Hi all,
I’d appreciate advice on whether I have grounds for a constructive dismissal claim after my employer withdrew a core employment benefit. Here’s the situation:
Key Facts
Employment Context:
Worked for a private school under a formal Staff Discount Policy (50% fee reduction for staff children).
Policy states the discount aims to “attract and retain staff” and applies as long as employed directly by the school.
Breach:
My department was outsourced to a third-party company, and the school announced the discount would end after a 1-year “grace period.”
My child will be mid-GCSEs when the discount stops, forcing me to either withdraw them or pay unaffordable fees.
My Response:
Resigned, arguing this was a fundamental breach of contract (removal of a material term of employment).
Employer may claim the 1-year extension was “reasonable,” but the policy implies the benefit was permanent.
Questions
Claim Strength:
Is this likely constructive dismissal, given the policy’s wording and the timing (disrupting GCSE studies)?
Does the temporary extension weaken my case?
Evidence:
I have the written policy, emails confirming the discount, and resignation correspondence. Is this enough?
Next Steps:
Should I proceed with ACAS Early Conciliation or file an ET1 immediately?
Any recommendations for employment solicitors experienced in similar outsourcing/benefit withdrawal cases?
Grateful for any advice—thanks in advance!
I’d appreciate advice on whether I have grounds for a constructive dismissal claim after my employer withdrew a core employment benefit. Here’s the situation:
Key Facts
Employment Context:
Worked for a private school under a formal Staff Discount Policy (50% fee reduction for staff children).
Policy states the discount aims to “attract and retain staff” and applies as long as employed directly by the school.
Breach:
My department was outsourced to a third-party company, and the school announced the discount would end after a 1-year “grace period.”
My child will be mid-GCSEs when the discount stops, forcing me to either withdraw them or pay unaffordable fees.
My Response:
Resigned, arguing this was a fundamental breach of contract (removal of a material term of employment).
Employer may claim the 1-year extension was “reasonable,” but the policy implies the benefit was permanent.
Questions
Claim Strength:
Is this likely constructive dismissal, given the policy’s wording and the timing (disrupting GCSE studies)?
Does the temporary extension weaken my case?
Evidence:
I have the written policy, emails confirming the discount, and resignation correspondence. Is this enough?
Next Steps:
Should I proceed with ACAS Early Conciliation or file an ET1 immediately?
Any recommendations for employment solicitors experienced in similar outsourcing/benefit withdrawal cases?
Grateful for any advice—thanks in advance!

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