EMPLOYMENT
TRIBUNALS
If you are interested in AN ACTUAL
CASE or WANT TO MAKE AN APPLICATION to an employment tribunal,
you should contact the Employment Tribunals Service enquiry
line (tel: 0845 795 9775).
Unified
Tribunal Service
The Lord
Chancellor announced on 11 March 2003 that Employment Tribunals
and the Employment Appeal Tribunal will form part of a unified
Tribunal Service to be created over the next few years.
The announcement is published on the Lord
Chancellor's Department website. Some
briefing on the new service and changes to tribunals in the
employment field is given below.
What’s
the purpose of the unified service?
To achieve better quality of service for tribunal users.
The transfer of the Employment Tribunals Service,
which is the agency that administers employment tribunals and the
Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT), will allow costs and resources
to be shared across other major tribunals.
For example, accommodation, IT systems, and other
facilities can be pooled, and good administrative practice shared
between tribunals.
What will be the impact on employment tribunal claimants?
Over
time, the Government expects service standards to improve, so that
cases are processed and decided more quickly.
The procedures employment tribunals follow to determine
cases are set by statutory instrument, which is now being revised
by DTI to implement changes under the Employment Act
and
the recommendations of the recent Employment Tribunal System
Taskforce. There
will be full public consultation on new draft regulations later
this year. The DTI will
continue to be responsible for employment tribunal regulations
after the creation of the unified service.
EAT regulations are the responsibility of the Lord
Chancellor and will continue to be.
What’s the effect on lay
members?
Employment tribunal lay members are appointed under the
employment tribunal regulations. DTI
has no plans to change this part of the regulations, nor the
current requirement that lay members must have experience of
employment relations in the workplace.
The practical knowledge and experience of the lay
membership are essential to the expertise and judgement of
employment tribunals. Therefore, while the unified service will
assume responsibility for the expenses and administration of the
lay membership, we expect the pool of members to be largely
unchanged by the creation of the unified system.
It may be possible for lay members to serve on other
tribunals within the new system but lay members from other
tribunals will only be able to serve on employment tribunals or
the EAT if they meet the same requirement as current lay members.
Formal responsibility for future lay member appointments to
both bodies will transfer to the Lord Chancellor's Department, working in partnership with DTI.
The DTI has published an evaluation report
(62Kb)
on the process
used and a table
(1.3Mb)
showing the effectiveness of the advertising
media for the
2002 lay member recruitment exercise.
How
will the work of Acas be affected?
Acas
has a statutory duty to provide conciliation services to
tribunal claimants. There
is therefore a very close relationship between Acas and the
Employment Tribunals Service. This
will continue after ETS moves into the new system. The
Employment Tribunal System Taskforce recently
recommended a number of ways to improve the operational efficiency
of this relationship and these recommendations have been
accepted by the Government. The
creation of the new service will not affect their implementation.
Acas, and the organisations which it resources (Central
Arbitration Committee and Certification
Office) will not form part
of the new service.
Will
reinstatement committees be part of the new system?
Yes.
Reinstatement committees and umpires are concerned with the
rights of reservists to return to their previous work after
service in the armed forces. They
are closely linked with employment tribunals and the EAT and will
join the new system in due course.
How
will the system operate in Scotland?
Employment
tribunals are a nationwide service (a separate system operates in
Northern Ireland). Scottish
employment tribunals will also form part of the unified service.
Separate arrangements for judicial appointments will
continue to apply in Scotland.
How
will the new system be organised and managed?
Proposals
for the structure and governance of the unified system will be set
out in a White Paper to be published later this year.
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Last updated 21 May 2003
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