Report trade union facility time data
As a public sector employer, you must report and publish information on facility time for your employees who are trade union representatives.
Foreword
The government recognises that there are significant benefits to both employers and employees when organisations and unions work together effectively to deliver high quality public service, but facility time within the public sector must be accountable and represent value for money.
The Trade Union (Facility Time Publication Requirements) Regulations came into force on 1 April 2017, requiring public sector organisations who employ over 49 Full Time Equivalent Staff to publish information relating to trade union usage/spend. These regulations provide a framework for open and transparent monitoring.
During the passage of the Trade Union Act 2016, the government committed to develop guidance to help employers meet this legislative requirements and to ensure a high level of transparency and consistency across organisations. Over the past year, the government has sought feedback from public sector organisations and Trade Unions to improve guidance based on this feedback.
The Trade Union Facility Time Publication Service’s deadline for public sector organisations to centrally submit data is 31 July.
The Civil Service is leading by example and demonstrating that greater accountability can result in sensible savings, demonstrating effective use of taxpayers money. The government strongly encourages all public sector organisations to ensure facility time spend represents value for money by aiming to reduce facility time spend to 0.06% of paybill as achieved by the Civil Service.
Overview
Facility Time data is data that you need to collect, report and publish under the Trade Union Facility Time Publication Requirements Regulations 2017.
As a public sector employer, you must report and publish information on facility time for your employees who are trade union representatives.
Facility time is when an employee takes time off from their normal role to carry out their duties and activities as a trade union representative.
View examples of trade union duties and activities
You need to report and publish this information once a year every year.
Check if you need to report trade union facility time data
You must report and publish facility time information if you’re a public sector employer and had more than 49 full time equivalent employees during any seven months of the relevant period.
Public sector employers
Public sector employers include:
- local authorities
- National Health Service
- maintained schools, academies or other educational institutions
- police
- UK government departments – except the Secret Intelligence Service, the Security Service and the Government Communications Headquarters
- Scottish Ministers
Refer to the list in Schedule 1 of the regulations for a full list of public sector employers who need to report this data.
Exceptions to the reporting requirement
You can choose whether to report the data if you had fewer than 49 full time equivalent employees during any seven months of the period between 1 April and 31 March each year.
You do not need to report the data if you’re in Northern Ireland or you’re a devolved Welsh authority.
You must report your data if you fit the above criteria, even if you do not have any trade union representatives or spend any money on Trade Union Facility Time. If that is the case, please use the reporting service anyway to submit a nil return, in compliance with statutory requirements.
How to report the data and when to report it by
By 31 July each year:
- report the data on GOV.UK using its online trade union facility time reporting service
- publish the data on your website – the easiest way to do this is by publishing your answers from the online service
- include the data in your annual report and accounts if you have one
If you choose to publish your own data on your website, you’ll also need to calculate and add the:
- percentage of pay spent on facility time
- percentage of total paid facility time spent on paid trade union activities
When reporting your data on GOV.UK using the online Trade Union Facility Time Reporting Service, the service will automatically calculate these figures for you.
Trade Union Facility Time Reporting Service
The 2023/24 reporting service is now open.
Click here to submit your organisation’s data.
Please contact facilitytime@cabinetoffice.gov.uk with any enquiries.
What you need to report
You need to collect and report facility time information to cover the period from 1 April to 31 March each year.
Data you need to collect
Keep a record of the:
- total number of trade union representatives your organisation employed - include employees who were not representatives for the full 12 months
- total full time equivalent number of representatives
- total amount of time representatives spent on facility time
- percentage of working hours each representative spent on facility time – you’ll need to select from an option of 0%, 1 to 50%, 51 to 99%, or 100% when you report this on GOV.UK
- total amount of time representatives spent on paid facility time – paid union duties and activities
- total amount of time representatives spent on paid union activities
- total pay bill – for all employees not just union representatives
- total cost of facility time
You may find it helpful to use a spreadsheet to collate the information.
Calculations you need to make
Full time equivalent number (FTE)
The individual full time equivalent number is an employee’s individual hours divided by the employer’s full time hours. For example, the FTE for a part time employee who works 18.5 hours a week based on a full time week of 37 hours is 0.5.
To get the total FTE number, add the number of full time employees who are representatives and the individual FTE for representatives who work part time.
Count the total number of hours representatives are employed, not just the hours they spend on facility time.
Full time equivalent number example
This is based on full time hours of 37 hours a week.
Data | FTE |
---|---|
2 full time employees | 2 FTE employees |
1 part time (18.5 hours) | 0.5 FTE employees |
1 part time (25 hours) | 0.7 FTE employees |
Total FTE | 3.2 FTE employees |
Total pay bill
This is the total gross amount for all employees spent on wages plus the total pension contributions plus total National Insurance contributions.
Total cost of facility time
The individual cost of facility time is the hourly cost for each representative multiplied by the number of paid facility time hours.
The hourly cost is the gross amount spent on wages for each employee plus pension contributions plus National Insurance contributions divided by the number of working hours during the period.
To get the total cost of facility time, add together the facility time costs for each representative. For example, if a representative’s hourly cost is £10 and they did 56 paid facility time hours then their individual facility time cost would be £560. If there is only one other representative and that person’s facility time cost is £360 then the total facility time cost would be £920.
If you’re a local authority
If you’re a local authority, you need to report the data separately for trade union representatives in each of the following categories:
- central function
- education function
- fire and rescue function
Facility time cost
You need to subtract from the total cost of facility time any money received from other parties.
Divide your total contribution by the total number of union representatives and multiply that result by the number of representatives in the function you’re reporting on.
Example
Data | Result |
---|---|
Function reporting on | Education |
Total number of trade union representatives | 3 |
Number of representatives in the education function | 2 |
Total facility time cost | £60,000 |
Money received from other participants | £10,000 |
Facility time cost for the education function | £33,333 |
If you’re a school
If you’re a maintained school, the local authority should report the data on your behalf. If you’re an academy, you need to report your own data.
Include TUPE, non-TUPE, teachers and support staff representatives in your data.
Read the Department for Education guidance on trade union facility time in schools.
If you have a pooled arrangement
A pooled arrangement is when a number of employers share trade union representatives to save costs. It is usually run by a local authority but can also be run by a multi-academy trust.
A pooled arrangement can also refer to when a local authority shares its union representatives across several functions. For example, a local authority that employs a union representative in its fire and rescue function who also undertakes union work for the education function.
The cost of the representatives is shared by the participants in the arrangement. Each party puts money into a shared pot.
Reporting the data
The employer of the union representative(s) needs to collate and report their facility time data. This includes the time spent by your union representative(s) on paid facility time for each organisation, and the breakdown between duties and activities.
If you do not employ a union representative but pay into a pooling arrangement or share a trade union representative, you must record that facility time spend on the reporting service annually.
What happens to the data
The data will be published on GOV.UK by the end of August.
Trade union duties and activities
Trade union duties are when an employee has paid time off during working hours to carry out recognised trade union duties.
Working hours refers to any time when an employee has to be at work according to their employment contract.
Trade union duties are paid. Trade union activities can be paid or unpaid. Trade union representatives are entitled to reasonable paid time off to carry out trade union duties. They are not entitled to paid time off for trade union activities but an employer can choose to pay for this time.
Find out more about the rights of trade union representatives to paid time off.
Examples of trade union duties
- duties connected with collective bargaining – for example, on terms and conditions of employment, redundancy, allocation of work
- taking part in a negotiation or consultation process – including meeting and corresponding with managers, and informing union members of progress and outcomes
- attending a disciplinary or grievance hearing, with trade unions, including allowing reasonable time to prepare
- attending training for the trade union representative role
Examples of trade union activities
- discussing internal union matters
- dealing with internal administration of the union – for example, answering union correspondence meetings other than as part of the negotiating or consultation process
For academies
Trade union duties tend to be related to employment within the academy – for example, supporting colleagues in disciplinary hearings.
Trade union activities tend not to be directly related to academy needs – for example, attending an annual trade union conference or voting in union elections.
Updates to this page
Published 21 May 2019Last updated 22 May 2024 + show all updates
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Added a link to allow users to submit their organisation's data.
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Updated to reflect that the 2022/23 reporting service is now closed and added contact details.
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Updated to include the link to submit trade union facility time data.
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Link to reporting service website changed to email link for enquiries.
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The 2021 to 2022 reporting service is now open.
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First published.