New guide explains maternity rights and redundancy

-

Acas and the Equality Human Rights Commission have published a new guide to help employers understand the rights of women who are pregnant or on maternity leave when facing redundancy.

Employers and employees seeking advice on pregnancy or maternity and redundancy issues make more than 15,000 calls a year to Acas’s helpline. Unfair dismissal or detriment related to being pregnant or on maternity leave accounted for 1,900 cases lodged at the Employment Tribunal in 2011-12 [1].

The new guide, ‘Managing redundancy for pregnant employees or those on maternity leave’, outlines what the law says and advice on how to handle the situation correctly. It sets out four important questions the employer should ask when considering which posts to make redundant:-

• Is the redundancy genuine?
• How do I consult employees on maternity leave?
• How do I decide the right selection criteria?
• Is there a suitable alternative vacancy?

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

Steve Williams, Acas Head of Equality said, “There is still a lot of confusion amongst employers about managing an employee who is pregnant when their role is genuinely being made redundant. No redundancy situation is nice, but it can be made a lot worse if an employer is not aware of the law or how to treat a person fairly.

“Supervisors and managers need to know the specific rights of pregnant women and women on maternity leave. We know that employers want easy to understand help to handle these situations correctly.”

Sarah Anderson, Commissioner for the Equality and Human Rights Commission said, “Cutting back on their workforce is one of the tough choices facing some businesses in Britain. Prospective and new mothers are not always sure of their rights around redundancy, nor are their employers – especially those running small and medium size enterprises. This can lead to mistakes being made. This guide will help managers get redundancy decisions right the first time. Otherwise an expensive tribunal case could end up costing the business more.”

Rosalind Bragg, Director, Maternity Action said, “Since the recession began, Maternity Action has provided advice to a steady stream of pregnant women and new mothers who have lost their jobs because of unfair – and unlawful – treatment in redundancy situations. This guidance is a useful step towards addressing this serious problem.”

Latest news

Helen Wada: Why engagement initiatives fail without human-centric leadership

Workforce engagement has become a hot topic across the boardroom and beyond, particularly as hybrid working practices have become the norm.

Recruiters warned to move beyond ‘post and pray’ as passive talent overlooked

Employers risk missing most candidates by relying on job boards as hiring methods struggle to deliver quality applicants.

Employment tribunal roundup: Appeal fairness, dismissal reasoning, discrimination tests and religious belief clarified

Decisions examine appeal failures, dismissal reasoning, discrimination claims and religious belief, offering practical guidance on fairness, causation and proportionality.

Fears of AI cheating in hiring ‘overblown’ as employers urged to rethink assessments

Employers may be overstating concerns about AI misuse in recruitment as evidence of candidate manipulation remains limited.
- Advertisement -

More employees use workplace health benefits, but barriers still limit access

Many workers struggle to access employer healthcare support due to confusion, costs and unclear processes.

Gender pay gap in tech widens to nine-year high as AI roles drive salaries

Women in IT earn less as salaries rise faster in male-dominated AI and cybersecurity roles, widening pay differences.

Must read

Stephanie Harper: From baby boomers to echo boomers – how do you become a talent magnet?

  Having survived leavers’ prom, a lads’ trip to Zante...

Alex Fleming: Remove stigma from hybrid working in 2022

Is flexible working the great equaliser, asks Alex Fleming? She warns there is a danger for people who choose to work from home when the office is open, to miss out on social capital, when compared to their in-office counterparts - but says it shouldn’t be this way.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you