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September 28, 2013 By Constance Hall Leave a Comment

Working together to iron out the wrinkles of retirement

Working together to iron out the wrinkles of retirement

Employers and employees need to work together to manage a change in lifestyle as many older staff work on after the scrapping of the default retirement age.

The default retirement age was scrapped from April 6, leaving the way open for employees to choose when they want to give up work rather than have their employer show them the door on their 65th birthday.

For many employers, this means a new strategy of managing a smooth transition between work and retirement.

Employers need to figure out how to get the best value from over 65’s, how to prolong their working lives and how to smooth the way to retirement, according to a joint study published by The Age and Employment Network (TAEN) and Saga, the lifestyle and financial firm for the over 50’s.

They have published two guides – Rethinking Retirement: An Employer’s Guide to Managing the Workforce without a Fixed Retirement Age, and Rethinking Retirement: An Employee’s Guide to Working

TAEN is of the view retirement will cease as an abrupt event that dictates individuals should stop working on a date set at their birth.

The likelihood is, work will taper off at a different pace for individuals, depending on their health, lifetime savings and other lifestyle choices.

TAEN chief executive, Chris Ball, said: “Many people do want or need to continue working and earning in some way, but they often find the option of working full time, in demanding roles or under great pressure, not to their liking. They begin to see the attractions of a more relaxed pace in which knowledge and skill is more important than ‘hurry, hurry, worry, worry’.

“Part work and part retirement makes an awful lot of sense. The challenge is to make it possible by putting sensible retirement policies into place.

“There is no reason in principle why people should not continue to work and earn in some form much later in life – but to be able to do that, they must be supported, with employers adopting radically different employment policies that make working later an attractive and plausible option.”

Download the employer’s guide

Do you want more than what Diversity Training can deliver? See Diversity Leadership at Work .

Filed Under: Age - Diversity Strand, Post Formats

September 28, 2013 By Constance Hall Leave a Comment

EHRC funds home care test case at Supreme Court

A test case funded by the Equality and Human Rights Commission asking if a local council was justified in withdrawing night care for an elderly woman is before the Supreme Court.

EHRC is looking at the effectiveness of the care and support system provided to older people in their home as part of a wide-ranging homecare inquiry.

In the case, lawyers for Elaine McDonald, a former Scottish Ballet principal ballerina, argue that community care, human rights and disability discrimination confirm that her assessed need should be met.

Ms McDonald needs to use a toilet up to three or more times a night due to a medical condition.

Kensington and Chelsea Council decided that her need was for “assistance at night to use the commode” which could only be met with the provision of an overnight carer.

The council provided the service until her care budget was cut and decided to supply her with incontinence pads instead.

John Wadham, Group Director, Legal, at the Commission, said: “This case will set an important precedent. With an ageing population and budget pressures, care for older people is an issue that is escalating in scale.

“Older people deserve to be treated with dignity and respect. Providing them with the care they need should be a basic right; local authorities should not be able to override that fundamental human right.”

Ms McDonald explained the council’s decision left her lying in a soiled bed for hours on end.

“I feel like the council is penalising me because I want to remain independent and do not want to become incontinent,” she said.

“On the nights when I don’t have a carer I may have to lie in my own urine and faeces for 12 hours at a time, until my carer arrives the following morning. I do not even think that prisoners have to suffer such indignities.”

The hearing is scheduled for two days.

Filed Under: Age - Diversity Strand Tagged With: age, Customer Service, elder abuse, Equality Act 2010, legal case

September 28, 2013 By Constance Hall Leave a Comment

Dual discrimination rules scrapped in Budget

Dual discrimination rules scrapped in Budget

Scrapping dual discrimination rules was among a raft of measures to cut red tape for business announced in the 2011 Budget by Chancellor George Osborne.

The rules were introduced by the Equality Act 2010 but remained on the statute book waiting to start on April 6.

Dual discrimination regulations would have let people who felt they had a discrimination case under two ‘protected characteristics’ to launch a combined claim. The characteristics include race, religion, belief, gender and sexual orientation.

Groups and charities working with minority individuals slammed the move.

Richard Hawkes, chief executive of disability charity Scope said: “This Budget won’t help the government to deliver on its commitment to support disabled people. It is undermining the Equality Act by delaying the dual discrimination clauses. This shows questionable support of disabled people in employment and in everyday life.

Businesses get a free pass from new rules

“The Equality Act is hugely important to disabled people and has already been through a rigorous process to become legislation. Why are we hitting the pause button yet again when it comes to giving disabled people the protection and confidence they need to contribute to society?”

Consultation has also opened on the best way to remove the “unworkable” Equality Act 2010 requirement calling on employers to prevent harassment of their staff by third parties.

The Chancellor claims deregulation will save businesses around £350 million as firms with 10 or less employees were given a three-year moratorium on complying with new rules.

Alongside the Budget rule changes, the government has also indicated that a review of European Union regulations and directives considered ‘burdensome’ is under way.

This includes looking at EU proposals to give 20 weeks maternity leave and two week’s paternity leave on full pay that is likely to cost UK businesses around £2 billion a year.

Filed Under: Age - Diversity Strand, Disability-diversity strand, Gender-diversity strand, Race and Ethnicity-diversity strand, Religion or belief-diversity strand, Sexual Orientation-diversity strand, Uncategorized

September 28, 2013 By Constance Hall Leave a Comment

Spending cuts spark equality act challenges

Spending cuts spark equality act challenges

Council spending cuts that impact on minority or disadvantaged groups may face diversity law challenges from special-interest groups.

Lawyers from the Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) have already demanded equality assessment papers from councillors in Stoke-on-Trent in a row over scrapping a £13,600 a year subsidy.

The money helps the RNIB run a door-to-door Talking Books scheme for 173 blind and partially-sighted people in the Staffordshire city.

The council decided to stop the subsidy last year and the cash runs out on March 31, 2011.

RNIB legal policy officer Paul Hackney has written to the council urging a rethink and pointing out the charity believes the council has breached the Equality Act by failing to consult people using the 18,000-title audio book service.

From April 1,2011 the blind and partially sighted will have to pay £82 a year for the service or make do with deliveries of a reduced selection of audio books from the city’s Homelink library service.

The RNIB’s letter says: “For many Talking Books subscribers, Homelink will be inadequate.

“The Homelink service does not allow people to choose their own books, it will not offer enough titles, the format and quality of the recording will cause difficulties and the service will be unable to cope with demand.

“The council has failed to consult service users before withdrawing the service. The individual contact made with affected individuals was not consultation but merely informed them of the decision.

“We believe that blind and partially sighted people forced to access the council’s library services through the Homelink service are being placed at a substantial disadvantage.
If blind and partially sighted people wish to access a library service which more closely approximates the service offered to sighted readers they will have to pay for it.”

A Stoke City Council spokesman said: “Financial pressures have affected our support for the RNIB’s Talking Books service, but this decision wasn’t taken lightly and the equality impact of the decision was considered.”

Filed Under: Age - Diversity Strand, Disability-diversity strand, Gender-diversity strand, Race and Ethnicity-diversity strand, Religion or belief-diversity strand, Sexual Orientation-diversity strand, Transgender (Gender identity)-diversity strand Tagged With: age, Customer Service, diversity strands, housing

September 28, 2013 By Constance Hall Leave a Comment

May signposts public sector diversity audit u-turn

May signpost public sector diversity audit u-turn

Equalities Minister Theresa May has backtracked on proposals to audit public sector workers on personal issues like sexuality, disability and religion.

She has published a written statement in Parliament suggesting the plan to ask around 27,000 public sector organisations, including schools, police and councils is under revision.

Although she has not stated so outright, the £28.6 million cost of the audit in times of government austerity and cuts may have something to with her decision.

In the statement, May said: “We have considered the draft regulations further in the light of our policy objective of ensuring that public bodies consider equality when carrying out their functions without imposing unnecessary burdens and bureaucracy.

“As a result, we think there is room to do more to strip out unnecessary process requirements.”

A separate policy review explains public organisations will not have to publish details of any “engagement” or “equality analysis”’ reviews involved in drafting policy or equality objectives.

The revised proposals were due to become law on April 6, 2011 but are now subject to delay.
The Government Equalities Office (GEO) also announced that the commencement date for the new general equality duty for England, Scotland and Wales will be April 5, 2011.
“This revision of the specific duties may create a degree of uncertainty for public authorities,” said the Equality and Human rights Commission. “The commission previously set out its views on the previous draft regulations and we will review the new proposals before submitting our views to the GEO.

“We support the aim to reduce bureaucracy and we will need to examine the new proposals closely to make sure that they offer organisations certainty; without that certainty public bodies will simply replace bureaucratic procedures with legalistic overprotection to guard against every possible source of challenge.

“Our focus remains on providing public authorities with the information and guidance that they need to prepare for the new equality duty.”

Additional information:

  • EHRC statement
  • GEO announcement and draft guidance

Filed Under: Age - Diversity Strand, Disability-diversity strand, Gender-diversity strand, Race and Ethnicity-diversity strand, Religion or belief-diversity strand, Sexual Orientation-diversity strand, Transgender (Gender identity)-diversity strand, Uncategorized Tagged With: age, audit, diversity strands, sexuality

September 28, 2013 By Constance Hall Leave a Comment

UK Government plans to outlaw age discrimination

UK Government plans to outlaw age discrimination

Firms and organisations that offer goods and services based on age will have to revise their policies or risk breaking the law from April 2012.

Proposals put forward for consultation by the government ban unfair discrimination against someone because of age when providing goods and services.

The ban applies equally to the old and young – the rules will make refusing service to someone because they are 25 years old is just as unlawful as refusing service to someone who is aged 85.

The ban does not apply to children aged under 18.

Specific exceptions will let companies or organisations like councils offer beneficial services to certain age groups – for example, free bus travel for over-60s, or holidays aimed at people aged 30 and under.

Financial services firms, including insurance companies, can still use age when assessing risk and deciding prices, so long as they can show the decision is based on sound evidence and is not simply an arbitrary decision.
Insurers and brokers will also be asked to help people if they are unable to provide cover for age-related reasons by signposting other providers.

Time to end outdated stereotypes, says minister

Equalities Minister Lynne Featherstone said:“It’s high time we put an end to outdated stereotypes based on age and recognise the valuable contributions that people of all ages can make to our society and economy. When older people are turned away from the market place through unfair treatment, the economy misses out on increased business and revenue.

“These proposals will ensure that doesn’t happen, providing new protection and support for people of all ages. We don’t want to throw the baby out with the bathwater, which is why we will allow businesses to continue to provide the age-specific services that many people of all ages benefit from every day.”
Workplace age discrimination has been illegal since 2006.

Extending the ban to the provision of goods and services follows the announcement earlier this year that the government plans to phase out the default retirement age, which can be used to force people to retire at 65 even if they don’t want to.

The government is seeking views from people of all ages, as well as those working in relevant industries in a consultation running for three months before making the proposed ban a law.

The full proposals can be downloaded from the Government Equalities Office web site at http://www.equalities.gov.uk/

Do you want more than what Diversity Training can deliver? See Diversity at Work http://www.diversityleaders.org/our-services/training-a-events

Filed Under: Age - Diversity Strand Tagged With: age, retirement

September 28, 2013 By Constance Hall Leave a Comment

Will you still need me when I’m 64?

Will you still need me when I’m 64?

The answer to the question posed by The Beatles in their chart topping song seems to be a resounding yes more than 40 years after the lyrics were written.

It’s a fact more over 65s are working than a decade ago – and the number’s set to keep on rising as the default retirement age is scrapped and the first of the baby boomers hit that age milestone.

With a record 640,000 people reaching 65-years-old in the next year – instead of giving up work, many will swell the ranks of those who can’t or won’t kick the habit of a lifetime.

Of course, many people regarded their 65th birthday as a finishing line with a chequered flag. The time when they could finally kick off their shoes and relax without worrying about the boss.

For many, the government has picked up that line and pushed retirement further off towards the horizon.

The Office for National Statistics reveals that in the last three months of 2010, 270,000 full-time and 600,000 part-time workers were over-65.

That means 8.8% of the the age group are still toiling away compared with just 4.6% a decade ago.

As the baby boomers swell their ranks, in less than a year, Britain could see 10% of the population over 65 years old still working.

Not that there’s anything wrong with that. Retiring at 65 was always arbitrary anyway.

The story goes that when the retirement age was set in the USA in the 1930’s, half of the retirement schemes opted for 65 years old as the threshold and the rest had 70-years-old.

After much discussion, 65 years old was considered the most suitable retirement age. The baton was picked up by the Welfare State in Britain and successive governments have run with it until now.

As an aside, volunteer charity WRVS has produced research that shows over-65s inject almost £40 billion more in to the economy than they take out as state pensions, welfare and health services.

The return to society is more than financial, too, according to the WRVS, with 50% volunteering to help charitable organisations and 65% regularly help out elderly neighbours.

Do you want more than what Diversity Training can deliver? See Diversity at Work http://www.diversityleaders.org/our-services/training-a-events

Filed Under: Age - Diversity Strand Tagged With: age, retirement

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