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Flooding and heavy snow are currently causing significant disruptions to road and rail travel in various parts of the country. What is the legal position if an employee is unable to get to the workplace, or is late, due to disruptions to road or rail travel?

As a general rule, it’s an employee’s responsibility to turn up for work and to do so on time. However, where travel disruption caused by adverse weather means that they are having commuting difficulties, you need to be more flexible. You have a statutory duty to ensure the health and safety of your employees, so you should not demand they travel to work when it is not safe to do so and may put them at high risk, e.g. the Met Office has issued a severe weather warning for your area following heavy snow and has advised people to avoid travelling unless absolutely essential.

Assuming travel is sufficiently safe but there are road or rail travel disruptions, employees should be advised to allow extra time for their journey and/or make alternative travel arrangements if possible. Where travel disruption has genuinely resulted in an employee’s absence from the workplace or their lateness, your options here include: