flash news
The assumptions of the Artificial Intelligence Systems Act have appeared in the List of Legislative and Programme Works of the Council of Ministers. It is intended to implement the so-termed AI Act, which we wrote about on our portal.
On 29 July 2024, the Court of Justice held that a rule under which part-time workers can only receive overtime pay for work exceeding the work time standard applicable to full-time workers constitutes unequal treatment of part-time workers which, if not justified by objective reasons, may be contrary to EU law (case ref. C-184/22 and C-185/22).
Two days from the office and three days from home - this is the most popular remote working model across Europe, according to a recent CBRE study. The report from the study published in July (European Office Occupier Sentiment Survey 2024) indicated that 70% of employees work from the office for two or three days and only 7% work from home four days a week.
On 30 July 2024, the following was published on the website of the Government Legislation Centre: supplementary material to the draft Act on amending the Act on foreigners and certain other acts (UC15). It includes an annex to aRegulation of the Minister of Internal Affairs and Administration with a list of professions the practice of which results in the recognition of higher professional qualifications obtained by a foreigner.
Yesterday, the website of the Government’s Legislation Centre published a new draft bill on minimum wages. Its purpose is to implement Directive (EU) 2022/2041 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 19 October 2022 on adequate minimum wages in the European Union.
A new solution has been introduced to the Polish pension system: a so-called widow's pension. This stems from the Act of 26 July 2024 amending the Act on pensions from the Social Insurance Fund and certain other acts, as published in the Journal of Laws on 16 August 2024.
The Act states that widows and widowers, in addition to their pension (or other similar benefit such as the pre-retirement benefit), will be able to receive a survivor's pension from their deceased spouse.
One of these pensions will be due in full and the other will be paid:
- from 1 July 2025 to 31 December 2026 at the rate of 15%,
- from 1 January 2027 at the rate of 25%.