SAS Doctors guide to strike action in Wales

Visas

Updated: Friday 5 April 2024

If you are working in the UK on a health and care visa under a certificate of sponsorship from a licensed sponsor, you need to consider the impact of unpaid leave, unauthorised absences and reduction in pay on your visa sponsorship and on your leave to remain.

Unpaid leave as a result of industrial action

Under current immigration guidance, unpaid leave taken to participate in legally organised industrial action is exempt from the rule that your sponsorship will be terminated if you are absent from work unpaid for 28 days or longer in a calendar year.

Unauthorised absences over 10 consecutive days

If you are absent from work for 10 consecutive working days or more without permission, your employer may be required to notify the Home Office of this absence. The Home Office will consider if further action is required.

Our legal interpretation is that this refers to missing 10 days in a row on which you were scheduled to work or had a shift and not 10 calendar days in a row. This means the count towards 10 consecutive missed working days in a row continues even if there are authorised non-working days that occur in between them. If a series of consecutive unauthorised absences is broken by a day that you did work as scheduled, the count resets at zero. It is the number of your consecutive unauthorised absences, rather than the consecutive number of days of strike action in general, which would contribute to this count.

This is the basis upon which we will fight for members in the unlikely event an employer takes action against them based on a different interpretation.

Below are example shifts over a two-week period of strike action which demonstrate how 10 consecutive days of unauthorised absence are calculated.

Unauthorised absences: example shift pattern 1

In the first example, you are absent due to legal industrial action for the entire period. If you were scheduled to work Monday to Sunday one week and then Tuesday to Friday the next, from the second Thursday, your employer would be required to notify the Home Office. This would be the tenth day of your absence.

Example 1: you are absent due to legal industrial action for the entire period. If you were scheduled to work Monday to Sunday one week and then Tuesday to Friday the next, from the second Thursday, the tenth absence, your employer would be required to notify the Home Office. T Table 1. Shift pattern in which unauthorised absences due to strike action break the 10 consecutive day rule

Unauthorised absences: shift pattern example 2

The example below demonstrates how the count resets if you work a shift that breaks a consecutive series of unauthorised absences. In this example, you are absent from work due to strike action for 7 consecutive days when you are scheduled to be working. There is no strike action on the day you are scheduled to have your next shift and so you attend work as usual. This would reset the count at zero from the perspective of the 10 consecutive day rule. Your next unauthorised absence would be considered the first in the count towards a new series of 10 consecutive days unauthorised absences.

Example 2: You are absent from work due to strike action for 7 consecutive days when you are scheduled to be working.  There is no strike action on the day you are scheduled to have your next shift and so you attend work as usual. This would reset the count at zero from the perspective of the rule. Table 2. Shift pattern example in which strike action does not break the 10 consecutive day rule

Please contact the BMA Immigration Advice Service for further advice if you have any concerns about any anticipated absence amounting to 10 consecutive working days without permission, or your employer seeks to interpret this period in another way.

Reduction in pay

If your salary is reduced for any period of time, your sponsor will be required to notify the Home Office. They must confirm the reason for the reduction of salary and the dates that the reduction is effective from and to.

Although your sponsor is required to report a reduction in salary to the Home Office, if the cause of this salary reduction is legally organised industrial action, the sponsor cannot end their sponsorship of your visa.

If you are impacted in any way by a reduction in salary that does not result from taking part in legally organised industrial action, please contact the BMA’s Immigration Advisory Service.

Reporting procedures for visa holders

Doctors sponsored by health boards/trusts

  • The reporting process at health boards/trusts for absences without permission/unpaid absences involves a Level 1 User (usually, a named HR representative) sending an online report directly to the Home Office confirming any reportable change/activity. 
  • The Home Office imposes an obligation on sponsors to report certain types of employment activity relating to sponsored workers within a 10-working day period of the activity taking place. This is the only mandated timeframe in relation to reporting on sponsored worker absences. We would therefore encourage IMGs with health board/trust sponsors to report their absence as strike action to their overseas sponsorship team within 10 days of returning to work.
  • Should an employer seek to propose a reporting methodology that differs from that of the Home Office guidance as outlined above, please contact us for support.

Doctors with settled status

  • Doctors who have settlement in the UK, whether that is Settled Status (EU Settlement Scheme) or ILR (remainder of the Immigration Rules), fall outside of the scope of these reporting requirements.

Doctors on spousal visas

  • The income threshold required to be met for most spouse visa applications submitted in the UK will is ordinarily a combined income of least £18,600 (some exceptions can apply).
  • It is highly unlikely that a doctor would fail to meet the financial threshold for this visa category by taking strike action. However, if you feel your personal circumstances would put you in jeopardy of being below the financial threshold for your visa, please contact the BMA immigration advisory service.

Doctors with a pre-settled status

  • If you are on a ‘personal’ visa category such as pre-settled status, you are not sponsored by your employer and so are not under an immigration obligation to report to your employer any plan to take industrial action.
  • Your employer is under no obligation to report the individual employees’ activity either, as this is not a sponsored role.

Doctors with refugee status

  • The right to take industrial action is available to all doctors, including those with refugee status.
  • However, there are a number of different types of status for those who are refugees and, as with all visa types, conditions attached to a visa can differ from individual to individual.
  • In order for us to best support members, should an individual with a refugee status have a specific question regarding the impact of taking industrial action, please contact the immigration advisory service and we will be able to provide individualised support and advice.