The one chart that shows the MoJ is talking out of its a**e on ET fees

Unless you’ve just come back from a trip to Mars, you’ve probably seen the quarterly tribunal statistics issued by the Ministry of Justice yesterday, showing a dramatic, 79 per cent fall in the number of employment tribunal claims. (But if you need to catch up, this outstanding blog post by Gem Reucroft tells you all you need to know).

In fact, it’s not quite as bad as that, but it’s still very, very bad.

The overall number of claims in the three-month period October to December 2013  is down 79 per cent, compared to the same period a year ago.  But the overall number of claims includes all the multiple claimants in the relatively small number of multiple claim cases, which are much less affected by the fees regime, not least because the fees paid per multiple claim case are capped at six times the fee for a single claim, regardless of the number of claimants in the case, which can be as many as several thousand.  And most multiple claims are brought by a trade union, with the biggest unions now paying such fees for their members.

What really matters here is the number of single claims by individual workers. And, compared to a year ago, that is down by 67 per cent. Which is plenty bad enough.

In response, the Ministry of Justice does not appear to have issued any formal statement on the matter (other than the statistical bulletin itself). But the justice minister, Shailesh Vara MP, is quoted in both the Financial Times and Personnel Today as saying:

“We think that the fees are not the only reason for the fall in the number of employment tribunal receipts; there has been a longer term downward trend as the economy has strengthened, and some of the big [multiple claim] cases involving airlines are now being concluded.”

Which, as the following chart shows, is utter hogwash.  The chart shows the number of single claims by individual workers, so the issue of the ‘big multiple claim cases involving airlines’ is irrelevant.  And I challenge Mr Vara and his officials to identify any significant ‘longer term downward trend’ going on here.

Chart: single ET claims, January 2012 to December 2013

ET single claims, monthly 14 03 14

(Yes, I’ve left out the months of July, August and September 2013, because they tell us nothing other than that there was a predictable rush to submit claims in July, before the fees came into force on 29 July, followed by a balancing out in August and early September.)

The simple fact of the matter is that ET claims have fallen off a cliff since the introduction of fees.  But if anyone in the Ministry of Justice can produce a chart or graph showing a longer-term downward trend behind the figures for October, November and December 2013, we’d be very happy to reproduce it here on Hard Labour.

So, exactly how much does it cost to make an employment tribunal claim?

You might be wondering – no, I’m sure you’re wondering – how much it costs to make an employment tribunal claim these days. It’s a good question. And who better to answer it than Jenny Willott, the Liberal Democrat MP for Cardiff Central and current BIS employment relations minister?

Just a few weeks ago, in the House of Commons, the Minister rather testily insisted to MPs that “it does not cost women [who have been subject to pregnancy discrimination] more than £1,000 to go to a tribunal. It costs only £250 to start a claim, and most cases are finalised well before a hearing”.

Well, thank goodness for that!  We wouldn’t want excessive cost obstructing workers’ access to justice.

However, somewhat confusingly, last week the Minister wrote that it costs “on average £1,800 to present a claim at tribunal” for, say, pregnancy discrimination. It does?

Yes, it does. It says so in Annex A of the BIS final regulatory impact assessment on Acas early conciliation, quietly published by BIS last week.  This shows how the Minister’s £1,800 figure consists of three elements, each one calculated in 2012: there’s £714 for “time spent on case”, £23 for “travel & communication”, and a whopping £1,017 for “costs for advice & representation post ET1”. (Yes, I know. But who are we to question figures approved by the BIS employment relations minister?)

That comes to a total of £1,754, which BIS then rounds up to £1,800.  So, the Minister’s figure of £1,800 does not include anything for the hefty upfront tribunal fees introduced in July 2013.

Which means it costs, on average, £2,050 to issue and pursue a tribunal claim for pregnancy discrimination. Which, according to both Maternity Action and the equalities minister, Maria Miller, is a serious and growing problem.  And, where the case goes to a hearing, for which a fee of £950 is payable, that average cost rises to £3,000.

So now we know.  Thank you, Jenny.

Just how desperate is the MoJ to keep a lid on the impact of ET fees?

Last week, in rejecting the judicial review brought by UNISON, two High Court judges noted the “dramatic fall in [employment tribunal] claims” in September, the most recent month for which official figures are available, and made clear they would expect to hear the issue again should the Lord Chancellor’s “optimism” that the number of claims has since bounced back to more normal levels prove unfounded.  As I wrote elsewhere, the judges nailed Grayling’s genitals to the wall, and – if you’ll excuse the pun – a lot now hangs on the next set of quarterly statistics.

Which begs the question: why is the Ministry of Justice so resistant to issuing any more recent statistics, if they would remove the Lord Chancellor’s genitals from risk?  In recent weeks, the Ministry has declined to answer a straightforward parliamentary question on the matter, and has wriggled its way to not answering repeated Freedom of Information requests from me.

In those FoI requests, I asked both for basic figures on the number of ET claims in the months since September, and for the number of ET fee remission applications made and refused.  And in November, in response to a FoI request by Plumstead Law Centre, the Ministry had actually answered the latter question (FoI 86412).  So, after they had stonewalled my request, submitted in late December, for more recent figures, on 20 January I made a further request, using exactly the same wording as Plumstead Law Centre had in November.  And this is the reply I received on Wednesday:

Thank you for your email of 20th January 2014, in which you asked for the following information from the Ministry of Justice (MoJ):

“How many Employment Tribunal Fee Remission applications have been received by HMCTS since 1 July 2013, and how many of these applications were rejected?

Your request has been handled under the Freedom of Information Act 2000 (FOIA).  I can confirm that the Ministry of Justice holds information that you have asked for.  However, because the cost of complying with your request would exceed the limit set by the Freedom of Information Act, on this occasion I’m afraid I will not be taking your request further.  In this letter I explain why that is.

The law allows us to decline to answer FOI requests when we estimate it would cost us more than £600 (equivalent to 3½ working days’ worth of work, calculated at £25 per hour) to identify, locate, extract, and then provide the information that has been asked for.  In this instance to provide you with the information we would be required to conduct a manual trawl of fee remission files to obtain the information requested. Each case file would take approximately 15-20 minutes to go through the file, to identify if that application was an application which had been re-submitted, the level of fee payable and the outcome/decision made.

You refer in the body of your email request that information was provided previously in FOI reference 86412.

The information provided in [that] response was taken from a manual count of the remission applications received and processed by the Employment Tribunal (‘ET’) and not taken from the supplier responsible for the maintenance of the fees and remission database (Jadu Ltd). Although this information was provided it should have been explained that this was a manual count and may not be an accurate number of the applications received.  This manual count is no longer being carried out by the ET, as the information is now recorded on the remission database.  To obtain the information requested requires interrogation of the employment tribunals’ fees and remission database, and quality assurance checks on that data to ensure it is accurate, reliable and in a form suitable for publication.

We are in the process of putting this system in place, but it is not currently available.  As explained in the response to your previous request we are not in a position to provide the information requested without manually trawling through all of the files where a remissions application has been received.  This process is estimated to cost more than the limit of £600.  

So, the number of fee remission applications made and decided is now recorded on an ET fees & remission database. But to extract from that database the number of ET fee remission applications made and decided to date would involve more than 3½ days of work? Really?  What is recorded on this ET fees & remission database, if not the number of ET fee remission applications made and decided?  How much is the Ministry paying Jadu Ltd. to provide and maintain this database?  Have I stumbled across yet another public sector IT fiasco?

Or is the Ministry just telling porkies to protect the Lord Chancellor’s genitals from High Court judges?

Postscript:  Since posting the above, I’ve come across this written answer, yesterday, to a parliamentary question by Ian Murray MP, seeking the number of ET fee remission applications made and determined:

Mr Vara: Data concerning outcomes of fee remission applications made, in employment tribunal cases and in other court and tribunal jurisdictions, are not routinely published.

HM Courts and Tribunals Service is working with partners to develop appropriate system reporting tools that will enable extraction, interrogation and subsequent quality assurance of data, including the data requested. Until those system reporting tools are developed, later this year, we will not be able to provide the data requested.

The Government has previously said that it plans to publish a Post Implementation Review, assessing and reporting on the impacts of fee-charging on the employment tribunals system.  The reporting tools we are developing will help us to undertake that work.

As in my previous answer, my officials are currently undertaking this work, and I will write to the hon.  Member as soon as I am able.

So, the Ministry of Justice is paying Jadu Ltd. to provide and maintain an ET fees & remission database that currently has no reporting tools, and therefore cannot provide any, er, data.  Someone should sort that out.  Because the Lord Chancellor really doesn’t like to see taxpayers’ money wasted on IT fat cats. [Are you sure that’s right? Ed]

Postscript 2: But what is this? Oh, it’s the website of Jadu Ltd., and their “exemplar case study” number 23: ET fee payments.  Yep, that’s the ET fees & remission database.  So, what does the Jadu “exemplar case study” tell us?

Well, somewhat superfluously, it tells us that “potentially massive savings” to the Ministry of Justice have “huge dependency” on Jadu delivering “a high quality IT system”, because – and I’m really not making this up – “media reaction to IT failure [could] significantly amplify the political sensitivity and national media reaction”.  Gosh, really?

Yes, really.  So, a “product owner was established at MoJ and at Jadu, both of whom worked closely to make key decisions”.  Well, that has to be better than only one of them working closely.  Whatever, they “communicated on a daily basis”, re-adjusting the priorities and “moving more important things up the list and less important things down the list”.  Phew, for a minute there I thought they were going to get it the wrong way round!

Not only that, but the closely-working product owners “established a Definition of Done”.  Note the capitals.  Not done, but Done.

After that, well, there was “change audit and versioning”, some “migration and roll back tests”, a few “sprint demos”, a dash of “code versioning”, some “user and usability tests”, and – finally – “iterating the delivered solution”.  This was essential, because “with many IT projects in the public sector failing to deliver value, it is essential that the Government pro-actively promotes better ways of working”.  You can say that again.

And all this versioning and “Test Driven Development” meant that the delivered ET fees & remission database is “of a very high standard”, with “216 different user journey routes”. Two hundred and sixteen!  Not only that, but it was “launched on 27 July, two days ahead of the deadline”.  And a “well rehearsed launch” led to “a very high quality service being delivered”.  Yes, yes, we got that.  Unfortunately, being of “a very high standard” seems not to include having the “reporting tools” to deliver basic data on ET fee remission applications.  Maybe no-one versioned the code for that.

But hey, Jadu “built what was needed, not what was agreed at the start”.  No surprise, then, that in November Jadu and it’s “exemplar 23” – that’s the Jadu ET fees & remission database to you and me – was shortlisted for an award.  Here’s a nice photo of the Jadu team off to the award dinner.

And all this ‘high quality’ for just … £1.5 million!  Well, that’s what the Jadu website says.  According to a Ministry of Justice press release, seemingly issued to coincide with the award dinner in November, it was £2 million.  But I guess only little people quibble about £500K.

Yes, the Lord Chancellor with an aversion to fat cats has handed as much as £2 million to Jadu, in return for a database that, according to the Ministry of Justice, can’t (yet) count basic data.  And, since you ask, Jadu are doing very nicely on it, thank you.  Indeed, thanks to the Ministry of Justice contract, Jadu has “been transformed, with significant growth and investment”, and has now “expanded into Australia, becoming a truly global player”.  This is what the Lord Chancellor had to say in November:

“Jadu is a perfect example of how small businesses in the private sector can help transform our justice system, driving innovation and better value for hardworking taxpayers – and it’s something I want to see much more of.”

But the last word has to go to Suraj Kika, founder and chief executive of Jadu and, seemingly, a budding philosopher:

Sometimes, to fix things – you need to break them first.

The one in which the Minister says it does not cost £1200 to pursue an ET claim for discrimination

In the House of Commons yesterday, it was looking as if yet another session of oral questions to the Department for Business, Innovation & Skills (BIS) was going to pass without Vince Cable and his ministerial team being pressed on arguably the most damaging element of the Coalition’s erosion of workplace rights: the hefty, upfront employment tribunal (ET) fees introduced last July.

But then up popped Labour backbencher John Cryer with this poser (scroll down to column 438): “The Minister confirmed just a few minutes ago that women who become pregnant can and do face discrimination at work.  Why, then, are the Government going to charge those women £1,200 to go to an industrial tribunal?”

Glossing over the fact that employment tribunals haven’t been called ‘industrial tribunals’ since 1998, the response by Jenny Willott – the Liberal Democrat MP covering as BIS employment relations minister during Jo Swinson’s maternity leave – is worth setting out in full:

 I am disappointed that this figure is being bandied around yet again. It does not cost women more than £1,000 to go to a tribunal.  It costs only £250 to start a claim, and most cases are finalised well before a hearing.  For those who end up going to a hearing, fee remission applies in many cases, and if the women win their case, costs are often awarded against their former employers.  It does not cost what the hon. Gentleman suggests, it is scaremongering by Labour Members, and I am concerned that this will put women off taking cases against their employers when they have been unfairly discriminated against.

Now, it’s true that it costs “only” £250 – the equivalent of a week’s wages if you’re on the national minimum wage, but clearly little more than loose change to a Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State – to start a claim for pregnancy, maternity or any other form of discrimination.  But there’s little point paying to start a claim unless you intend to finish it, and if the respondent employer doesn’t settle your claim that will cost you another £950 – or another four weeks’ wages if you’re on the minimum wage.  And why would the respondent employer settle your claim before seeing whether you are prepared to pay the £950 hearing fee on top of your £250 issue fee?

Then again, according to Ms Willott, that shouldn’t be a problem because “fee remission applies in many cases”.  It does?  I’d like to hear Ms Willott’s definition of ‘many’, because the only figures the Ministry of Justice has been willing to release to date show that 80 per cent of fee remission applications are rejected, and that just four per cent of claimants actually receive any fee remission.  It’s entirely possible that the latter proportion has increased in recent months, but in that case why has the Ministry of Justice repeatedly declined to release more recent figures?

So, not much chance that you’ll get any fee remission then.  But at least “costs are often awarded” against losing employers.  They are?  According to the official ET statistics, in 2011-12 costs were awarded to just 116 (0.005 per cent) of the some 24,000 claimants who won their case in the tribunal (either at a hearing, or through a default judgment).  Call me picky, but I wouldn’t say that was “often”.  Indeed, claimants are somewhat more likely to have costs awarded against them.

So, will many women who have been subjected to pregnancy or maternity discrimination by their employer be ‘put off’ from bringing an ET claim by John Cryer’s parliamentary question?  I guess that comes down to whether you share the Minister’s rather unusual definition of ‘many’.  But I think we can be sure that a great many more will be put off by having to fork out up to £1,200 in upfront fees, with little chance of any fee remission and – should they win – almost no chance of having costs awarded to them by the tribunal.

Have the Government Made Another Mistake on ET Fees

In the Judicial Review brought by Fox and Partners in the Court of Session in Scotland in respect of employment tribunal fees, the Lord Chancellor conceded that Equal Pay claims were type A claims for the purposes of the Fees Order because they are complaints in relation to a breach of the sex equality clause  in terms of section 66 of the Equality Act 2010. This is despite the Fees Order saying they were Type B claims attracting the higher fee on issue and hearing.  It was suggested this was a drafting error and Ministers would want to amend the Fees Order.

I think I may have spotted a further drafting error.  I recently chaired a working party for the Employment Lawyers Association responding to the ACAS consultation on amending paragraphs 15 and 36 of the code of practice on Discipline and Grievance following the EAT decision in Toal and another v GB Oils Ltd UKEAT/0177/13DM.  If you are interested, you can find our response here http://www.elaweb.org.uk/sites/default/files/docs/ELA%20Response_ACAS%20consultation%20on%20Code_Discip_Griev_7Jan14%20%282%29.pdf

It is necessary for the Chair of the Association to approve any response before it is submitted.  He approved our response but asked me whether a fee was payable to bring a claim under Section 10 of the Employment Relations Act 1999, where an employer refuses to allow a worker to be accompanied by a companion of their choice at a grievance or disciplinary hearing.  I knew the answer to that was “yes” but I couldn’t answer the follow up question which was what was the level of fee.  I always assumed it was a type A claim.

I went to the fees order and was very surprised to see the claim was not listed in Table 2 of Schedule 2 as a type A claim, attracting the lower fee of £160 on issue and £230 for hearing.

This means that an worker wishing to bring a claim under S.10 of the Employment Relations Act 1999 must pay an issue fee of £250 and a hearing fee of £950.

Bearing in mind that the remedy for breach is compensation of an amount not exceeding 2 weeks pay and a weeks pay has the usual maximum of £450, a worker will have to spend £1200 to get back £900.  Of course, if they succeed they should have their fees paid by the losing party, but this is not automatically the case.

But it is worse, as a result of the decision in Toal  we now know that the word “compensation” in S.11 (3) of the Employment Relations Act 1999 requires the worker to prove they have suffered actual loss and nominal damages may be appropriate where no actual loss can be proven.

Type B cases are meant to be the more complex and costly claims.  I cannot believe the Government assessed S.10 claims are complex and so more costly.  Currently, who is going to speculate £1200 to win a maximum of £900 in compensation?  The right under S.10 becomes meaningless.

So is this a further example of the rushed nature of introducing the legislation on employment tribunal fees last July leading to errors in drafting?  Will the MoJ agree to remedy the error in the same way as they did with Equal Pay claims?

Tribunal fee remission: a very small fig leaf?

In response to widespread concern about the detrimental impact on access to justice of the employment tribunal fees regime introduced on 29 July last year, Coalition ministers have repeatedly claimed that low-income claimants will have their access to justice protected by the accompanying fee remission scheme.  In late October, for example, just days after the Ministry of Justice published provisional statistics indicating a sharp fall in the number of individual claims since July, the BIS employment relations minister, Jo Swinson, stated (in a letter to Maternity Action):

“The Government believes that all users of the tribunal system should make a contribution to the costs where they can do so, regardless of the type of claim.  Where claimants cannot afford the fees, the remission system ensures that nobody will be denied access to the tribunal.”

However, the  tribunal fee remission scheme, under which a claimant can receive full or partial exemption from the fee, is simply a revised version of the pre-existing County Court fee remission scheme, which in 2012 was condemned by Citizens Advice as “not fit for purpose” on account of its complexity and maladministration by HM Courts & Tribunals Service.  Under this revised scheme, any individual living in a household that has £3,000 or more in savings will not be entitled to any fee remission. This eligibility criterion applies to everyone, including those out of work.

And let’s not forget, the upfront fees introduced last July are substantial.  To issue and pursue a claim for unfair dismissal, for example, costs £1,200 (an issue fee of £250, and a hearing fee of £950).  Will summarily dismissed workers who have acted prudently to protect their family from sudden financial shocks by building up moderate savings of just £3,000 want to risk £1,200 of those savings on a tribunal claim for unfair dismissal, when there is no guarantee that the employer will repay the fees even if the claim is ‘successful’?  As recent government research has shown, half of the workers awarded compensation by a tribunal do not receive their award in full, and there’s no reason to think that those employers who fail to pay an award will be any more forthcoming when it comes to the repayment of hefty fees.

Furthermore, the upper income limits, above which claimants will not receive even partial remission of the fees, are set extremely low.  An analysis by economist Howard Reed, commissioned by the TUC, shows that “even among households where someone is earning just the national minimum wage, fewer than one in four of these workers will receive any [fee remission] and will have to pay the full fees”.  Reed’s analysis further suggests that just one in nine disabled workers, and one in 20 workers aged 50-60 (i.e. those most at risk of age discrimination) would qualify for full fee remission.

So, has the fee remission scheme protected access to an employment tribunal since the introduction of fees in July?  Last week, I stumbled across a Ministry of Justice response to a Freedom of Information request, published on-line by the Ministry in November (FoI 86412) but, as far as I can tell, not otherwise reported by whoever it was that submitted the request.  This states that, of “the 852 employment tribunal fee remission applications submitted nationally between 29 July and 11 November, 672 were rejected”.  That is a rejection rate of 79 per cent.

In other words, during the first three months of the fees regime, just 180 tribunal claimants received full or partial fee remission.  And we know that, in the same period, there were some 4,500 tribunal claims by individual workers (i.e. single claims; I have left multiple claims out of this analysis).  So, only 22 per cent of all single claimants applied for fee remission, and just four per cent of all single claimants received full or partial fee remission.  Yet as recently as September 2013, in its final Impact Assessment on the revised fee remission scheme, the Ministry of Justice suggested that 31 per cent of all claimants would be eligible for full (25 per cent) or partial (six per cent) fee remission.

Furthermore, the figure of 4,500 individual claims in the three-month period August to October is substantially lower than the average number of such claims prior to the introduction of fees.  But for the introduction of fees, we could have expected about 13,200 single claims in that period.  So a mere 1.4 per cent of the individual claimants we might have expected in the first three months of the fees regime received full or partial remission of the fees.

Whichever way you look at it, the fee remission scheme didn’t do a great deal to preserve access to justice in the first three months of the fees regime.  That said, the fee remission application rate may have risen in subsequent months, and the rejection rate may have fallen, as legal advisers became more familiar with both the fees regime and the fee remission scheme.

Well, maybe – time will tell.  But there’s certainly no room for the sort of ministerial complacency exhibited by Jo Swinson in October.  If the numbers don’t improve significantly, and soon, the fee remission scheme is going to look a very small fig leaf.

News from the Employment Tribunal National User Group

I spent most of this afternoon at a meeting of the Employment Tribunal System National User Group. ETSNUG is chaired by the President of Employment Tribunals (England and Wales) and includes reports from both HMCTS and ACAS, so it’s a good opportunity to find out how the employment tribunal system looks from the inside.

The following is based on my note of the meeting. While obviously I think it’s an accurate account, it shouldn’t be taken as an official statement from the President, HMCTS or ACAS.

It’s also quite long — I’ve tried to put the most interesting stuff at the beginning.

Claims accepted

After the large drop in August and September, the number of cases accepted by the tribunal is rising slowly.

Both the President and HMCTS expect a slow rise until the numbers stabilise at their post-fee level. But it’s too early to say what that level will be — particularly with early conciliation coming in from 6th April 2014. They don’t expect to be able to draw clear conclusions about the post-fees level of tribunal work for another 12 months.

ACAS reports that the number of calls to their helpline remains steady. This suggests that the underlying level of workplace conflict remains much the same.

Fees / Remissions

About one third of remission applications are being granted on the first decision. Most remissions that are granted are granted in full — there are very few partial remissions.

Initial decisions are being made fairly rapidly. The oldest remission applications without a first decision is about two weeks old. Contrary to speculation (some of it mine) there is no large pile of unprocessed remission applications building up in Leicester.

However, there is a time-line impact, because it takes time to deal with fees / remission before accepting the claim and HMCTS statistics have always worked with accepted claims. They are considering whether to start publishing information on claims submitted as well.

HMCTS is actively reviewing the remission process, both within and beyond employment tribunals. They’re looking at the information provided to applicants and their own processes, with the aim of improving both the remission applications and the way they deal with them.

Apparently quite a lot of remission applications fail because, on their face, the applicant can’t pass the capital test (i.e. they have declared more than £3k disposable capital). There’s some suspicion that some unions require members to make an application for remission before they will fund the fee. If this is happening HMCTS would like them to change policy, because it’s causing unnecessary work.

Outstanding caseload

More than half of the outstanding caseload of about 600,000 claims isn’t ‘real’. In other words, it’s made up of airline working-time claims and insolvency claims, that are lodged with the tribunal, but which almost certainly won’t need judicial resolution.

Most of the claims heard by a tribunal are multi-day discrimination claims. A high proportion of unfair dismissal and wages claims settle.

Equal pay: almost all claims are against the state in one form or another. There are now very few central government claims and the number of claims against local government is dropping.

In general, the timeliness indicators in single cases have improved over the last four years. The average time to complete a case is dropping. Given the reduction in tribunal resources, HMCTS feels this is significant success.

Online portal

HMCTS is aware of difficulties with the online portal, both in terms of bugs and aspects of the process users would like to see improved. They’re working on both areas of this.

About 75% of claims now come through the online portal — compared with about 40% submitted online under the old system.

New Rules

From the tribunal’s perspective the introduction has gone smoothly and quietly.

Presidential guidance covering applications for postponements (and default judgments in Scotland) will be published in the next few days. These are the areas covered by the example guidance in the rules consultation. The published guidance will be very similar, but with a certain amount of updating and revision.

Next year, there will be more wide-ranging Presidential guidance, dealing particularly with case management. The ultimate aim is for there to be a single piece of umbrella guidance, online, with links to more specific guidance.

A Practice Direction under rule 88, providing for service on the Secretary of State, the Law Officers, and the Counsel General to the Welsh Assembly Government, in cases where they are not parties, will be released in the next couple of days. This will not involve any change in the current practice.

Early conciliation

We can expect regulations on early conciliation towards the end of January. The preparatory work within ACAS of producing guidance and training staff is going forward ahead of the regulations being finalised.

ACAS has added 40 new conciliators to its existing team of 240 in preparation. The new conciliators are appointed on a temporary basis (some are temporary promotions from within ACAS, some are on temporary contracts). Staffing levels will be reassessed when it’s clearer how much work there will be in both early conciliation and tribunal claim conciliation.

ACAS expects most applications for conciliation to be online. They hope to get 80% of applications that way. Their aim will be to call applicants the next working day.

The general approach will be to talk to both employees and employers and encourage them to consider engaging in discussion before a claim is lodged. ACAS will try to avoid pushing people into entrenched positions or linking the conciliation process with any tribunal claim. Partly for this reason, conciliation won’t involve writing down details of any potential claim.

Non-payment of awards

Ministers are engaged and concerned with this issue. They wanted up-to-date research to have an evidence base for further action. This has now been published.

It’s clear that non-payment is a multifaceted problem with no single solution. BIS are now considering their approach. They want to have better information and guidance for claimants — but they are also considering more wide-scale change to the way awards are enforced.

There is funding for a national pilot, in which claimants will be contacted about 42 days after the judgment. Half will only be asked if the award has been paid. The other half will be told about enforcement. BIS is hoping to establish if this sort of signposting makes a difference to enforcement rates. This pilot will go forward at the same time as other efforts on non-payment.

BIS is also concerned about phoenix companies. There has been some successful examples of them working with the investigative branch of the insolvency service. They hope to do more of this.

Financial penalties against respondents

These will come in from 6th April 2014. They are likely to be enforced by debt collection agencies, as HMRC debts are.

There might be consideration of the debt collectors enforcing unpaid awards to claimants at the same time. But discussions are at a very early stage on this.

Judicial mediation

The number of cases going to judicial mediation is slowly dropping. There appears to have been a change of policy among some parts of the public sector away from accepting mediation. Also the overall number of claims is down. Fees haven’t yet had an impact, because those cases aren’t yet far enough through the system.

At the moment no new judicial mediators are being trained. This will be looked at again when the full impact of recent changes can be assessed.

Regional reorganisation

This is mostly complete. The ultimate aim is that each of the 12 regions will have a single administration centre, which will do the back-office work for the other hearing venues in the region. For example, in London South administration is now concentrated in Croydon; Ashford is now purely a hearing venue.

The following regions are still being worked on:

  • South West: where decisions are still being made about what will happen.
  • East Midlands: Nottingham will be the regional centre. Administration will be from the Magistrates Court buildings. Hearings will be in the old coroners court, which will be refurbished for tribunal use. Although Leicester is the central administrative hub, it won’t deal with the any of the regional admin.
  • London North / West: decisions still being made about what to do.

Non-legal members

Now sitting in far fewer cases, generally only in discrimination claims. It’s very unusual for an unfair dismissal hearing to have non-legal members.

HMCTS estimate that there has been a hearing time saving of one third.

Tribunal / Court estate

This remains an important area of concern for HMCTS. The estate as a whole is at about 80% capacity. This means that, on any given day, one in five courts are empty. Some are permanently empty and some are underused.

This is a problem, because it means that the government is spending a lot of money on buildings that it isn’t using. Estate is likely to be a key issue in discussions of HMCTS funding and structure in the future.

There is a general principle that HMCTS will not hear civil cases in criminal courts unless it’s necessary. Where courts are refurbished it is common to curtain off criminal features, such as docks and the jury area. These aren’t permanently removed so that the court can repurposed again easily if necessary.

Recruitment

41 new fee-paid judges were appointed in the last round. They have recently completed their training and begun sitting.

There are no plans to recruit judges or non-legal members in the foreseeable future. Everyone is waiting to see what the ultimate impact of the changes is on work-load before making any decisions.

A tad more on ET claims since July

A few weeks ago, I emailed each of the regional ET offices, asking for the number of ET claims they had received in each month in 2013, including October.  At least some of my emails were passed to HMCTS, which unilaterally decided to treat them as a Freedom of Information request. And I have just received a partial FoI response from HMCTS: the data provided is for just seven ET regional offices, and does not include any figures for October. According to the covering letter from HMCTS, the figures for October are “not currently available”. To which I can only say: and I’m a banana.

Whatever, the data probably adds little if anything to the fantabulous, two-part analysis by Alex Lock on this blog of the data already published by the Ministry of Justice/HMCTS.  But I’m going to share it with you anyway, as I think there are a couple of interesting points to note.

*Claim & Multiple Claim Case* Klaxon!!! Yes, before we start, it is important to note that the data, set out in the following table, relates to ‘claims’ received by each ET regional office.  That is, the figures for each month are – as an estate agent would say – comprised of the number of single claims by individual claimants, plus the number of individual claimants included in multiple claim cases.  Which, as Alex Lock noted, is not the most meaningful measure of the ET system’s workload: the better (but still not ideal) measure is the number of single claims by individual claimants, plus the number of multiple claim cases.  This is important, because at the level of ET regions the number of ‘claims’ can easily be distorted by just one or two unusually large multiple claim cases (or the lack of same).  Got that?  OK, now we can move on to the table.

ET Office

Jan

Feb

Mar

Apr

May

Jun

Average

Jul

Aug

Sep

Actual – aver
Nottingham

721

433

332

572

323

329

452

1,400

218

73

335

Leeds

1,461

1,307

808

1,085

686

567

986

789

684

325

-1160

Huntingdon

193

171

173

200

230

168

189

296

109

53

-109

Reading

431

263

540

276

265

224

333

395

102

61

-441

Watford

320

295

357

272

446

586

379

780

102

81

-174

Bristol

221

174

194

179

183

158

185

317

66

32

-140

Southampton

195

210

272

236

190

239

224

248

218

73

-133

Total

2748

 

 

698 

-1822

To the table of data provided to me by HMCTS, I have added two columns: one giving the average monthly number of claims received in the six-month period January to June; and a final column showing the difference between the actual total number of claims received in the three-month period July to September, and the total number of claims that would have been received in that period had each month been an average month (based on the previous six months, January to June).  Whilst this fails to take account of seasonal variations, it does gives us a somewhat crude measure of the impact of fees in these seven regions, as it does at least even out any bulge of claims submitted earlier than they might have been in order to beat the introduction of fees on 29 July.

From this final column, we can see an apparent fall in the number of claims post-fees in six of the seven regions – the exception being Nottingham, which had a relatively large pre-fees bulge in July. Klaxon!!! Yes, as noted above, some or all of the Nottingham bulge could be due to one or more unusually large multiple claim cases. Overall, the seven regional offices received 1,822 fewer claims in the three-month period July to September than they would have done, had each of those months been an average month.

Perhaps more significantly, in September the number of claims was well below average, in all seven regions.  Indeed, the September total for the seven regions (698) is just 25 per cent of the average monthly total (2748).

We can also see that in three regions – Leeds, Reading and Southampton – there was in fact no evident pre-fees bulge.  Klaxon!!! OK, by now you know what the klaxon means.

If you are still awake at this point, you might have noticed that the August and September figures for Nottingham and Southampton are not just similar, but identical.  This seemed so unlikely that I asked HMCTS to double-check, and they have today assured me that the figures are correct.  Coincidence? It would seem so.

Different klaxon!!! Yes, enough with the klaxons already. As Alex Lock noted, the September (and perhaps even the August) figures might well need to be adjusted upwards, as they do not include any claims submitted but not counted as received by HMCTS because a decision on fee remission is still pending.

Which means I’ve probably just wasted two minutes of your time, and you’ll just have to come back and read a further devastating analysis by Alex once the October and November figures have been made public.

Cliffs and claims: Employment Tribunal cases post-fees

EMPLOYMENT TRIBUNAL CLAIMS

POST-FEES

PART 1 

 

On 29 July 2013 the Government introduced fees for those wishing to bring claims in the employment tribunals seeking to enforce their rights. For a system set up to be quick, simple, informal and free, this was the single biggest – and arguably most controversial – change since the tribunals were created in 1964. The Government stated the reason for doing so was to make sure that the users of the system paid their fair share of the cost of it, rather than it all falling to the taxpayer. No mention was made of the fact that the users of the system were, almost without exception, taxpayers.

The suspicion was that a government which had, in some quarters, expressed hostility to employees having and exercising rights, was introducing fees in order to cut the number of claims. Those suspicions were not allayed when the size of the fees were confirmed. For simple ‘money’ claims there was to be a fee of £160 to issue and a further £230 should it proceed to a hearing. For more complex claims the issue fee would be £250 with a further £950 for the hearing.

Unsurprisingly the introduction of fees was challenged via a judicial review application brought by UNISON (current fee £60 plus £215 for a hearing. The Government has now proposed increasing this to £135 plus £680 for a hearing). The hearing for this challenge began on 22 October. Just days before, on 18 October, the Ministry of Justice published an “ad-hoc statistical notice” showing the number of claims received into the employment tribunal system in the period July to September 2013. The key messages in the executive summary were:

  • They normally have an average of 17,000 “receipts” per month
  • In June there were 25,000 “receipts” and in July 17,000
  • In August there were 7,000 “receipts” and in September 14,000
  • The top “key finding” was that, “Employment Tribunal receipts were around 40,000 for July – September in line with historical quarterly trends”

A cynic may suggest that what the Government was saying, in advance of the judicial review hearing, was that:

  • the introduction of fees hadn’t really had an effect on the number of claims being brought – “in line with historical quarterly trends” – showing a decrease of only 2,000 “receipts” over what they would normally expect.
  • That is only a 5% drop (which probably represented the unmeritorious claims usually put in by the idle, making use of a free-system funded by the taxpayer, just to annoy their employers (and probably hard-working families)).
  • Quite properly the Government was re-balancing the system so that users made a proper contribution.

How could anyone criticise this? Surely the facts speak for themselves, particularly in the statistics the Government had so helpfully released prior to the judicial review hearing. As is so often the case, the executive summary was not really a summary at all. It is the place where you put the messages you want to get across, safe in the knowledge that few people will venture beyond it. Particularly where there are graphs, tables and figures.

First off, it is important to be clear about our language. In the executive summary the MoJ spoke of “receipts”, rather than cases or claims. There are two types of figures that are recorded:

  • Single claims – where an individual brings a claim against the employer. This may be Fred bringing an unfair dismissal claim; Susan bringing an unfair dismissal and unpaid accrued holiday claim; or Jay bringing a discrimination and whistle-blowing claim
  • Multiple claim – where two or more individuals bring claims against a common employer. This may be a group of transferring employees alleging a failure to inform and consult following  a TUPE; or it may be a huge number of cabin crew bringing a claim against an airline alleging their holiday pay has not been calculated correctly (of which more later).

“Receipts” is an amalgamation of the two types of claims, i.e. adding up the number of single and multiple claims received, but counting each of the claims within the multiple claims individually. Therefore, if 1,000 single claims were received and 1,000 multiple claims each comprising 10 individuals were also received, “receipts” would total 1,000 + (1,000 x 10) = 11,000, rather than 1,000 = 1,000 = 2,000 receipts.

Does it make any difference if we look at single and multiple claims separately rather than together as receipts? The short answer is yes and arguably a more accurate picture is painted as to what is happening to claims following the introduction of fees. If we start off with single claims – where a worker or employee submits a claim against his or her employer – what would we normally see? If we go back to 2012 there is a fairly consistent pattern of 4,000+ cases bring received nationally each month (the average is 4,602, with a range from 4,021 to 4,981).

If we look at the period from January to June 2013, much the same pattern is evident: an average of 4,380 per month, with a range from 4,029 to 4,635.

Moving on to July 2013 – with fees looming on 29th – there is a spike in claims to 6,691, a rise of over 2,300 on the average, representing a more than 50% increase. This is to be expected, as the MoJ acknowledges, with claimants bringing forward submission of claims to avoid the fee.

This was bound to result in a decrease for August, which it did: down to 3,341, as some of the claims submitted in July would have been submitted in August but for the introduction of fees.

Turning to September, just 1,003 single claims were submitted, being only 23% of the average for 2013 (and under 22% of the average for 2012). In September 2012 4,021 were submitted,  more than four times as many.

Surely, however, September suffered from the same fate as August, with claims being submitted early to beat the fee? Probably not and certainly not to the same extent. The reason for that is that the tribunals have a short limitation period. For most claims the period of time in which the claim must be submitted is 3 months. Therefore people cannot hang around and experience suggests that claims submitted in September related to events from late-July onwards, so those claimants would not have had the ability to bring forward submission of their claims in the same way those submitting in July could have done. The events they were complaining about had probably not happened early enough to do so.

One caveat ought to be attached to this analysis. The MoJ only counts a claim as “received” once it has been accepted. For those claimants who applied for remission of the fees, which would delay acceptance of the claim, their cases may not be included in these figures. One smaller caveat – made by the MoJ – is that the figures it released were provisional and subject to change. Final figures will be released on 12 December. Even with those caveats, it is highly unlikely that anything like 3,000+ claims will be restored for September.

So how about multiple cases? For these the “ad-hoc statistical notice” tells us (on page 7) that, “When looking at the number of multiple claims cases, regardless of the number of individuals involved, there is a broadly flat trend from April 2012 to June 2013. There is an increase in multiple claims for July 2013, again possibly due to people wishing to submit cases before the introduction of fees. There is then a decline in cases in August and September 2013.” The question is, how much of a decline?

If we look at the figures for the from April 2012 to June 2013 (none, curiously, are published from January to March 2012) we see a range from 682 to 404 submitted each month, giving an average of 520. In July we see our familiar spike of 616, being about 18% up, with a dip in August to 304. In September we plumb the depths to just 114. That is – again – 22% of the what one would expect to see. If we look at September 2012, 437 multiple cases were received: nearly four times as many, as with the single cases.

We do need to be cautious with multiple cases, however, as they contain a number of individual claimants. This is significant for three reasons. Firstly, there is one fee payable for submitting a multiple case. This means that the impact on each individual is far less than in a single case.

Secondly, in multiple cases the individuals are more likely to be supported by a trade union. Think of cases where multiple individuals bring a claim: failure to collectively consult on redundancies; failure to inform and consult under TUPE; large equal pay claims and so on. In those cases it is the union that will pick up the tab, rather than the individual.

Thirdly, since 2007, there have been over 10,000 claims brought by cabin crew in the airline industry in relation to the calculation of their holiday pay. Those claims are re-submitted every three months. Looking at the figures for ‘multiple receipts’ (the numbers of individuals within multiple cases) in March 2013, for example, there were 20,588. In July – our ‘spike’ month – there were 10,462, in August 4,107 and in September 13,359.

These numbers can really distort the figures, if that is what one wanted to do. When the MoJ, on behalf of the Government, publishes figures immediately prior to a judicial review on the introduction of fee and states that, “Employment Tribunal receipts were around 40,000 for July – September in line with historical quarterly trends(my emphasis), one might conclude that is what was being done. Yes, if you add up all the single claims in July to September and all the individuals within all the multiple cases, you do get to a figure of 38,963. That is a poor measure, however, and does not disclose what is really going on with employment tribunal claims.

Employment Tribunals up and down the country report that the number of claims has dropped significantly. Analysis of the statistics show that, far from being in line with historical quarterly trends, the number of claims has dropped by over 75% once you are past the distortion of the 29 July deadline.

It is true that claims may recover as people get to grips with a new system. When the statutory dispute resolution procedures were introduced in 2004, the number of tribunal claims dropped by about 25%, as people grappled with “what is a grievance?”, or “is this a Step 1 letter?”. Claims recovered.

What is not a surprise, however, is that if you introduce a hefty fee for something that was previously free, people consume less of it. One can argue about whether making it harder to bring a claim was the intention of a Government that commissioned the Beecroft Report, or that stated employers were “too scared” to employ people for fear of being taken to a tribunal. One cannot argue that it was wasn’t foreseeable that fewer people would seek redress through the tribunal system to protect their rights.

@alexlock

 

 

Compensation for Aborted Hearings from MOJ

I’ve recently been involved with a couple of hearings where no judge was available, so we all trooped off home (at significant expense for my client).

So I did some research on recovering those wasted costs from the famed MOJ Compensation Fund.

Apparently there is no ‘fund’, as such.  Rather, service managers at each tribunal centre have discretion to make payments.  My assistant rang round the tribunals to see what the practice was in different regions.  Most service managers wouldn’t take her call.  Of the few that did, the consistent response was:-

  • they take decisions about compensation on the facts of each case  (what facts?  Everyone wasted costs because no judge was available – how are any of those cases fact-sensitive?)
  • they don’t apply any formal (or informal) criteria – it just depends on the case

Whilst I don’t feel strongly enough about this to launch an e-petition and force a debate in parliament (like that would happen), it’s poor practice that these important decisions – relating to the state keeping up its end of the social (and now fee-paid) contract – should depend on the whim on a local service manager who isn’t even purporting to apply consistent or fair criteria.