Is it (just) me, or is anyone else appalled by yesterday's report in "HR Grapevine" and public media of the £40k+ award given to a new mother for having been sacked while on Maternity Leave when her "HR Consultant" and "Business Management Service" employers chose to change their Company registration (for reasons not explained), dismissing in clear breach of a whole raft of legislation (including the Equality Act and TUPE Regulations).
Not only was this a self-evident unfair dismissal contradicting her basic rights as both employee and Mother, but it transpires that this family-operated organisation provides services to several major national employers, including Domino's and Costa Coffee!
How is it that once again we are faced with a clear case of people wholly unfit to operate as HR Consultants being free to do so with impunity, since anyone who choses to call themselves "HR Professionals" can do so, riding on the back of that term to conduct business without concern for either employees or statute, to the potential damage of not only individual employees, but the reputations of both their clients and those of us who aspire to conduct ourselves, and guide those we advise, as true professionals?
None of the reports I have read have mentioned the status of those principally involved in running this company as CIPD members, but if they are, then this should be addressed, not just behind closed doors, but as a public comment. Surely it must be time that we as an organisation pushed for the same preventions of abuse of the terms "HR Professional" or HR "Consultant", etc. that apply to other professions into whose hands personal rights, data, welfare and safety are passed, including not just Accountants, Solicitors and the like, but also the jobbing Gas Fitter, so as to offer both employees (at all levels) and their corporate employers the same certainties that apply to those "titles"?
This case, and the distress it cased to a new mother (and potentially also her child's welfare) is but one instance of the many we have all seen (and comment on in this community) of employers advised by the incompetent or opportunistic causing discomfort, distress, and real damage to employees through poor HR practices or ill-advised interpretations of statue, employment rights, or appropriate responses to welfare issues. This time of change and uncertainty, relating to Covid, added to those factors surely MUST be a time for us, as the Profession we claim to be, to press for formal recognition and registration for HR practice and qualifications.
....and if not: Why not?
P