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Anna Denton-Jones Communication Employment Contract Employment Law

Knowledge November 2023

Week 1

Covering the topic of ‘changing terms and conditions’, Week 1 of Knowledge November 2023 is now available to view:

https://mailchi.mp/b2caa2c0aa1b/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-15647912

Week 2

Week 2 of Knowledge November 2023 is now available to view. Last week we looked at the background and flexibility clauses. This week we consider:

  • Are variation clauses any help?

  • 3 ways to vary the contract

https://mailchi.mp/ff4161aa847c/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-15648052

Week 3

Last week we looked at the first two routes to a change of contract. In Week 3 of Knowledge November 2023 we will look at the third.

https://mailchi.mp/a85806429922/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-15648056

Week 4

So far in Knowledge November 2023, we have considered the main legal risks and routes to achieving a change but during this final week we look at how do we do it.

https://mailchi.mp/5ad6bae9bbba/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-15648060

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

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Anna Denton-Jones Bullying and Harassment Conflict Duty of Care Employment Law Harassment

Video | Anti-bullying week 2023

Our latest video is available to view on the Refreshing Law YouTube channel — please click here to watch the video that Anna has recorded to mark Anti-Bullying Week 2023. Anna discusses her thoughts on, and the various issues around bullying in the workplace.

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

 

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Anna Denton-Jones Collective Redundancy Communication Employment Law Employment Rights Act 1996 Redundancy Settlement Agreements Video

Video | Settlement Agreements — An employer’s contribution to fees

Our latest video is available to view on the Refreshing Law YouTube channel — please click here to watch Anna discussing the various issues around an employer’s contribution towards an employee’s legal fees when negotiating Settlement Agreements.

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

 

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Anna Denton-Jones Disability Discrimination Law Diversity Duty of Care Employment Law Employment Rights Act 1996 Equality Act 2010 Offer of Employment Reasonable Adjustments Recruitment

Employers making reasonable adjustments in recruitment

An applicant for a job who had dyspraxia asked to make an oral job application instead of filling the online form that the employer required. The employer emailed him with repeated requests asking him to explain what his difficulty was with the online process. The individual had difficulty with written communication, indeed that was the reason behind his request in the first place, so he also struggled to deal with these emails. The employer ought to have realised this as they knew about the dyspraxia. The Tribunal ruled that a reasonable employer would have phoned the applicant in order to understand their situation more fully.

A factual quirk of this case is that the applicant was seeking to return to the same team, with the job applications being judged by the same line manager who had dismissed him 8 months previously (failed probation). Understandably, that may have been behind the employer’s reluctance to engage with the individual but what you don’t get to know is to what extent they knew about the dyspraxia during the probationary period and what reasonable adjustments were made at that stage to assist the individual in order to level the playing field and put them into a position where they might have been able to pass the probationary period.

This case illustrates the importance of making reasonable adjustments not only for your own employees such as probationers but for all job applicants. It also illustrates how sometimes the reasonable adjustment is something very cheap and easy to do (a phone call instead of an email) and how as soon as the employer has knowledge there is a disability they should be making adjustments not waiting for the employee to ask.

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

 

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Anna Denton-Jones Anonymity Confidentiality Data Protection Act 2018 Data Use and Access Act 2025 Employment Law Employment Rights Act 1996 Freedom of Speech Investigations Privacy

Monitoring exchanges in WhatsApp

Your average employee and their manager are merrily commenting to each other and their colleagues using apps such as WhatsApp, because such applications are an easy way to communicate, saving  time compared to picking up the phone to each other, interrupting each other or sending a more formal email. However, to your average employment lawyer and HR professional, it can feel like the lid coming off Pandora’s box.

You are probably all aware of recent examples of harassment where employers have got into trouble because of the content of messages on Apps (Met Police being an example that hit the news). Today I was reading about an example in ‘People Management’ where a misogynistic older male had sent a female colleague nearly 200 messages that were wholly inappropriate for the workplace including memes, jokes that the sender probably would put down as “banter” and so on. In that particular case, the employee was awarded £19,000. It is for good reason that we are all triggered with concerns as we are asked to delve into this area but that is not the focus of this thought piece. I wanted to focus on the extent to which the employer is able to access WhatsApp messages, for example, if they are stored on a company device.

This largely depends on what you have set down in writing to the employee. An employee will have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their working life, which will include their office space which also now includes their “device space”. So, if the employee is having a chat with their friend, for example, or their partner, they are likely to have a legitimate expectation that that conversation is private in just the same way as in the Halford case years ago, where the employer got into trouble for listening to a conversation with a trade union representative on the telephone. This is why we have to draw to an employee’s attention, what monitoring takes place and you will find statements in policies and in contracts managing that employee’s expectation, so setting out when, for example, a manager is likely to be reviewing the content of their laptop or their device, such as if they go on holiday or if they are off sick. Just because a non-work related matter is being stored on a work laptop or a work phone or iPad, doesn’t mean it loses the quality of privacy in the sense of management of expectations.

You could go further these days and spell out that if employees use things like Facebook or WhatsApp on work equipment, that they should not have any expectation of that communication remaining private. For example, if a manager does have to access the device or after the employee leaves, if they have left those applications open and we then discover something, we are able to use that evidence…

Having said all that, my experience of the Employment Tribunal system is that they do have discretion over admissibility of evidence. Whilst you may have technical legal arguments as to why something has been obtained in an inadmissible way, the Tribunals as opposed to the Courts in the UK, tend to be much more relaxed and are just interested to see the content of the messages and rule on how they affect the legal questions before it. From an employee perspective, it can be deeply frustrating to feel violated in terms of your privacy rights and then find that arguments along those lines don’t get you terribly far and the Tribunal’s focus remains on the substantive claims you are bringing.

I have also recently seen the first examples of emojis causing significant offence and a harassment and victimisation claim but in this particular instance it was the crying with laugher emoji that was the issue. This illustrated that the combination of the emoji with the words used alongside it turn what might be relatively innocuous into the recipient being able to argue that it was offensive. Make sure you have updated your policies to include offence being caused by emojis…

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

 

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Anna Denton-Jones Employment Law Employment Relations (Flexible Working) Act 2023 Employment Rights Act 1996 Reasonable Adjustments Remote Working Return to Work Working from Home

Video | The Employment Relations (Flexible Working) Act 2023

Our latest video is available to view on the Refreshing Law YouTube channel — please click here to watch Anna discussing the new Flexible Working Act (which comes into force in July 2024). This video focuses on the processes that need to be followed under the new Act.

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

 

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Alternative Dispute Resolution Anna Denton-Jones Dispute Management Employment Law

New guidance on alternative dispute resolution

The President of the Employment Tribunals in the UK, Barry Clarke, has issued Presidential Guidance on 7 July 2023 about Alternative Dispute Resolution.

The Guidance acknowledges that the whole Employment Tribunal process has a cost, whether that is for society in terms of running the judicial side of things or for the participants in terms of time, emotional energy, legal costs, damage to reputation and disruption. It acknowledges that whatever the dispute, the Employment Tribunal process involves risk for those involved, both financial, emotional and reputational. In cases where an outcome is fairly clear, the Tribunal’s approach to remedy, when it comes to compensation, can’t be predicted with certainty until the Tribunal has evaluated all of the evidence. Inevitably, alongside the question of whether a claim will succeed, there is always a discussion about what it is worth and in some cases, particularly arrears of pay cases, the costs of arguing about a case can totally outweigh the sums involved.

The Guidance goes onto acknowledge that every time a case is resolved by agreement, in some shape or form, that that is minimising those different types of cost and risk involved. There is an advantage to everybody of being able to move forward if a resolution is reached. From his perspective, resolution of cases also frees resources to be devoted to other cases. You may not know this but when they are listing, the Tribunals routinely put more cases in the diary than there are actually Judges available to hear them, working on an assumption that a high proportion will be resolved.

In terms of settlement options, generally we are talking about conciliation through Acas but also things like Settlement Agreements.

The Guidance emphasises that of course the Tribunal system will decide a case where the parties cannot reach agreement, but the system is going to encourage them to resolve their case by agreement, wherever possible, and this is the focus of the Guidance.

There are four different approaches. This Blog will focus on the three that people are less familiar with: Judicial Mediation, Judicial Assessment and a Dispute Resolution Appointment.

Judicial Mediation is a consensual (meaning the parties have agreed to participate), confidential (without prejudice – so that any concessions made in the meeting will not be used in Tribunal if the process fails) and facilitative (means the Judge is there to facilitate a settlement, not to give any views on the merits of the case in front of them or prospects of success). It is used in cases that are listed for 3 days or more, so complex things like discrimination and whistleblowing cases. This process can be useful early doors before costs have been incurred and usually takes place over a day. If agreement is reached, it falls into the Acas COT3 process to wrap it up. Any Judge that has been involved would not then be involved in a Hearing if the case does reach a hearing.  Success rates are said to be 65-70%.

Judicial Assessment is consensual, confidential and evaluative (evaluative is where the Judge evaluates the respective prospects of success and possible outcomes in terms of remedy whilst remaining impartial). The Judge is able to give an opinion. If the parties don’t accept what is being said, it can certainly assist them to understand the issues at stake and to clarify and narrow the things that are requiring adjudication moving forward so that in itself can be useful to reduce the number of days hearing that is necessary. Again, the Judge that was involved would not be involved in a Final Merits Hearing.

A Dispute Resolution Appointment. This is the new bit – it is non-consensual, confidential and evaluative. It is aimed at cases listed for 6 days or more (more complex claims). A Judge can require the appointment.

Such an appointment can be proactively used where the type of case means that there is going to be a lot of time and effort put into case management, correspondence with the Tribunal or where long hearings are going to contribute to waiting times. These are going to be used where long hearings would be out of proportion with, for example, the fact that the parties are still in an employment relationship or where the likely award would be in respect of injury to feelings only. Such an appointment might also be used if judicial mediation has failed.

Whilst these sorts of cases may settle nearer a hearing time, that in itself, clogs up the system. Effectively, the Tribunal is intervening and requiring the parties to come together to discuss the issues in the case. They can’t of course mandate an outcome from the appointment but they can force minds.

This is usually a 2 or 3 hour hearing which will give an evaluation of prospects of success and possible outcomes whilst remaining impartial. In order to be able to do this effectively, this will take place after the witness statements, so unlike Judicial Mediation, for example, the Judge will have a copy of the relevant paperwork. Again, this is done with a view to the parties really understanding what the case is about and what is at stake, narrowing the issues requiring adjudication and resulting in a shorter more focused final hearing.

Like any change or processes that they are not familiar with, people naturally shy away from trying these things. As a trained mediator, I am of course a big advocate of Alternative Dispute Resolution, particularly because outcomes can be agreed which the Tribunal wouldn’t otherwise be able to order, such as agreed references or apologies.

I took part in a Judicial Mediation last year where I was acting for the Claimant in a high value claim and there were real advantages: the Claimant was able to participate in the comfort of her own home and was not put to the stress and anxiety of travelling to and appearing in a Court environment, the matter was resolved 6 months earlier than it otherwise would have been, again saving a lot of stress and anxiety and she received a sum that she would have been likely to receive had the matter gone to Tribunal. The employer saved themselves 6 months of hassle and all the work in preparing the case.

The next time you are dealing with a difficult dispute, maybe you should give one of these a whirl.

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

 

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Anna Denton-Jones Employment Contract Employment Law Immigration Recruitment Right to Work

Reporting duties — Sponsored workers

More and more organisations are sponsoring employees from an immigration perspective, which means those that are working in HR are having to be more familiar with the duties that they have to report to the Home Office in respect of the staff. This means that the issue of immigration isn’t just something that we deal with on recruitment, it means that throughout the life cycle of the employment relationship, we need to be thinking, in any situation, about the sponsorship implications.

Delays to the commencement of work is something that will have to be notified – the reason for the delay. Illness, bereavement and travel disruption will all be legitimate reasons, as will working out notice with a previous employer but essentially, the Home Office want to know if there is any delay. There is a sensible reason for this (making sure the person does come here and start work and does not abscond).

Absences from work, whether that is for maternity or paternity leave, sick leave or strike action, is another notifiable event.

Any changes made to the role, which will include promotion, changing job title or reduction in salary, is something that needs to be reported. This will cover formal promotions but it can also cover less formal changes in core duties, so line management need to be aware that they can’t just make changes without there being implications.

A change of work location to a different site or working from a customer’s premises and working remotely from home on a permanent or full-time basis will all be things that need to be notified, which is another reason why employees should not be given carte blanche to work from anywhere and there are sponsorship angles to your hybrid policies.

You also have reporting obligations if there is any ending to the relationship or the employee is absent without leave for 4 weeks in total during a calendar year.

These changes have to be notified within 10 days so you don’t have a great deal of time to act.

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

 

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Anna Denton-Jones Communication Employment Contract Employment Law HR Offer of Employment Recruitment Video

Video | Offers vs contracts

Our latest video is available to view on the Refreshing Law YouTube channel — please click here to watch Anna discussing a case she read about recently which relates to an issue that she does see cropping up from time to time around what has been offered at interview and in the initial offer letter versus what is in the contractual documentation later on.

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

 

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Anna Denton-Jones Employment Law Holiday Pay Redundancy Settlement Agreements

Pay-in-lieu of notice and holiday

The most common query I have to deal with relates to holiday calculation and notice/payment-in-lieu of notice.

I’ll set out an example to illustrate:

Today is 15 May 2023. An employee gives their notice of 1 month today, so their employment would end on 15 June 2023. Their holiday will be calculated to 15 June 2023.

However, if the employer decides they don’t want them to work out their notice and agrees instead to make a payment in lieu of (instead of) notice then the end of employment will be 15 May 2023. Holiday will be calculated to today’s date. The employee will be paid 1 months’ salary and benefits including any holiday to today’s date in their final pay.

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law