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Maternity and paternityHR PodcastsRedundancy

Suitable alternative employment: five tips for employers in a redundancy situation

by Personnel Today 21 Oct 2015
by Personnel Today 21 Oct 2015 Considering suitable alternative employment is an important part of a redundancy procedure.
Considering suitable alternative employment is an important part of a redundancy procedure.

Considering suitable alternative employment for employees at risk of redundancy is an important part of a fair redundancy procedure. When dealing with offers of alternative employment, employers need to understand the effect on entitlement to redundancy pay and the rights of employees on family-related leave.

We set out five tips for employers on considering suitable alternative employment for redundant employees.

Suitable alternative employment: resources

Podcast: The duty to consider  alternative employment in a redundancy situation

Redundancy rights on maternity leave

1. Explore alternative employment for redundant employees as an integral part of the redundancy process

An employer that dismisses an employee for redundancy without considering whether or not there is alternative employment available could be found to have dismissed the employee unfairly, even if there was a genuine redundancy situation.

Exploration of alternative roles should be undertaken as an important part of the redundancy consultation process.

2. Don’t rule out offering a role that may not seem “suitable” for a particular employee

An employee may be willing to accept an offer of a less senior role or a job in a different part of the business, if the alternative is unemployment. So employers should not withhold information about vacancies they assume an employee would not be interested in.

3. Start considering alternative employment as early as possible

Employers should begin considering what alternative employment might be available as soon as it is clear that redundancies may be necessary. Exploration of alternatives to redundancy should continue throughout the process.

4. Think very carefully before withholding a redundancy payment from an employee

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An employee who unreasonably refuses an offer of alternative employment will not be entitled to a redundancy payment. However, it is not always clear if a particular job is “suitable” or whether or not it is unreasonable for the employee to refuse it, so employers should be very cautious about withholding a payment.

5. Be aware of special rights for employees on maternity leave

Employers need to be particularly careful when handling redundancies when there are employees on maternity leave, adoption leave or shared parental leave, as these employees have extra protection. If there is a suitable alternative vacancy for an employee on family-related leave, the employer has an obligation to offer it to him or her.

Personnel Today

Personnel Today articles are written by an expert team of award-winning journalists who have been covering HR and L&D for many years. Some of our content is attributed to "Personnel Today" for a number of reasons, including: when numerous authors are associated with writing or editing a piece; or when the author is unknown (particularly for older articles).

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