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Equality Act 2010: Details of October implementation for employers

06 September 2010

After months of speculation, the Government has confirmed which provisions of the historic Equality Act 2010 will come into force this October.

The Act received Royal Assent in the dying days of the Labour government, and following the General Election there was uncertainty about whether the new coalition government would stick to the previously announce implementation timetable and how differences of approach set out in the manifestos of the Liberal Democrats and Conservative parties would be resolved.

The Government Equalities Office (GEO) has now confirmed which provisions will come into force this October and which are subject to further consideration by the Government.

From October 2010

The main aim of the Act is to consolidate and harmonise existing discrimination legislation that has developed piecemeal over the last 40 years. The Act introduces a consistent approach to most of the concepts which apply to the different equality ‘strands’, and which the Act calls ‘protected characteristics’.

There are no new protected characteristics for the purposes of the Act, but some of the definitions have been amended slightly. The protected characteristics are:

The Act sets out the basic framework of protection against direct and indirect discrimination, harassment, victimisation and disability discrimination, which is referred to as ‘prohibited conduct’. This will all be unlawful from October.

Employers need to be particularly aware of the following provisions of the Act coming into force on 1 October 2010:

Expected from April 2011

The Government is currently consulting on the new equality duty, which will apply to certain public bodies listed in the Act.

This will see the current public sector duties relating to gender, race and disability combined and expanded into a ‘super duty’ encompassing age, disability, gender reassignment, pregnancy and maternity, race, religion or belief, sex and sexual orientation.

The new duty will require public bodies to consider the following matters when carrying out their functions:

This will not come into force in October, but is expected to be introduced in April 2011.

Implementation date uncertain

The Government has said it is currently considering how best to implement the following provisions, which will not come into force in October 2010.

There has however been speculation that some of these provisions may not come into force at all:

Further information

The Equality and Human Rights Commission is producing the statutory Codes of Practice under the Act as well as making detailed guidance available on its web site. The GEO has produced its own guide to the Act. Further information on the public sector equality duty can be found in the consultation document below.

Equality Act Codes of Practice
Equality Act 2010: What do I need to know?

Public sector Equality Duty

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