21 March 2024
Law at Work - March 2024 – 2 of 4 Insights
We commented on the government's consultation on a draft Code of Practice on dismissal and re-engagement in March's Law at Work last year. The draft code set out how employers should act when seeking to change employment terms and conditions, if the employer envisages possibly having to dismiss and re-engage.
The government has now issued a response to the consultation and amendments have been made to the Code as a result. The revised Code provides practical guidance to employers and employees in situations where an employer considers that it wants to make changes to its employees' employment contracts which, if not agreed, may result in dismissals and potentially an offer to employees of re-employment on those new terms. Alternatively, an employer may dismiss and then engage new employees to perform the relevant roles on the new terms. To avoid disputes between employers, employees and trade unions, the purpose of the Code is to ensure that the employer takes steps to explore alternatives to dismissal. It should provide information to and engage in meaningful consultation with trade unions, other employee representatives or individual employees in good faith and avoid using threats of dismissal to put undue pressure on employees to accept new terms. There is an obligation on employers that dismissal and re-engagement should only be used as a last resort.
The Code needs to be approved by Parliament and no specific date has yet been set for it to come into effect.
Although the draft Code of Practice emerged from the controversy surrounding P&O failing to consult and dismissing about 800 employees in 2022 (although this Code does not directly impact on that redundancy scenario as there was no "rehire") the government is clear in its Response that it would not be appropriate to ban dismissal and re-engagement as there are some situations in which it can play a valid role. In its view "the Code strikes the right balance between protecting employees who are subject to dismissal and re-engagement practices, whilst retaining business flexibility to change terms and conditions."
It will certainly require businesses of all sizes to reflect on "fire and re-hire practices" and factor in one or more consultation processes (depending on whether collective consultation is also engaged), as well as informing Acas before taking action. Given the sanctions for non-compliance, and the possibility of an uplift in compensation for failure to comply with the Code it will certainly give employers, particularly perhaps smaller ones with fewer resources, pause for thought when considering business decisions which involve possible dismissal and re-engagement of staff on fresh terms.
21 March 2024
21 March 2024
21 March 2024
by Clover May
by Kathryn Clapp and Shireen Shaikh
by multiple authors