Hello,
I'm after some help on behalf of my friend. Already spoken to ACAS who haven't been able to clarify the legal position.
Basically - My friend has 2 part time jobs with the same employer. Two very different roles (1 in admin and 1 in student support) On her pay slip the jobs are separated and payments are listed separately.
She has been made redundant from her admin role and at the moment she is in the consultation process.
Yesterday she had her first consultation meeting where they told her, that if she wanted to have her full redundancy payment entitlement she would have to be made redundant from BOTH posts. Only the admin post is at risk though - not the student support post. They also said, if she wants to keep her Student Support role (which is not at risk of redundancy) then they would give her a 'compensatory payment' for her admin role - worth 2/3 of what her actual redundancy payment is worth.
We have spoken to ACAS who stated that this approach sounds 'improvished' but what we are really interested in is - is this legal? Can they actually enforce this? My feeling is that the employer is trying it on.
Any help greatly appreciated, Thank you!
I'm after some help on behalf of my friend. Already spoken to ACAS who haven't been able to clarify the legal position.
Basically - My friend has 2 part time jobs with the same employer. Two very different roles (1 in admin and 1 in student support) On her pay slip the jobs are separated and payments are listed separately.
She has been made redundant from her admin role and at the moment she is in the consultation process.
Yesterday she had her first consultation meeting where they told her, that if she wanted to have her full redundancy payment entitlement she would have to be made redundant from BOTH posts. Only the admin post is at risk though - not the student support post. They also said, if she wants to keep her Student Support role (which is not at risk of redundancy) then they would give her a 'compensatory payment' for her admin role - worth 2/3 of what her actual redundancy payment is worth.
We have spoken to ACAS who stated that this approach sounds 'improvished' but what we are really interested in is - is this legal? Can they actually enforce this? My feeling is that the employer is trying it on.
Any help greatly appreciated, Thank you!
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