Chapter 3 - The Role of Policy and Procedure in the Employment Context Flashcards
What is the importance of having policies and procedures in place?
- Prevent disputes from arising, and if they do arise, can help to resolve them without involving legal professionals.
- Allow for consistency.
- Ensures employers are compliant with current employment law.
How do employers implement policies?
- Make them contractual by incorporating them into employment contracts.
- Can use them as additional guidance.
Once implemented - staff must be made aware of the policies through training.
Liberty Living plc v Reid [2011]
What is the difference between disciplinary and grievance issues?
Disciplinary issues - with an employees work, conduct or absence.
Grievance issues - problems and concerns the employee has with the employer.
What does s3 ERA 1996 state?
Employers are under a duty to provide their employees with details of any workplace disciplinary or grievance procedures and disciplinary rules.
Key reasons for having a disciplinary policy
- to ensure all employees are treated consistently and fairly if there are disciplinary issues
- to communicate to employees what is considered to be acceptable behavior
- to deal with situations where employees break the rules
- to deal with situations where employees under perform
What is the ACAS Code?
Provides guidance on disciplinary and grievance procedures and their content.
It is split into guidance on disciplinary and grievance matters.
What are the 5 elements of fairness set out in the ACAS Code?
- Matters should be raised and dealt with promptly
- Parties should act consistently
- Employers should carry out the necessary investigations to establish the facts
- Employers should inform employees of the basis of the problem, and allow the employee to put forward his case
- Employee should be allowed to be accompanied at any meeting
What is the process for disciplinary matters established by the ACAS Code?
- Establish the facts of the case
- Inform the employee of the problem
- Hold a meeting with the employee
- Allow the employee to be accompanied
- Decide on appropriate action
- Provide the employee with a opportunity to appeal
What was established in the Holmes v Qinetig Ltd [2016] case regarding the ACAS Code?
The Code only covers misconduct issues, poor performance, disciplinary warnings and grievances.
What is the process for grievance matters established by the ACAS Code?
- The employee should set out in writing the nature of the grievance
- The employer should hold a meeting with the employee
- The employer must allow the employee to be accompanied
- The employer must decide on appropriate action
- The employer must allow the employee to take the grievance further if the matter isn’t resolved.
What is the legal status of the ACAS code?
s.207 Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act states that failure to follow the code in itself doesn’t give rise to a claim.
It is however significant in unfair dismissal cases. the ACAS code is admissible as evidence and any provision deemed relevant in a particular case will be taken into account, Therefore failure to comply with the code could hurt the employers chances of arguing that a dismissal was fair.
How can an award be adjusted if either party fails to follow the ACAS code?
If an employee is successful in their claim and it is found that the employer unreasonably failed to follow the ACAS code the court may increase any award to the employee by up to 25%.
If an employee unreasonably fails to comply with the code the court may reduce the award by up to 25%.
The Code does not offer any specific guidance for ETs on this, all it states is that “what is reasonable or justified will depend on all the circumstances of the case” and “employment tribunals will take the size and resources of an employer into account” when determining what steps should have been taken under the Code.
What guidance has ACAS produced in relation to the ACAS code?
ACAS has produced a comprehensive guide to handling disciplinary and grievance matters.
Key points in the Guidance are as follows.
- To reinforce the emphasis on resolving disputes, it includes a brief commentary on how mediations operate and suggestions on when they might be appropriate, for example, for resolving grievances.
- Sample letters are provided that employers can use as models for dealing with disciplinary and related issues. They include a notice of a disciplinary meeting, a notice of a final written warning and a letter to a worker’s GP to enquire into the cause of a worker’s absence.
- The Guidance comments that, on a strict interpretation, the right to be accompanied at grievance meetings as set out at s10 EReA 1999 applies only where an employer is dealing with a complaint about a duty owed to the worker which arises from statute or common law (e.g. a contractual right).
The Guidance makes it clear that it is good practice to allow workers to be accompanied by a colleague or trade union representative at all formal grievance meetings.
What must an employee do before they can bring a claim to the ET?
They must contact ACAS to inform it of the prospective claim. ACAS will then work with the parties, if they agree, to try to effect a settlement of the dispute without the need to issue proceedings in the ET.
The system is referred to as a mandatory scheme, but it is mandatory only in the sense of having to notify ACAS before an employee begins a tribunal claim – full participation in the scheme is still voluntary. An employee who fails to notify ACAS, however, will be unable to issue proceedings in the ET as a unique Early Conciliation number (issued by ACAS) needs to be included in the claim form ET1
What is a disciplinary hearing?
According to s13(4) EReA 1999, a disciplinary hearing is one which could result in one of the following actions being taken:
- the employer gives the employee a formal warning;
- the employer takes some other action in respect of the employee (which may include dismissal); or
- the employer confirms a warning or other action taken.
What does ACAS consider to be a disciplinary issue?
ACAS considers disciplinary issues to be those relating to misconduct or poor performance, and notes that it is often best to try to resolve these issues informally first.
How to deal with a disciplinary issue.
See table at 3.2.2
What should a disciplinary policy include?
- a statement as to the purpose and key principles of the procedure;
- the stages in the disciplinary process – informal discussion, first warning, final written warning and dismissal, including suggested timescales for each stage;
- the employee’s rights in relation to the procedure – for example, the right to be accompanied to a disciplinary meeting;
- the procedure for matters which amount to gross misconduct and a definition of those matters; and
- the appeals process.
What is a disciplinary warning?
It is used if the allegation doesn’t lead to a dismissal. The approach to disciplinary warnings is not set out in statute, but is dealt with the ACAS Code.
It will be usual for there to be at least three levels of warning:
- informal warning – this is not meant to be a formal disciplinary warning;
- written warning – a formal warning that remains on the employee’s record for a specified period of time; the recommendation is that this will be for around six months;
- final written warning – a formal warning that remains on the employee’s record for a specified period of time; the recommendation is that this will be for around one year.
If the employee repeats the same “offence” during the period that the warning is on record or does not meet the required level of improvement, the next level of warning may be given. When an employee is given a warning there should be a clear explanation of what standards need to be achieved, or what behaviour must not be repeated.
What is a grievance hearing?
s13(5) EReA 1999 defines a grievance hearing as a hearing which concerns the performance of a duty by an employer in relation to a worker.