HRreview Header

Charlotte Mepham: Internships

-

Legally speaking, internships are somewhat of a grey area. Are the interns volunteers who fall outside of the National Minimum Wage Regulations or are they actually ‘workers’ who do not?

Generally, if an intern is shadowing and going to meetings with people, or their internship is a formal part of their university/college course they are probably not workers. However, if they have pre-determined tasks, are expected to be in the office for set hours, have deadlines and their work is monitored, they are most likely to be workers and should really be paid the minimum wage.

Dominic Potter, co-author of “Why Interns Need a Fair Wage” (published by IPPR, July 2010) and director of Internocracy states: “we now have entire industries that rely on the willingness of young people to work for free. In the long term this is bad for business because it damages the reputation of these industries and makes it difficult for them to recruit from the broadest pool of talent. It also means that young people from well-off backgrounds or with good family connections have an instant advantage when it comes to finding a permanent job”

The National Gallery, National Portrait Gallery, Natural History Museum and the British Museum all use interns on a regular basis ranging from two weeks to nine months. A spokeswoman for the National Gallery said that interns “were normally students whose internships constitute formal parts of their courses”. (London Evening Standard, 23 February 2011) Students who undertake work experience as part of higher or further education do not need to be paid the minimum wage, as long as their placement does not exceed one year.

 

HRreview Logo

Get our essential daily HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Weekday HR updates. Unsubscribe anytime.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

 

Paul Breton, director of HR at the Natural History museum, said it had “utmost respect” for the “significant contribution” of interns, while the Imperial War Museum said “we value the support of all interns and are confident that the museum helps them to develop skills and knowledge which prove useful throughout their career’’ (both quotes from the London Evening Standard, 23 February 2011).

Whatever your opinion on interns, the topic has certainly gained momentum in recent years with Nicola Vetta managing to sue London Dreams Motion Pictures Limited for back payment of wages for the period of her internship in 2009. She was on an “expenses only” internship which is not uncommon. Pressure appears to be mounting for payment for interns – in 2010 the Low Pay Commission reported to the government of the “systematic abuse of (unpaid) interns” and the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development recommended the introduction of a ‘training wage’.

At the moment the law is enforced on a fairly ad hoc basis depending on whether an organisation comes to the attention of HMRC or the Employment Tribunal, but companies need to be aware of the risks in hiring interns for activities that could classify them as workers. The higher profile this subject is in the press, the greater the chance of having tribunal claims from disgruntled interns.

Employment and Immigration Solicitor, Davenport Lyons

Charlotte‘s practice focuses on acting for both employers and employees in relation to all aspects of employment law including employment tribunal proceedings.

Charlotte specialises in providing HR support to companies in relation to various matters from redundancies to flexible working requests to reviewing and drafting employment documentation.

Her recent experience includes successfully negotiating a number of commercial settlements for employer clients in employment tribunal claims ranging from discrimination claims to unfair dismissal claims and unlawful deduction of wages claims.

Latest news

Middle East air disruption leaves UK staff stranded as employers weigh pay and absence decisions

Employers face complex decisions on pay, leave and remote working as travel disruption leaves British staff stranded in the Middle East.

Govt launches gender pay gap and menopause action plans to help women ‘thrive at work’

Employers are encouraged to publish action plans to reduce pay disparities and support staff experiencing menopause under new government measures.

Call for stronger professional standards to rebuild trust in jobs

Professional bodies call for stronger standards and Chartered status to improve trust, accountability and consistency across roles.

Modulr partners with HiBob to streamline payroll payments

Partnership integrates payments automation into payroll workflows to reduce manual processing and improve pay day reliability.
- Advertisement -

Jake Young: Strong workplace connections are the foundation of good leadership

Effective leaders are, understandably, viewed as key to organisational success. Good leaders are felt to improve employee engagement, productivity and retention.

AI reshapes finance jobs as entry-level roles come under pressure

Employers prioritise digital skills over traditional accounting as AI reshapes finance roles and raises concerns over entry-level opportunities.

Must read

The view from America: The U.S.’s nonexistent paid parental leave policy

With the US in the early stages of the race to replace President Obama in the White House, candidates particularly on the Democratic side, are throwing focus onto the US's failure to provide paid leave for new parents.

Louise Newbury-Smith: Make your business more flexible, one AI tool at a time

In the face of the Employee Relations Bill, businesses must prepare to better support teams working from anywhere on a more permanent basis...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you