AN increasing number of applications for Shared Parental Leave (SPL) can be expected by businesses after new rules, which may also require more management time and paperwork, come fully into force next month.

Fathers wanting to take more than two weeks’ statutory paternity leave can apply to their employers to share, with their partner, up to 50 weeks leave and 37 weeks statutory pay, either together, or separately, in up to three blocks of time each.

Each parent must give their employer eight weeks’ notice of proposed leave.

SPL is to be welcomed as a more enlightened, family-friendly approach to allowing parents to share leave to care for newborn babies but, to minimise what could initially appear quite complicated, businesses should get strategies in place now, before a member of staff applies for SPL.

Until a member of staff applies for SPL, employers will not know how long a potentially crucial person may be on leave for. The flexibility of SPL could mean that some parents will make relatively last-minute decisions on how they choose to allocate the leave and businesses need to consider how this will affect them operationally.

In families where the mother earns the most, it is likely that parents will decide that she should return to work while the father looks after the baby, or they may wish to share the 50 weeks equally to avoid missing out on this precious time together as a family.

Although there is no legal obligation, the employers of parents applying for SPL – in the most likely event that they work for separate companies - should liaise to arrange the total leave jointly to ensure that the statutory 50 weeks leave is not exceeded.