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In relation to Cycle to Work schemes there is a specific exemption which is detailed under PERG 2.11.3. [4] Under the OFT group licence, employers required separate authorisation for cycle orders over £1000. The specific exemption for cycle to work schemes under the FCA also only covers orders up to £1000.
On 18 February 2010, it was confirmed that bike and car parts chain Halfords was to buy the company in a £73.2 million deal. The first four rebranded Halfords Autocentres opened in Derby on 24 May 2010, plus one in Solihull. Over three hundred Halfords Autocentre outlets are now open across the United Kingdom.
Halfords rebranded in February 2003, to the black and orange logo it has today. [5] Halfords entered into a Collaboration Agreement with Autobacs Seven Co. on 11 July 2005, [6] a Japan based car accessory retailer with chains of stores all over the world and is best known for being the title sponsor of Super GT and D1 Grand Prix. [7]
During their 2013 annual conference the Conservative Party announced a new scheme, called Help to Work, the workfare aspect of which "Community Work Placements" expected claimants to work for up to 30 hours a week for 26 weeks in return for Jobseeker's Allowance . The scheme was introduced in April 2014, but scrapped in November 2015.
The scheme was announced as providing grants to employers to pay 80% of a staff wage and employment costs each month, up to a total of £2,500 per person per month. The scheme covered the period 1 March 2020 until 30 September 2021, and had a total cost of £70 Billion. [2] The scheme initially ran for three months and was backdated to 1 March. [3]
The Work Programme (WP) was a UK government welfare-to-work programme introduced in Great Britain in June 2011. [1] It was the flagship welfare-to-work scheme of the 2010–2015 UK coalition government.
Sharesave, also known as Save As You Earn, SAYE, or the Savings Related Share Option Scheme, is a British savings scheme designed to encourage employees to buy stakes in the companies for which they work. [1] It was introduced by the British government in 1980, with HM Revenue & Customs approval, according to a model set by the Treasury. From 6 ...
Although the figure quoted was correct at the time, the project was front-loaded with costs and lagged in results; given another 11 months, the cost per head would have been roughly half of the quoted figure. [3] The New Deal was replaced in the Summer of 2011 by the Coalition Government's Single Work Programme. [4]