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’.
The Act protects people of any age, however, different treatment
because of age is not unlawful if you can demonstrate that it is
a proportionate means of meeting a legitimate aim. Age is the
only protected characteristic that allows employers to justify
direct discrimination.
Employers need to ensure they have
the appropriate policies and procedures in place to deal with
age discrimination and should raise awareness of it so that acts
of discrimination on the grounds of age can be prevented.
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
Examples of Age Discrimination
An example of direct
discrimination would be where someone with all the skills and
competencies to undertake a role is not offered the position
just because they completed their professional qualification 30
years ago. Other examples could include refusing to hire a 40
year old because of a company’s youthful image, not providing
health insurance to the over 50’s and not promoting a 25 year
old because they may not command respect.
A business requiring applicants
for a courier position to have held a driving licence for five
years is likely to be guilty of indirect discrimination. A
higher proportion of people aged between 40 and above will have
fulfilled this criteria than those aged 25. Other examples of
indirect discrimination could include seeking an ‘energetic
employee’, requiring 30 years of experience or asking clerical
workers to pass a health test.
An example of perceived
discrimination could be where an older man who looks much
younger than his years is not allowed to represent his company
because the Managing Director thinks he is too young.
However, different treatment
because of age is not unlawful if it can be objectively
justified and you can demonstrate that it is a proportionate
means of meeting a legitimate aim. For example, an employer
might argue that it was appropriate and necessary to refuse to
recruit people over 60 where there is a long and expensive
training period before starting the job. However, cost by itself
is not capable of justifying such an action.
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 now covers
harassment by a third party, therefore an employer is
potentially liable for harassment of their staff by people they
don’t employ. Example, a salesman pitching company products for
a customer is ridiculed on the grounds of age. If the employer
does not take action and the circumstances occur on three
occasions, whether or not for the same client, the employer
could be held liable for harassment.
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.
Service related benefits
Employers are allowed to use a
length of service criterion in pay and non-pay benefits of up to
five years’ service. Benefits based on over five years service
are also allowed if the benefit reflects a higher level of
experience, rewards loyalty or increases or maintains motivation
and is applied equally to all employees in similar situations.
It is for the employer to demonstrate that the variation in
pay/benefits over five years can be objectively justified.
Employers are recommended to
review their pay and benefits policies to ensure that they are
based on experience, skills and other non-age related criteria.
Redundancy
The existing statutory payment
provisions remain in place. Employers can, as before, pay
enhanced redundancy payments. However, to avoid discriminating,
employers should use the same age brackets and multipliers as
used when calculating statutory redundancy pay.
Retirement
The default retirement age and the statutory
retirement procedure were abolished from 6 April 2011. The transitional period
for notifications of retirement issued prior to 6 April 2011
end on 30
September 2011. Where an employee has requested an extension of
their period of notice, you can agree this and
still rely on the DRA provisions to enforce the retirement,
providing that the extension is no more than six months and the
employee retires on or before 5 October 2012. The request needs
to be
made before 5 January 2012.
Employers that wish to prescribe a
compulsory retirement age may do so only if it is a
proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim.
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
We will be more than happy to provide you with assistance or any
additional information required.
For information
of users: This material is published for the information of clients.
It provides only an overview of the regulations in force at the date of
publication, and no action should be taken without consulting the
detailed legislation or seeking professional advice. Therefore no
responsibility for loss occasioned by any person acting or refraining
from action as a result of the material can be accepted by the authors
or the firm.
|