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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Lancashire Care NHS Foundation Trust v. Reilly [2010] UKEAT 0254_09_2704 (27 April 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2010/0254_09_2704.html Cite as: [2010] UKEAT 0254_09_2704, [2010] UKEAT 254_9_2704 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PUGSLEY
MS G MILLS CBE
MISS S M WILSON CBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MS RACHEL WEDDERSPOON (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Hempsons Solicitors Portland Tower Portland Street Manchester Lancashire M1 3LF |
For the Respondent | MR JOHN MACKENZIE (Solicitor) Messrs John Mackenzie Solicitors Rotherfield House 7 Fairmile Henley on Thames Oxon RG9 2JR |
SUMMARY
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION: Reasonable adjustments
This was an appeal by the Respondent employers against a finding that they had failed to make reasonable adjustments. After the case was opened in the first hearing it became clear that there was such a conflict between the parties that it was necessary to call for the notes and to ask for the Employment Tribunal to make clear the way in which the matter had been put before the Employment Tribunal. At a subsequent part heard finding the EAT found that any claim that there had been procedural irregularities failed and this was in effect an appeal on perversity.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PUGSLEY
The Factual Background
"17. We are satisfied that the question of voice activated software was only raised by the Claimant in May 2007 and the Respondent took reasonable steps to enquire about the provision of this equipment and that but for the Claimant's medical suspension it is likely it would have been provided. It remained to be seen whether the Claimant would have been able successfully to use the equipment. Although the Claimant was clearly upset that a number of colleagues found out about her dyslexia we are not satisfied that the Respondent handled this matter insensitively or without consideration for the Claimant's feelings.
18. In respect of the concerns regarding physical restraint the Claimant suggested that the Respondent should have transferred her to a suitable appointment in a community team or a post that would not involve the use of physical restraint or record keeping that the Claimant had difficulty with. The Tribunal is satisfied that the Respondent made reasonable attempts to accommodate the Claimant's disabilities up until her medical suspension on 8th June 2007. Following the raising of the Claimant's concerns the Respondent had temporarily redeployed the Claimant to the Darwen Resource Centre where she had successfully worked for a period of 11 months. It is clear that the Claimant made significant progress in this role and learned a number of important strategies and means of assisting psychiatrically ill persons in the community. The Respondent offered the Claimant a further, albeit temporary, role at the Mount Pleasant Rest Home which she chose to decline. The Respondent obtained advice from its Occupational Health Unit as to the Claimant's condition and how it would affect her. The attempt to reintegrate the Claimant into Pendle View by ensuring she was not working on the wards during the mornings of the week was worth attempting, albeit it is clear that the Claimant found the afternoons stressful. When that attempt was made, the occupational health view was that the problem was a managerial rather than a medical one, and Ms Cullen and Ms Kershaw had put forward an induction package to compartmentalise the level of ward work, at least in the early stages, with a view to building up the Claimant's confidence and overcoming her fears. The Respondent had no real option other than to suspend the Claimant when it became apparent that further work in such an environment would be likely to expose the Claimant to ill health, for which the Respondent would no doubt have been liable.
19. The Tribunal does not accept however, that after the Claimant's medical suspension the Respondent took reasonable steps to overcome the substantial disadvantage that the Claimant faced. In our judgment it was not appropriate to postpone the meeting which was to be held with the Claimant's manager pending the resolution of a grievance. If that was to be the course adopted the grievance should have been resolved within a matter of days and a high priority placed upon it. In our judgment it was imperative to explore all reasonable avenues of redeploying or accommodating the Claimant in her nursing assistant role at as earlier an opportunity as was possible.
20. In cross examination both Ms Cullen and Dr Deo were asked to consider whether it would be possible for the Claimant to undertake her duties whilst not going on to the 4 wards in Pendle View save to collect or return a service user. Dr Deo had set out his opinion in his statement, that the care of the patients required considerable flexibility. In his opinion it was clearly best for those who worked with the psychiatrically ill patients to rehabilitate and reintegrate into the community to be able to be as flexible as possible. This would enable the member of staff to build up a good rapport with patients. He drew attention to the fact that each patient had different requirements for care and must therefore have an individualised and person centred approach. Working with patients on the ward as well as off the ward would enhance the relationship and the confidence of the patient in his nursing assistant. Dr Deo conceded that it would be possible for the Claimant to work with the patients in the surrounding facilities other than strictly on the wards and that she would be able to discharge her duties in this way but this would not be ideal. We were satisfied that the risk of the Claimant becoming isolated and detached from other staff members to become peripheral was not significant, because, as Mr MacKenzie pointed out the Claimant would still be having regular [sic] with her colleagues and the patients around and about the ward area, on his proposal.
21. The CMHTs had been formed in partnership between the Respondent and the local authorities. The Respondent had managed successfully to place the Claimant in one of these teams for a period of 11 months and had found an alternative placement at the Mount Pleasant Resource Centre. No further enquiries were made during the long period of the Claimant's suspension as to whether or not her services might have been put to valuable use in the community in partnership with the Local Authority.
22. We find that the managers of the Respondent closed their mind to the consideration of reasonable adjustments following the raising of the grievance by the Claimant in late June 2007. They failed to apply the principles set out in their own redeployment policy by considering first and foremost whether or not the Claimant's job could be adapted to enable her to discharge the role. The mindset of the Respondent is demonstrated by the fact that in February 2008 the Claimant was offered the two jobs which it was clear she could not do because of her disability. Indeed this was the very reason she was suspended. This must have been offensive to the Claimant. To offer a disabled employee a job which the employer knows that the disabled employee cannot do because of the disability is hurtful and inconsiderate. It is remarkable that the Respondent has not, even as yet, terminated the Claimant's employment notwithstanding it says no reasonable adjustments can be made to accommodate her.
23. Although Ms Cullen and Ms Kershaw had eliminated the possibility of the Claimant undertaking her role off the wards, in 2006, that was against the background of Dr Trafford's opinion that the difficulties the Claimant had were not founded in a medical problem, but the problem was a managerial one. This was not dissimilar to the other objection raised by the displaced employee from the Woodlea facility. Addressing the redeployment or restructuring of roles to fit in with the overarching reforms of mental health care creates practical challenges. Although Mr Smithson said that he was approaching this particular situation by application of the medical redeployment policy, assuming the Claimant's difficulties were disabilities, it was nevertheless without the medical support to engage the legal duty to make reasonable adjustments. Inevitably in such a situation the employers' position is not as constrained as when the duty arises. That position changed with the advent of Dr Parker's medical opinion. There should have been an early meeting at which careful consideration was given to rearranging the duties discharged by the Claimant to accommodate her whilst at the same time, of course, safeguarding the interests of the patients. In evidence Dr Deo conceded that this was possible. A meeting with Dr Deo, Ms Cullen, Mr Chadwick and Dr Parker, together with the Claimant and her representative was essential in order for various options to be explored. We are not satisfied that the Respondent could rely upon the earlier analysis undertaken by Ms Cullen the previous year of the indivisibility of functions discharged by a nursing assistant. One possibility canvassed by the Tribunal would have been to have provided the Claimant with some support from another nurse or worker during time she might have had to spend with patients on the wards. This need not have taken the form of a security guard, but another nurse or assistant working in very close proximity who could intervene in the event of the need for physical restraint, might have eliminated, or at least reduced to manageable proportions, any stress and anxiety. Another adjustment was to arrange as much contact with patients and the Claimant in the facilities surrounding the ward, and exploring further the type of compartmentalising of off ward duty as had been arranged in the 2 week trial period in May or June 2007. These were the types of measure the Respondent needed to examine in June and July of 2008 in order to ensure the Claimant could have returned to her job satisfactorily. The explanation of the Respondent that this had all been ground which they covered in the past was not persuasive. We were not satisfied that a combination of these adaptations, carefully considered and implemented, was not reasonably possible or would have generated undue risks.
24. Further possibilities of placing the Claimant at a CMHT should and could have been explored with other managers at those teams including Local Authority workers. No such enquiries were made after the Claimant's suspension. Simply to say that the Claimant could not work in that environment because she was only categorised on Band 3 was to close the Respondent's mind to the possibility of any reasonable adjustment. As Mr Chadwick himself said in evidence he would not rule out a Band 3 worker being employed within the community mental health team because anything is possible in such a reorganisation. In fact one of the claimant's colleagues, graded at band 3, had become an OT worker, but the explanation in his case was that he had certain technical skills. If such an accommodation could have been made in that case, then it is not clear why no such accommodation could be achieved for a disabled person, for whom there is a statutory obligation to make adjustments. There was no reason advanced why the claimant could not have continued to have provided a valuable contribution to the STR team, at least on a temporary basis, as she had during the placement at Darwen Resource Centre, albeit with a greater level of supervision comparable to that given by Mr Bibby. It had been envisaged that such an arrangement would have been put into effect at the Mount Pleasant Resource Centre from May 2007. Although the Claimant had dismissed that out of hand in her discussion with Mr Bibby, it was the type of option which required further exploration when the alternative was continued suspension. When faced with the earlier ultimatum of two options in May 2007, the Claimant accepted one. Ms Cullen said in evidence that the Claimant had some very valuable skills in engaging some very difficult people.
25. Mr Pierce seemed to believe that obtaining the NVQ3 would be the gateway for the claimant to obtain Band 4 regrading whereupon a job would then be available in a community team. The claimant could have enrolled on a course, whilst working temporarily in a community team such as Mount Pleasant Resource Centre, and might have achieved regrading by now. We were not satisfied that the Respondent could not redeploy the claimant into a CMHT, given the inconsistent and unclear account of how such posts were designed and allocated. This was an obvious area fertile for adjustment to accommodate the disability.
26. In all the circumstances therefore we find that the Claimant was subjected to a detriment as a consequence of a continued suspension in her work when she should have been gainfully employed. We find on a balance of probabilities that the Claimant would have been able to remain in work had the Respondent taken steps to explore all appropriate avenues after the 8th June 2007. The limited steps of Mr Smithson to keep an eye out for a suitable vacancy were wholly insufficient in the circumstances, given the very particular need to tailor duties to the Claimant's own capabilities. We therefore accept that the claimant has established that the duty arose, and that, in the absence of an adequate explanation, there was a breach of it. We have rejected the explanation advanced by the Respondent that there was nothing they could reasonably achieve, an attitude contributed to by frustration at the claimant's grievances and unwillingness to be flexible. A fresh and open minded reassessment in July 2007 would have avoided continued suspension, albeit the hours of work may have had to be varied or reduced. Continuing review of the situation would have been necessary. It may be that such review and evaluation of the competing demands on the service in the longer term and the ability of the Claimant to continue to provide flexibility would not be sustainable. Only that would become apparent when put into practice. We find, however, in the absence of an adequate explanation to the contrary, that it would have been possible to lift the suspension and provide work at least up until the end of March 2008."
"In obviating any discriminatory provision, criterion or practice, employers usually have to depart from an arrangement they regard as ideal. It is a question of proportionality, and balancing the disadvantageous effect of the discriminatory practice to the employee against any disadvantage caused to the employer's organisation. We are not satisfied that this was an exercise the Appellants had undertaken, properly or all."
a) The ET failed to apply the appropriate standard of proof as set out in Project Management Institute v Latif [2007] IRLR 579.
b) That the Employment Tribunal relied upon material which did not form part of the explicitly pleaded case contrary to Abbey National PLC v Bascetta UKEAT/O403/08.
c) Failed to conduct a proper balancing act having regard to the statutory criteria in Section 18(b) (1).
d) Failed when assessing whether a step was reasonable to apply the objective standard contrary to Smith v Churchhill Stairlifts PLC [2006] IRLR 41 at Paragraph 45.
e) Failed to have regard to all the circumstances and to look at the wider implications; see The Chief Constable of Lincolnshire Police v Weaver UKEAT/0622/07/DM.
f) Made a perverse finding in that the balance of the evidence was that it was not practicable to remove ward based work.