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Guide to the revised (November 2007) D & G Code of Practice

Right to be represented at disciplinary and grievance hearings

 

The right is provided in a new PART 7A of the Employment (Jersey) Law 2003 – "Disciplinary and Grievance Hearings"

 

A Code of Practice made under the Jersey Advisory and Conciliation (Jersey) Law 2003 has been revised by the Social Security Minister to reflect a pending amendment to the Employment (Jersey) Law 2003. 

 

The Employment (Amendment No. 3) (Jersey) Law 2007 gives employees the right to be represented by a fellow worker or trade union official in certain formal disciplinary and grievance hearings and is expected to come into force in September of this year.  For the full amendment, please see the website www.jerseylegalinfo.je

 

About the right

 

An employee is entitled to be represented at a disciplinary or grievance hearing by any one of the following;

 

  1. a fellow employee who is employed by the same employer
  2. an employed trade union official (who may or may not be an official of a union that is recognised by the employer, but the union must be registered under the Employment Relations Law),
  3. a trade union official who is not employed by a union, but whom the union has reasonably certified in writing as having experience of, or having received training in, acting as an employee’s companion at disciplinary or grievance hearings.

 

A ’disciplinary hearing’ is one that could result in a formal written warning or some other formal disciplinary action being taken against the employee (or the confirmation of such a warning or action).

 

A ’grievance hearing’ is one concerning an employee’s complaint about the performance of a duty owed to them by their employer (i.e. a statutory, contractual or common law duty).

 

If the representative cannot attend at the time proposed by the employer, the employee may propose a reasonable alternative time for the hearing within 5 working days of that proposed by the employer. Where the representative is a fellow employee, he is entitled to a reasonable amount of paid time off to prepare and attend the hearing.

 

A representative must be allowed:

 

- to put the employee’s case;

- to sum up that case;

- to respond on the employee’s behalf to any view expressed at the hearing; and

- to confer with the employee during the hearing,

 

Representatives are not allowed:

 

- to answer questions on behalf of the employee;

- to address the hearing against the employee’s wishes;

- to obstruct the employer or any other person from explaining or contributing to their case.

 

Enforcement

(The new rights provided in Part 7A are enforced via a new Article 78B, Paragraphs (1) to (3) of the Employment Law and the existing unfair dismissal provisions of the Employment Law.

 

An employee has the right not to be subjected to any detriment for exercising or seeking to exercise the right to be represented, or to act as representative to another employee.

 

If the employer fails to allow (or threatens not to allow) an employee or their representative to act in accordance with the right to representation, the employee may make a complaint to the Employment Tribunal within 8 weeks of the failure or threat (which may be extended in certain circumstances at the discretion of the Tribunal). 

 

Where the claim is successful, the Tribunal may award compensation of up to 4 weeks’ pay and quash any action taken by the employer in respect of the disciplinary or grievance matter (other than dismissal).

 

An employee who is dismissed for representing (or proposing to represent) another employee, and an employee who is dismissed for asserting the right to be represented in a disciplinary or grievance hearing, are automatically protected against unfair dismissal.

 

 

November 1st 2007

 

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