enforcement of holiday entitlement

37.This section makes it an offence for an employer of an agricultural worker in Wales to fail to allow the worker to take the holidays specified in an agricultural wages order and provides that the maximum fine payable on conviction is level 3 on the standard scale (currently £4000).

38.Where an employer is prosecuted for a failure to allow a worker to take holidays, it is for the employer to prove that the worker was allowed to take the number of days holidays that the employer imposed, contrary to the number of days holidays specified in the relevant agricultural wages order.

Section 7 – Duty of employers to keep records

39.The Welsh Ministers may make regulations requiring employers of agricultural workers to keep specific records which are relevant to this Act. For example, these records might include wages slips, time sheets, contract of employment and information relating to the holiday leave.

40.If the Welsh Ministers do make regulations under this section, by virtue section 5 of this Act, it will be an offence for an employer not to keep the specific records, or to deliberately make (or allow to be made) false entries in the records. The penalty for this, if convicted, is an unlimited fine.

Section 8 - Appointment of officers

41.This section enables the Welsh Ministers to appoint enforcement officers to act in Wales.

42.In performing their duties officers must, if asked, produce appropriate identification proving that they are authorised to carry out such duties.

43.In addition, where officers are under the impression that any person they are talking to doesn’t know that they are carrying out duties in relation to enforcing compliance with this legislation, the officers must explain that to the person.

Section 9 - Information obtained by officers

44.Under this section, information that has been obtained by officers for the purposes of the Act may be supplied to the Welsh Ministers (typically to enable them to bring prosecutions under the Act) or to the person to whom the information applies (so that civil proceedings may be brought in respect of the underpayment).

45.However, the Welsh Ministers may not supply information received under this section to any other person or body unless it is required for criminal or civil proceedings.

Section 10 - Meaning of “the national minimum wage”

46.This section provides the definition of the national minimum wage for the purposes of this Act.

47.In most cases this is the minimum single hourly rate as set by regulations made under section 1(3) of the 1998 Act.

48.However, in the circumstances set out in subsection (2) to (5)of this Act a different rate for the national minimum wage may be deemed to apply.

Section 11 - Amendment of the Working Time Regulations

49.This provision makes consequential amendments to the Working Time Regulations 1998 to ensure that those regulations continue to apply to agricultural workers in Wales in the same manner as they currently do in relation to the annual leave year for agricultural workers.

Section 12 - Transitional provision

50.This section provides for the provisions of the Agricultural Wages (England and Wales) Order 2012 (as they were when that order was made on 20 July 2012) to have effect in relation to agricultural workers in Wales from 1 October 2013. Those provisions will cease to have effect when the Welsh Ministers make a new agricultural wages order under section 4 of the Act.

51.For the purposes of enforcing the provisions of the 2012 Wages Order from 1 October 2013, it is deemed to be an order made under section 4 of the Act. The rights and liabilities accrued prior to 1 October 2013 are to be enforced under the Agricultural Wages Act 1948: see article 4 of the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (Commencement No. 1, Transitional Provisions and Savings) Order 2013 (SI 2013/1455).

52.If, at any point, the national minimum wage exceeds any minimum rate of the 2012 Wages Order, the minimum rate in question is deemed to be the same as the national minimum wage.

53.For ease of reference, a copy of the Agricultural Wages (England and Wales) Order 2012 is annexed to these Notes.

Section 13 – Report on operation and effect of this Act

54.This section provides that the Welsh Ministers must review the operation and effect of the Act during the first three years after the Act receives Royal Assent. As soon as is practically possible after the expiration of the three year period, and having consulted interested parties in order to assist them, the Welsh Ministers must produce a report containing information on the operation and effect of the Act, and lay it before the National Assembly for Wales.

55.The report will also contain details about the effect of the Act upon agricultural workers, employers of agricultural workers and the agricultural sector generally.

56.The Welsh Ministers must publish the report after it has been laid before the National Assembly for Wales.

Section 14 – Duration of this Act

57.This section operates to bring to an end to the Act four years from the date it comes into force, unless the Welsh Ministers make an order stating that the Act is to continue in effect.

58.An order to retain the effect of the Act may only be made by the Welsh Ministers after the 3 year review period has expired but before four years has passed since the date the Act came into force.

Section 15 - Offences by bodies corporate

59.Under this section, where a body corporate (such as a company) has committed an offence, a director, manager or secretary or similar officer of a body corporate (or a person purporting to hold such a position) may also be convicted and punished for the offence if they were involved with the commission of the offence, knew about it (and did nothing) or should reasonably have known about it.

Section 16 – Ancillary provision

60.This section enables the Welsh Ministers to make orders for the purposes of, or in connection with giving full effect to the Act.

61.This is might be used, for example, to make consequential amendments to other legislation when the Agricultural Advisory Panel for Wales is established.

Section 17 – Orders and regulations

62.This section provides that the powers of the Welsh Ministers to make orders and regulations are to be exercised by statutory instrument. When doing so, the Welsh Ministers can make other provision in order to give full effect to those orders or regulations (such as dealing with transitional matters).

63.Orders under sections 2, 14 and section 16 (where it modifies the text of an Act or Measure of the National Assembly for Wales or an Act of Parliament) are subject to the affirmative procedure, as are regulations made under section 7.

64.Any other orders made under the Act are subject to the negative procedure.

Section 18 - Interpretation

65.This section provides the meaning of key terms within the Act.

66.Of particular note here are the definitions of “agricultural worker” and “agriculture”.

67.An “agricultural worker” is a person employed in agriculture in Wales, whether or not the whole of the work undertaken by virtue of that employment is undertaken in Wales. Therefore, it matters not what percentage of work is undertaken in Wales for a worker to be covered by the provisions of the Act.

68.The definition of “agriculture” is broader than what might typically be seen as its ordinary meaning. As a result, while it encompasses cultivating soil for the growing crops and the rearing of animals to provide food, wool and other products, it also includes such activities as dairy farming, using land as osier land or as a market garden.

Section 19 - Commencement

69.The provisions of the Act came into force on 30 July 2014, the day of Royal Assent.