18th November 2008, 09:46 AM
I would totally agree with joining your union. They can make sure that your redundancy is handled correctly and you recieve any benefits that your employer might not 'advertise'.
Ellie are these c.30 staff the same staff that downed tools a couple of months ago? As Kevin says it sounds like there has been a breach in the Employment Act, although does it cover staff on temporary contracts?
From direct.gov
http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/Employment/R...G_10029835
Ellie are these c.30 staff the same staff that downed tools a couple of months ago? As Kevin says it sounds like there has been a breach in the Employment Act, although does it cover staff on temporary contracts?
From direct.gov
Quote:quote:
Employers should always consult with employees before making them redundant.
[u]Ways of consulting you</u>
There are two ways in which your employer might have to consult you about redundancy:
collectively (that is, consulting the whole group that is being made redundant)
individually (that is, speaking to each person directly)
[u]Collective consultation</u>
If your employer's planning to make 20 or more employees redundant within a 90-day period, your trade union (or elected employee representative if you don't have a union) should be consulted before anyone's given notice.
The consultation should cover ways to avoid a redundancy situation, and how to keep the number of dismissals to a minimum and limit the effects on those dismissed (eg by offering retraining). It should take place at least 30 days before the redundancies are due to begin or 90 days if more than 100 employees are affected.
If this doesn't happen, you (or your representative) can take your employer to an Employment Tribunal, which can award up to 90 days' pay in compensation to each employee.
[u]Individual consultation</u>
Your employer should always consult you individually. This will normally involve:
speaking to you directly about why you have been selected
looking at any alternatives to redundancy
If this doesn't happen, your dismissal for redundancy may be unfair.
http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/Employment/R...G_10029835