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Employment Law: An Update. January 2006 Alison Bell. Hot Topics: . Discipline and grievance Long term sickness Changing terms and conditions Compromise agreements. New Legislation:. TUPE 2006 Work & Families Act 2006 Recent Cases What's in the pipeline. Hot Topics .
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Employment Law: An Update January 2006 Alison Bell
Hot Topics: • Discipline and grievance • Long term sickness • Changing terms and conditions • Compromise agreements
New Legislation: • TUPE 2006 • Work & Families Act 2006 Recent Cases What's in the pipeline
Hot Topics Discipline and grievance
Disciplinary/dismissal and grievance procedures • Statutory Dispute Resolution Regulations • In 2 parts: Disciplinary/Dismissal Procedure and Grievance Procedure • Standard 3 step procedure • Put it in writing • Meet and discuss • Appeal
The disciplinary/dismissal procedure • Mandatory Disciplinary/Dismissal Procedure • An additional obligation • If the employer fails to comply: • Automatic finding of unfair dismissal; and • An increase in compensation
Points to note in the standard procedure • Step 1 – Put it in writing, send it to the employee and invite the employee to a meeting • Step 2 – Arrange the meeting before action is taken • Step 3 – If the employee appeals, invite the employee to a further meeting and inform the employee of the final decision
Practical implications • Post employment disputes • Overlapping procedures
Practical Implications • Retirement • Redundancy
Practical implications • Probationary periods • Fixed term contracts
Grievance and disciplinary procedures • A wide definition of “grievance letter” • Solicitor’s letter (open or without grievance) • Flexible working request letter • Complaint about handling of earlier grievance • Solicitor’s letter asking for settlement not an appeal • Information required as part of a DDP • Employers must not rely on expired disciplinary warnings
ACAS Code of Practice • Investigation • Establish underlying cause • No reason for absence – discipline • Genuine illness – capability • Sympathetic and considerate approach Consultation, consultation, consultation !
Long term sickness - capability • Regular contact • Consult employee • Employee’s medical evidence • Own medical evidence • Need to replace
Long term sickness (2) • Warn employee of dismissal • Meeting with employee to consider • Alternative employment • Reasonable adjustments
Decision • Nature of the illness(es) • Likelihood of recurrences • Other sickness absence? • Length of absence
Decision (2) • Spaces between absences • Need for particular employee • Impact on others • Length of employment • Consistency
Varying terms and conditions • Employment law implications • Possible routes forward • Contractual change • Consultation • Redundancy situation
Contractual change ? • Terms and conditions • Employee handbook • Individual agreements • Longstanding practice
If no contractual change • Discuss at consultative forum • Individual consultation process • Reason for objection • Discrimination issues • Disciplinary procedure for refusals
If contractual change • How important • Business reasons
Introducing contractual change • Four options • Through a contractual right • By agreement • By imposing the change • By dismissal and re-engagement
Imposing the change • Resign and claim constructive dismissal • Continue to work under protest • Claim unlawful deduction from wages (if there is an effect on pay) • Claim breach of contract • Claim discrimination (eg if there is a negative effect on a particular group of employees)
Dismiss and re-engage • Wrongful dismissal • Unfair dismissal whether or not re-engaged • Business need, ‘some other substantial reason’
Redundancy • Very significant changes • Consultation with employees’ representatives • Individual consultation
Varying Terms and Conditions – Summary • Employment Law implications • Possible routes forward • Contractual change • Consultation • Redundancy situation
The technical requirements • When to use • Without prejudice conversations • Tactical considerations
Summary of main TUPE changes • More transactions likely to be TUPE transfers • Old employer can be liable for failing to consult • Old employer must disclose information to new employer • New employer has (limited) ability to change contracts of employment • Insolvency
Work and Families Act • Maternity and adoption pay • Keeping in touch • Early return to work notice • Flexible working for carers • Paternity pay • Minimum annual leave entitlements
Practical implications • Pay administration • Increased warning of return to work • Reasonable contact – KIT days • Sharing maternity/adoption leave • Impact of increase flexible working for carers
Case law developments • Disability absence and sick pay schemes • Sickness vs disability • Vicarious liability for harassment • Whistleblowing – detriment after termination • Discrimination by association • ‘On racial grounds’
Case law developments • Length of service and pay • Employers vicarious liability for discrimination • Public holidays for part time workers • Using the right procedures
Future legislation • Commission for Equality and Human Rights – Oct 07 • Data protection fully implemented – Oct 07 • Smoking bans – 2007/08
Smoking • Smoke free premises • Signage requirements • Vehicles • Penalties
Age Discrimination January 2006
Age discrimination • Outline of the Regulations • Specific issues • Recruitment • Service related benefits • Retirement • Other areas of impact
General observations • Applies to all applicants/workers • Irish experience: 22% of claims about age • Many existing policies/practices are ageist • Uncapped compensation
Some statistics… • 40% increase in age claims in the US • High numbers already facing age discrimination • Big cultural change required
Main principles • Direct – different treatment actual/perceived age • Indirect – policy/practice/criterion disadvantages • Harassment • Victimisation • Positive discrimination • Selection must be age neutral
Main Principles - Justification • Direct and indirect • Proportionate and legitimate • Evidence not assertion
Other exemptions to AD • Genuine occupational requirements (very limited) • Pay based on national minimum wage • Complying with a statutory authority e.g. health & safety, under 18s doing bar work • Occupational pension schemes • Life Assurance • Some pay and other service-related benefits • Contractual redundancy payments
What else… • Employers liable for acts of employees • No age limits for unfair dismissal and redundancy • Default retirement at 65 • Right to request to work longer
Enforcement & Remedy • In the Employment Tribunal • Brought within 3 months of the discriminatory act • Provided compliance with the Statutory Grievance Procedure • Compensation = Uncapped