Peninsula Team, Peninsula Team
(Last updated )
Peninsula Team, Peninsula Team
(Last updated )
In December and January, there tends to be a surge in the number of redundancies being carried out. This is due to poor trading conditions or an effort to balance a budget in the lead up to a new year.
Importantly, it's absolutely fine for an employer to make redundancies where there is a business need, and, indeed, redundancy is recognised as a fair reason for dismissal in the Unfair Dismissals Acts. However, this does not mean that every redundancy is fair and the Workplace Relations Commission will award unfair dismissals to an employee if they're concerned with one of the following three matters:
1. There wasn’t a genuine reason for making the role redundant
The most important issue from the outset is that it is the role that is being made redundant and not the person. A person should only be made redundant where there is a genuine redundancy ground and it should not be for any other reason such as that person’s conduct, personal difficulties etc. The focus, therefore, with redundancy is on the work rather than the people carrying it out.
2. The employee was unfairly selected for redundancy
It's important to be aware that an employee must be fairly selected for redundancy. Thus, if you have a requirement for redundancy in a particular department then all employees who do the same or similar work ought to be considered in the redundancy process. There are two generally accepted methods of selecting a person or persons for redundancy from a larger group, namely last in first out (LIFO) or a skills selection matrix.
Importantly, whichever selection method you use ought to be fair and reasonable and is compliant with the company’s own redundancy policy.
3. The procedure followed in making the employee redundant was unfair
It's important that an employer engages in a redundancy consultation process with the affected employee(s) before reaching the definitive conclusion to make the employee(s) redundant. The purpose of such consultation is to analyse whether or not there are any possible measures which could be introduced as an alternative to making any employee(s) redundant.
Therefore, it's important for employers to be wary of the dos and don’ts as a guide for when you have to take the dreaded step of effecting redundancies in the workplace. If done properly, the redundancy process can make your business leaner and fitter and better equipped to prosper in the economic downturn.
Dos
Don’ts
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