Bowling Alone wrote:
The definition of "course of Employment" could or should, in my opinion, also include the self employed,why would it be excluded?
'Employment' means an employer/employee relationship, thus by definition excluding the self-employed.
This would therefore exclude most of the taxi trade, except of course grandad's drivers
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Certainly the european courts of justice do not apply the same narrow definition in the status of workers, their definition includes those who are economically dependent and the self-employed. It also covers those who are engaged on temporary contracts and those who are engaged through labour agencies.
It's certainly a complex area and I equally certainly don't know all the ins and outs, but I suspect for the purposes of the rule in question it comes down to the perennial question of whether the driver is self-employed or an employee.
By the way, the as I recall it the National Minimum Wage legislation also uses a definition called 'worker', but precisely what this entails I'm not sure.
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I'm not at all convinced that taxi drivers are always truly self employed anyway
Yes indeed Stu, as many of us have been banging on about for years.
It's certainly not beyond the realms of possibility that this could become a test case for employment status in the taxi trade, rather than the more obvious route of things like employee rights and taxi/NI treatment where the distinction of employee/self-employed is often the subject of judicial proceedings.
Which would be doubly ironic in view of the fact that it's the PH in bus lanes debate that seems to have heightened interest in the employee/self-employed distinction in the private hire trade rather than again the more obvious questions.