Summer 2005 Newsletter


Content

More of the same?

Around the world

Hot tips

Inside out?

Sweet sacrifice

Simple trust

Done and dusted?

Open immediately

File under E

An Inspector calls

CO still OK

Open for business

High PHI

Arctic chills

Duty calls

Pensions

Fuelling around

WIP round

Win some, lose some

Take it and go?

Party talk

Work less, earn less

Making adjustments

Making adjustments


If you take on a disabled employee, you are required to consider what 'reasonable adjustments' you need to make to the workplace or to working arrangements in order to assist the worker to do the job. This seems sensible - it's not worth taking someone on if they can't do the job properly, and you have to make it possible for them to do the job.

In a recent employment tribunal case, the employer took on a blind employee, but did not give her enough help. She resigned two years later, claiming disability discrimination and constructive dismissal. The Court of Appeal upheld her claim, because the employer obviously knew at the time of recruitment that she was blind.

It's important to know your responsibilities towards employees - it must be good business, as well as the law, to give them the help they need to carry out their work.