LRD guides and handbook May 2017

Law at Work 2017

Chapter 11

Trade union membership and activities 



[ch 11: page 420]

It is automatically unfair to select someone for redundancy on grounds of trade union membership or activities (section 153, Trade Union and Labour Relations Consolidation Act 1992 (TULRCA). This includes activities connected with union recognition (see Chapter 5).



The selection of two employees for having been strike activists was an automatically unfair dismissal (Britool v Roberts [1993] IRLR 481). So too was selecting someone for redundancy because they spent too much time on union activities (Dundon v GPT [1995] IRLR 403). 



It was a trade union detriment in breach of section 146, TULRCA to delete a role from a restructuring plan for which an active trade rep would have been suitable after the rep led a challenge to the redundancy process. There was evidence that the rep would have had a “good chance” of getting the post had it not been deleted (University of Bolton v Corrigan [2015] UKEAT/0408/14/RN).


An employer cannot assess an employee for redundancy based on skills demonstrated while acting as a safety rep. An employee’s duties as a trade union or safety rep should not impact, positively or negatively, on a redundancy selection decision. This is because it would harm a rep’s independence to allow management evaluation of how they perform their statutory duties to form part of a redundancy selection exercise (Smiths Industries v Rawlings [1996] IRLR 656).



A union rep who was given a different role to accommodate his trade union duties was not unfairly dismissed when he was selected for redundancy from that role, even though there was still a need for work in his original post (O’Dea v ISC Chemicals [1995] IRLR 599). 



It is automatically unfair (section 104F, ERA 96) to select an employee for redundancy where the reason for selection relates to a blacklist (see Chapter 5).