Employers need to ensure they have the appropriate policies and procedures in place
to deal with discrimination and should raise awareness of it so that acts of
discrimination can be prevented. If you are an employer or employee in the Dartford
area we, at Kelley & Lowe Limited, can provide you with assistance or any additional
information required.
The Equality Act 2010 replaces all previous equality legislation, including the
Employment Equality (Age) Regulations 2006. The Equality Act covers age, disability,
gender reassignment, race, religion or belief, sex, sexual orientation, marriage and
civil partnership and pregnancy and maternity. These are now called 'protected
characteristics'.
Workplace discrimination occurs when an employee or job applicant is treated unfairly
based on characteristics such as race, gender, age, disability, religion, or other
protected factors. Discrimination can take many forms, including biased hiring
practices, unequal pay, harassment, or wrongful termination.
Recent legislation has strengthened protections against workplace harassment, expanding
employer responsibilities to prevent and address discrimination. New laws may include
stricter reporting requirements, broader definitions of harassment, and increased
penalties for non-compliance. Employers are now expected to implement comprehensive
anti-harassment policies, conduct regular training, and create safer reporting
mechanisms for employees.
In October 2024, the UK government introduced a comprehensive Employment Rights Bill
aimed at enhancing worker protections across various domains. Key provisions of this
legislation include:
- Protection Against Third-Party Harassment: Employers are now
legally obligated to take 'reasonable steps' to safeguard their employees from
harassment by third parties, such as customers or clients. This means that
businesses must proactively implement measures to prevent such incidents, ensuring a
safer work environment for all staff members.
- Enhanced Maternity and Pregnancy Protections: The bill strengthens
existing laws to provide greater security for pregnant employees and those on
maternity leave, aiming to prevent discrimination and unfair treatment during and
after pregnancy.
- Menopause Action Plans: Employers are required to develop and
implement action plans addressing the needs of employees experiencing menopause,
promoting a supportive and inclusive workplace culture.
- Default Flexible Working and Regulation of Zero-Hours Contracts:
The legislation establishes flexible working arrangements as the default and seeks
to eliminate most exploitative zero-hours contracts, granting employees more
predictable and stable working conditions.
Discrimination
Discrimination occurs when someone is treated less favourably than another person because
of their protective characteristic.
There are four definitions of discrimination:
- Direct Discrimination:
- Treating someone less favourably than another person because of their protective
characteristic
- Indirect Discrimination:
- Having a condition, rule, policy or practice in your company that applies to
everyone but disadvantages people with a protective characteristic
- Associative Discrimination:
- Directly discriminating against someone because they associate with another
person who possesses a protected characteristic
- Perceptive Discrimination:
- Directly discriminating against someone because others think they possess a
particular protected characteristic
Harassment
Harassment on the basis of age is equally unlawful. For example, a mature trainee teacher
may be teased and tormented in a school on the grounds of age during the teaching
experience. If no action is taken by the head teacher, this may be treated as
harassment. An employee may be written off as 'too slow' or 'an old timer'. This too
could be seen as harassment.
The Equality Act 2010 covered harassment by a third party, making employers potentially
vicariously liable for harassment of their staff by people they don't employ. However,
this has been repealed with effect from October 2013, and employers will no longer have
the risk of being held responsible if an external third party harasses an employee.
However, employers must continue to take 'all reasonable steps' to ensure that employees
don't suffer harassment at work; therefore it is recommended that your harassment policy
still states that you show 'zero tolerance' towards such behaviour.
Recruitment
Employers must be aware of the significance of the legislation at all stages in the
recruitment process and to avoid breaking the age rules they should consider:
- removing age/date of birth from adverts for example: 'Trainee Sales
Representatives.. envisaged age 21-30 years'
- reviewing application forms to ensure they do not ask for unnecessary information
about periods and dates
- avoiding asking for 'so many years of experience' in job descriptions and person
specifications for example: 'graduated in the last seven years'
- avoiding using language that might imply a preference for someone of a certain age,
such as 'mature', 'young', 'energetic' or 'the atmosphere in the office, although
demanding, is lively, relaxed and young'
- ensuring that other visible methods are used to recruit graduates as well as
university milk rounds, to avoid limiting opportunities to young graduates
- focusing on competencies to undertake a role and not making interview notes that
refer to age considerations
- never asking personal questions nor make assumptions about health or physical
abilities
- never ask health related questions before you have offered the individual a job.
Action for employers
Employers need to undertake the following to ensure that they are not breaking the law:
- review equality policies
- review employee benefits
- review policies and procedures on retirement
- undertake equality training covering recruitment, promotion and training.
How we can help
If you are an employer or employee in the Dartford area we will be more than happy to
provide you with assistance or any additional information required on
discrimination. Please contact
us at Kelley & Lowe Limited for more detailed advice.