My daughter is about to be made redundant. She has an informal meeting today and a formal meeting on 4 March. She has been employed for seven years.
In July 2023 her department was transitioned into another department. She successfully applied for another role (project planner) which started in January 2024 (although she had to first train another employee so didn't start until March) . The role didn't seem to exist, there was no job training and she has spent the past year doing apparently menial tasks, not a proper structured role. Another person was given a similar role, the two of them working in tandem. She doesn't know if the other person is being retained.
Possibly at the root of this is that she was employed as a Project Coordinator but her department head is employing only accountancy qualified personnel, although there are a few senior project planners. During the year, her team leader made an off the cuff remark that he didn't need two to do her job, he needed only one. Also it was made clear that the only training available was in accountancy and she was originally employed in Project Management (although had twelve years banking experience and qualifications) so has had no training.
Three questions please-
1- If they make her redundant and retain the other person (who is the same grade and does the same work) could this be constructive dismissal?
2-As she has been given no training to enable her to do the job as per her job description, might this be constructive dismissal?
3- Is the union the best to help her or should she seek help from an independent solicitor specialising in employment law?
I should add that last year she applied for a project manager role in the same firm and didn't get it because she was missing a particular qualification - and on the day of her interview found out that her then line manager had failed to pass on an open invitation to staff to do the course that would have given that qualification.
In July 2023 her department was transitioned into another department. She successfully applied for another role (project planner) which started in January 2024 (although she had to first train another employee so didn't start until March) . The role didn't seem to exist, there was no job training and she has spent the past year doing apparently menial tasks, not a proper structured role. Another person was given a similar role, the two of them working in tandem. She doesn't know if the other person is being retained.
Possibly at the root of this is that she was employed as a Project Coordinator but her department head is employing only accountancy qualified personnel, although there are a few senior project planners. During the year, her team leader made an off the cuff remark that he didn't need two to do her job, he needed only one. Also it was made clear that the only training available was in accountancy and she was originally employed in Project Management (although had twelve years banking experience and qualifications) so has had no training.
Three questions please-
1- If they make her redundant and retain the other person (who is the same grade and does the same work) could this be constructive dismissal?
2-As she has been given no training to enable her to do the job as per her job description, might this be constructive dismissal?
3- Is the union the best to help her or should she seek help from an independent solicitor specialising in employment law?
I should add that last year she applied for a project manager role in the same firm and didn't get it because she was missing a particular qualification - and on the day of her interview found out that her then line manager had failed to pass on an open invitation to staff to do the course that would have given that qualification.


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