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Just received this from our contact at HMRC

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    Originally posted by PurpleGorilla View Post
    Does this mean the chap who services my boiler is under my SDC because I ask him to 'de slurge the bogit' as it is making a whistle noise?
    If you are telling him when he should turn up then yes.
    The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't exist

    Comment


      Originally posted by LondonManc View Post
      If you are telling him when he should turn up then yes.
      So everyone is inside IR35, an no one can pay T&S then?

      (MPs excluded obviously)
      http://www.cih.org/news-article/disp...housing_market

      Comment


        Originally posted by PurpleGorilla View Post
        I ask him to 'de slurge the bogit' as it is making a whistle noise?
        Works done, that will be £750 +VAT, please.
        The Chunt of Chunts.

        Comment


          Originally posted by PurpleGorilla View Post
          So everyone is inside IR35, an no one can pay T&S then?

          (MPs excluded obviously)
          MPs are probably on permie contracts so will be allowed to claim expenses.



          Thought; do we insist in a contract that our registered office is our regular place of work and then we can claim T&S because we're travelling to an alternative location, i.e. client site?
          The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't exist

          Comment


            Just received this from our contact at HMRC

            Originally posted by mudskipper View Post
            https://www.gov.uk/government/public...nd-subsistence

            "Most end engagers will only need to take action where a worker is not under supervision, direction or control in the manner they undertake their work. Workers are assumed to be under supervision, direction or control, unless it is shown otherwise."

            So end client doesn't even have to make a decision.
            This is a big worry. How are they going to inform every single engager in the country? Or is that what they want, that everyone by default is inside IR35....?

            Comment


              Originally posted by cityben View Post
              This is a big worry. How are they going to inform every single engager in the country? Or is that what they want, that everyone by default is inside IR35....?
              To be clear - this isn't IR35 yet - just a portent of doom...

              Comment


                Currently, to be within ir35, all three of S, D and C need to apply.

                In the HMRC guidance it appears to indicate that a right to any one of the three would find a psc within ir35. However, the quoted paragraph of the proposal seems to contradict this.

                Either way, S, D and C are all fairly well defined by case law. To be outside it all that would be needed would be for the contract to state that there is no S, D or C, and for working practises to mirror this. This doesn't feel too bad.

                BTW, anyone who thinks that there being no legal definition of a psc will save them needs to sober up. All it needs is a judge in one case to say 'yes' to HMRC'S definition and that's it.

                Comment


                  Originally posted by GB9 View Post

                  Either way, S, D and C are all fairly well defined by case law. To be outside it all that would be needed would be for the contract to state that there is no S, D AND C, and for working practises to mirror this. This doesn't feel too bad.

                  .
                  FTFY - That is what the contract needs to state, no contract can say there is no S,D OR C, cos that basically means they can't ask you to start on X date, or follow their H&S policy or any minutia you care to pick.

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by Danglekt View Post
                    FTFY - That is what the contract needs to state, no contract can say there is no S,D OR C, cos that basically means they can't ask you to start on X date, or follow their H&S policy or any minutia you care to pick.
                    Things such as H&S fall outside sdc.

                    How is start date sdc? Fixed working hours, maybe.

                    Unless the definition of sdc changes, and they have indicated that it won't, then I think it will be very possible to get a non sdc situation.

                    What will be clear though is the client's expectation of whether they want a disguised employee or not.

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by mudskipper View Post
                      I don't believe we know. Best guess is "soon".
                      Our contact from HMRC said this "HMRC promise clear and concise guidance before 6 April 2016" - guessing this is as precise in terms of date as they want to be

                      Comment

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