Arts & Literature1 min ago
Unfair Dismissal?
16 Answers
Not sure where I stand here, I'm about to be made redundant but here's the thing.... I was employed on the factory floor as a machine operator. A few months AFTER I was taken the company employed two other operators and two years later I was moved upstairs to work on websites (something I had a small amount of experience in). Now the work has run dry I'm getting the golden handshake. Should I not have been moved back to the job that I was originally employed to do ? Please help me legal people
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Myriad2112. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Redundancy is for the job, not the person. If you accepted a new job and that didn't work out, even though your old job still exists being done by someone else, then there's nothing you can do. They can't get rid of one of them just so you have a job.
They could argue they promoted you, so hardly unfair treatment. If anything it could be constructive dismissal, but very hard to prove I should think.
They could argue they promoted you, so hardly unfair treatment. If anything it could be constructive dismissal, but very hard to prove I should think.
Good advice, as usual from BM.
Regarding the contract you became entitled to statutory rights upon entering into an employment contract without any need for the details of these rights being written into the contract.
As I understand the position your job has gone due to a downturn in orders and your employer is unable to offer you an alternative position, your employer is not required to offer you the job of another employee. It sounds like a genuine redundancy if it is your job, which has become redundant. Try to negotiate the terms with your employer, as statutory redundancy payments are not very generous.
Regarding the contract you became entitled to statutory rights upon entering into an employment contract without any need for the details of these rights being written into the contract.
As I understand the position your job has gone due to a downturn in orders and your employer is unable to offer you an alternative position, your employer is not required to offer you the job of another employee. It sounds like a genuine redundancy if it is your job, which has become redundant. Try to negotiate the terms with your employer, as statutory redundancy payments are not very generous.