Dear all,
I have a question that I have searched the web for an answer, but I seem to be unable to find one.
Imagine you are asked to release information regarding a specific role in your company, lets say IT administrator, and you have the following scenarios outlines below.
{
Useful context, the company pay structure starts at level 1 to 5 and each level has spine points 1 to 3 with difference in pay.
- Level 1 you might be paid up to £16k flat
- Level 1.2 might be paid up to £17.400
- Level 1.3 might be paid up to £23k
- Level 2 might be paid from £24k to £30k depending on their spine points - 1 to 3.
Each role in the business is mapped within a certain level range, for instance the IT admin can be 2.1 to 2.3 and the next level 3.1 is IT coordinator. Whilst some roles can also fit more than one level and start at 2.2 to 3.2 for instance for IT Advisor. In those scenarios, the pay for IT admin at SP 2.3 might exceed IT advisor at SP 2.2 even though the role is a level down in terms of seniority.
}
Hope this makes sense.
The scenario:
1. The person requesting the pay rates for the role of IT admin for 2020 is the IT admin himself. The reason is unknown but he wants to know what the company pays for people at his pay rate which happens to be between level 2.1 to level 2.3 on the pay grade for the role, not his individual circumstances.
2. The person requesting that information is the IT department manager, the reason behind the request is unknown, but likewise he wants to know the IT admin pay rates which fall between level 2.1 and 2.3 on the pay structure of the business.
3. The IT department manager and the IT admin both request this information, two separate requests, but not for their region which is London, but for the region of the North West that is managed by a different IT department.
4. A party requests that information for unknown reasons, but for the sake of the question lets imagine the two versions of the request below:
A) one they refuse to disclose but want that information;
B) and two they say it has to do with mortgage application, tax or personal financial reasons, and are unwilling to have the bank or financial advisor request the information on their behalf, thus they wish to obtain the information directly from us.
- scenario one, in both cases A & B, the person is an employee who does work for IT but not as admin, can be lower level role or higher
- scenario two, in both cases A & B, the person is an employee but does not work for IT, can be communications or PA
- scenario three, in case A , the person is external body such as the ICO, HMRC, court of law, Union.
- scenario four, in case A, the person has nothing to do with the business per se, BBC reporter for example or legal body (not involved in any payment litigation with the business) or even a UNION rep without ongoing dispute.
I am aware that usually when the request is internal and from a person with reasonable motives and capacity we will supply the data, for instance like a manager who might want it to know what to offer a potential job applicant.
However, what would your reply be for the other cases? Also, is there any specific law that you can refer me to or any best practice guide that explains why you would make that decision? I want to have it black and white in case I even need to justify authorising such a request and so I can learn for my personal benefit. This is mainly for when dealing with external bodies.
Thank you
Kind Regards,
Bobby