Good evening,
I'll start with an apology for the forthcoming wall of text. I'll try to keep it as brief as possible.
Ok so Background. I work for a large gov department and have done since 2001. Due to the closure of my local office where I worked, I had an option of redundancy or to remain in the department and transfer to another office approx. 50 miles away. For those opting to remain in the department, 5 years Daily Travel Assistance (DTA) was provided. This was 2017 when I decided to stay with them. At the point when Covid happened, I was in my 3rd year of travel assistance and once it became clear that this wasn't going away anytime soon I requested my DTA be suspended. This was a bit of a hoo-ha but eventually this was suspended and I was advised to contact them when I return to office for it to be reinstated,
For the past few months the department has been working hard to get people back to office. 12 weeks ago I submitted my claim to reinstate daily travel assistance. I requested the same travel passes as before the pandemic. An annual train pass and a bus pass (to get me to and from the train station from home.) - this costs approximately £3700 (this was far cheaper in the first few years but obviously prices rise hard and fast) -HR have dithered about this whole time and when my manager who is eager to see my return to work contacted HR she was advised that, I have had my 5 years DTA.
Prior to all of this as a compromise and whilst I was of the belief that my DTA would soon come through, I agreed to do a day a week instead of the newly hybrid hours of 3 days in 2 from home as part of our recent pay and contract reform. After 1 month I had to stop doing that as it was costing me £100 a month, a relatively small cost but one that I had not expected nor budgeted for and well, cost of living crisis, energy cap rise etc. That and, as far as I was concerned the cost should have been covered by DTA. On Friday (27/05/2022) - I advised my manager I just couldn't afford it any longer and HR were taking their sweet time. My manager agreed I could continue to work from home until it was sorted.
So now, to add to the problem, HR have now advised that because I have said I cant afford to travel to work in the meantime, then this now also falls under "Financial Conduct" - I think this is something to do with the Civil Service Code of Conduct or something like that. As a civil servant I must "manage my finances responsibly" - I do tend to manage my finances responsibly, I just can't afford to pay £3700 costs I did not expect to pay. - Due to the financial conduct issue I have already had services and security clearance removed that are vital to my job.
Haven't been able to reach a union rep yet (PCS) yet probably due to the upcoming bank holidays etc. It feels like i'm being pushed out and I feel they are wrong whichever way you look at it. 1. I was due 5 years of DTA and received 3. Nobody told me the clock kept ticking. And 2. even if it is ok for them to say the 5 years is up, surely they could/should have made me aware of this 12-18 months ago, and then I could have planned a new job or saved for the cost of my travel.
I'd love to hear any advice you can give as I am worried what will happen. I hear employment tribunals are expensive? Is there any hope at all?
I'll start with an apology for the forthcoming wall of text. I'll try to keep it as brief as possible.
Ok so Background. I work for a large gov department and have done since 2001. Due to the closure of my local office where I worked, I had an option of redundancy or to remain in the department and transfer to another office approx. 50 miles away. For those opting to remain in the department, 5 years Daily Travel Assistance (DTA) was provided. This was 2017 when I decided to stay with them. At the point when Covid happened, I was in my 3rd year of travel assistance and once it became clear that this wasn't going away anytime soon I requested my DTA be suspended. This was a bit of a hoo-ha but eventually this was suspended and I was advised to contact them when I return to office for it to be reinstated,
For the past few months the department has been working hard to get people back to office. 12 weeks ago I submitted my claim to reinstate daily travel assistance. I requested the same travel passes as before the pandemic. An annual train pass and a bus pass (to get me to and from the train station from home.) - this costs approximately £3700 (this was far cheaper in the first few years but obviously prices rise hard and fast) -HR have dithered about this whole time and when my manager who is eager to see my return to work contacted HR she was advised that, I have had my 5 years DTA.
Prior to all of this as a compromise and whilst I was of the belief that my DTA would soon come through, I agreed to do a day a week instead of the newly hybrid hours of 3 days in 2 from home as part of our recent pay and contract reform. After 1 month I had to stop doing that as it was costing me £100 a month, a relatively small cost but one that I had not expected nor budgeted for and well, cost of living crisis, energy cap rise etc. That and, as far as I was concerned the cost should have been covered by DTA. On Friday (27/05/2022) - I advised my manager I just couldn't afford it any longer and HR were taking their sweet time. My manager agreed I could continue to work from home until it was sorted.
So now, to add to the problem, HR have now advised that because I have said I cant afford to travel to work in the meantime, then this now also falls under "Financial Conduct" - I think this is something to do with the Civil Service Code of Conduct or something like that. As a civil servant I must "manage my finances responsibly" - I do tend to manage my finances responsibly, I just can't afford to pay £3700 costs I did not expect to pay. - Due to the financial conduct issue I have already had services and security clearance removed that are vital to my job.
Haven't been able to reach a union rep yet (PCS) yet probably due to the upcoming bank holidays etc. It feels like i'm being pushed out and I feel they are wrong whichever way you look at it. 1. I was due 5 years of DTA and received 3. Nobody told me the clock kept ticking. And 2. even if it is ok for them to say the 5 years is up, surely they could/should have made me aware of this 12-18 months ago, and then I could have planned a new job or saved for the cost of my travel.
I'd love to hear any advice you can give as I am worried what will happen. I hear employment tribunals are expensive? Is there any hope at all?
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