Re: Question re where next after appeal
Your first time in employment you say, but do you mean you first time in any employment? May I ask how old you are, Jay? Communication though is not really a PCP for your job. If you worked in a job giving advice communication would be the PCP. Jay I am sorry but you have just been very unfortunate in the way that you have been treated less than you deserve perhaps owing to your disability. Let's forget the PCP as this just relates to an employer's broad duties to disabled persons in terms of reasonable adjustments. For the same reasons let's also move away from reasonable adjustments. When we deduct the PCP and reasonable adjustments' issues we're still left with your unfavourable treatment and there does not appear to be any other reason for the below par treatment except your disability. I have revised my view and believe is this constructive disability discrimination which is not so obvious hence the lawyer and CAB not being alert to it, or missing this very subtle discrimination. It is not just victimisation as this is too broad a discrimination, it therefore disability discrimination. It is just my view am not qualified lawyer but I have studied a law degree. Normally a tribunal would set a preliminary hearing to see if you have a disability but in your case it is not likely. Your hurdle you have is proving discrimination. You could argue that there was a breakdown in communication when compared to a comparator company and their professional staff. There have likely been lots of procedural errors with company policy or omissions in relation to the Equality Act. You were not inducted at the new site, you were omitted translators during meetings. The Equality law where it had been in place in your employ and based on your facts would have been reasonable adjustments (forget PCP....it's not the same issue) in any type of meetings, for appraisal, grievance, appeal, not inductions, to put you in the same position as though you did not have the affective disability. Were the managers/ staff speaking too fast? Could you haven taken, and did you take, notes of what was being said in any face to contact you had with the company? Were any reasons given for not providing an interpreter? The defence, as aforesaid, for the employer is the questionable legal activity. However, it's not the company's main business, it's just a by-product that the company uses. In addition, there were also no material losses for the company so there would likely have been no evidence to make a prosecution in terms of theft. Contact ACAS and use some of the ideas I have presented here with a view to considering a tribunal hearing for disability discrimination. 3 months from last act of discrimination is time limit.
Originally posted by jay69477
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