The Employment Relations Authority has found that an
employee had a personal grievance and was unjustifiably dismissed after she was
made redundant. The employee had raised
concerns over bullying in the months prior to the redundancy process, but those
bullying allegations had not been upheld.
The ERA found that the employer had commenced the
redundancy process with the ulterior motive of removing a troublesome employee,
rather than a genuine redundancy. The
ERA found that the employer had pre-determined the outcome of the process and
had closed their minds to the possibility of redeployment.
There was a new role available within the workplace which
contained significant aspects of the current role. The ERA found that although some training and
professional development might have been required to put the employee into this
role, a fair and reasonable employer would not automatically have closed off
the possibility of redeployment.
In addition the ERA found that holding the meeting at the
employer’s lawyer’s offices, with the lawyer playing a significant part in the
meeting was inconsistent with good faith because no prior notice, that the
lawyer would be taking part in the meeting, was given to the employee.
The employer also failed to provide the employee with
sufficient information along with the redundancy proposal to allow them to give
a considered response.
All of those factors meant the redundancy process was not
genuine and the dismissal was therefore unjustified. The ERA awarded three months lost wages and
holiday plus $18,000 compensation for the hurt and humiliation suffered.
It is important that employers have a genuine reason for
redundancy and do not seek to disguise a performance or discipline matter as a
redundancy.
Alan
Knowsley
Employment
Lawyer Wellington
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