1 / 12

February 2014

Employment Law Update. Karen Plumbley-Jones. February 2014. Contents. Major recent cases New employment legislation Employment law news Action points. Tirkey v Chandok and another (ET). Could a claim for caste discrimination be brought under the Equality Act?

galen
Télécharger la présentation

February 2014

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Employment Law Update • Karen Plumbley-Jones February 2014

  2. Contents • Major recent cases • New employment legislation • Employment law news • Action points

  3. Tirkey v Chandok and another (ET) • Could a claim for caste discrimination be brought under the Equality Act? • Ms Tirkey was employed as a domestic servant and was of a low caste • She was treated very badly by her employers and claimed race and religion/belief discrimination • ET: race includes ethnic origin, which is wide enough to include caste and descent • Therefore Ms Tirkey could bring her claim • Tribunal decision so not binding and may be appealed • Equality Act to be amended to include caste (2015?)

  4. Olivier v Department of Work and Pensions (ET) • Was a belief in democratic socialism a philosophical belief under the Equality Act? • Mr Olivier was elected as a Labour councillor and had a letter that criticised the Government published in a paper • He was dismissed and claimed unfair dismissal and discrimination • ET: support of a political party is not enough but a belief in democratic socialism is protected • Tribunal decision so not binding

  5. Naeem v Secretary of State for Justice (EAT) • Mr Naeem started work in 2004 as a Muslim prison chaplain • Until 2002, the Prison Service only employed Christian chaplains • Pay system was linked to length of service • Nr Naeem claimed religious and race discrimination • EAT dismissed his claims • Length of service criterion did not place Muslim chaplains at a particular disadvantage • Any chaplain, of whatever religion or race, who was appointed after 2002 was treated in the same way

  6. Norbrook Laboratories (GB) Ltd v Shaw (EAT) • Did three emails amount to a qualifying disclosure for the purposes of whistle-blowing? • Mr Shaw managed a team of territory managers, who drove to customers to obtain sales • During heavy snow, Mr Shaw sent three emails raising concerns about the dangers of driving in the snow • Two emails went to h&s manager; one went to HR team • Mr Shaw was dismissed and claimed automatic unfair dismissal and whistle-blowing • EAT: email correspondence taken as a whole was a qualifying disclosure, even though each email on its own was not

  7. Employment legislation • Deregulation Bill – abolishes tribunals' power to make wider recommendations in discrimination cases • Transparency of Lobbying, Non-party Campaigning and Trade Union Administration Act 2014 – includes provisions relating to a trade union's duty to keep a list of members • Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment Act 2012 – reforms to offender rehabilitation come into effect on 10 March • ET limits increase on 6 April • Maximum compensatory award: £76,574 (or 52 weeks' pay if less) • A week's pay: £464 • Maximum basic/SRP: £13,920 • Statutory rates of pay rise on 6 April • SSP: £87.55 per week • SMP/SPP/SAP: £138.18 per week

  8. News • ACAS good practice guidance on dealing with questions regarding discrimination in the workplace • ACAS guide to managing requests to breastfeed at work • Extension of flexible working to be introduced on 30 June • Percentage threshold scheme to be abolished from 6 April

  9. Action points • Look out for possible race discrimination claims from those who allege caste discrimination • Be careful about disciplining or dismissing employees with known political beliefs or affiliations • Read the ACAS guidance on dealing with discrimination questions • Review and update your flexible working policy

  10. Thank you for listening to this podcast • Our CPD provider code is • 036/BODI

  11. If you have any queries, please get in touch withyour usual contact in the Employment team.

  12. February 2014 • Employment law update • Karen Plumbley-Jones

More Related