ChatterBank1 min ago
Redundancy Appeal
22 Answers
My friend is at the appeal stage of redundancy.His employer has to make cuts . All those selected are over 40 yrs old (there are younger staff).One employee with a poor sickness record threatened them with legal action before the consultation started and has escaped redundancy.Can my friend claim on grounds of age discrimination and a tainted process due to favoritism ? - if he does have a claim on those 2 grounds then the employer will know the other redundancy staff will have same claims and the process fall apart.Of course the employee threatening legal action can be seen as shop floor gossip -so i don't know how much relevance it will have in the appeal.Also most of the staff over 40 are on higher wages- so it could be argued that age was just a coincidence?
Also is the appeal decision an arbitrary one ? ( "sorry ,at the end of the day you got to go because of funding cuts")
Also is the appeal decision an arbitrary one ? ( "sorry ,at the end of the day you got to go because of funding cuts")
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Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Jobs become redundant not people. I'd have thought one would need to prove bias when selecting who to keep and who to get rid of, but if, as you say, "All those selected are over 40 yrs old", then that could be significant. I say this as pure opinion, I have no expertise it the subject area. Best of luck with further responses.
In a redundancy situation it usual to ask for volunteers first. They get the same package as the 'forced' redundancies . The company can refuse to accept the volunteers but if there are any they have to be considered before compulsory redundancies are made. Of course the best people normally are the ones to volunteer as they know they will go straight into a new job with a fat pay off.
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The company must identify the pool of workers to be considered for redundancy. They must also have a selection criteria. This is a matrix which scores, for example, skills, qualifications, disciplinary record, absence etc. Those selected for redundancy would be those with the highest (or lowest) points depending on how the scores were graded. Age must not be considered, nor should absence be considered for someone with a disability. The scores should be available for scrutiny. I have been in tribunal and noticed that the scores had been added up incorrectly and the claimant should never have been made redundant. Nobody had noticed. Please get in touch with ACAS or CAB