Workplace Report (June 2011)

Law - Redundancy

Redundancy — the law

A redundancy situation exists where an employer closes or intends to close the workplace or reduce the number of employees doing a particular kind of work. In particular, the employer must:

• adopt redundancy selection criteria which are not discriminatory;

• allow employees selected for redundancy time off to look for other work, provided they have at least two years’ service;

• give redundancy pay to all employees with at least two years’ service calculated using a statutory formula linked to age and length of service. A week’s gross pay is subject to a statutory maximum cap which is reviewed annually (£400 from 1 February 2011); and

• offer any suitable available vacancies.

If at least 20 redundancies are proposed, the employer must notify the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills. It must also consult employee reps with a view to reducing the number of redundancies. There are detailed rules which must be followed. Where an employer fails to consult, a union can apply for a protective award, up to a maximum of 90 days’ pay.

Redundancy —the key developments

• Unless bias or obvious mistake can be shown, scores awarded by an employer during a redundancy exercise will not be closely scrutinised by a tribunal (case 1).

Case details are available at www.employmentappeals.gov.uk (EAT) and www.bailii.org (Court of Appeal). Call 020 8686 9141 for details of the journal Industrial Relations Law Reports (IRLR).


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