From 26 October 2024, employers have a duty to take reasonable steps to prevent sexual harassment of workers in the course of their employment. The Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) has finalised and expanded on its guide for employers, after a short consultation on a draft version earlier this year. Alongside the full guidance, the EHRC has produced a simple 8-step plan for employers.
The guidance is not legally binding, but employment tribunals are likely to rely on it as a key source when deciding if an employer has met the new legal duty.
These are the key points from the final guidance:
The guidance now includes two more examples of what compliance might look like, expanding on the earlier draft which focused more on what non-compliance looks like.
The first example involves a construction company where a risk assessment identifies a high risk of sexual harassment. Reasonable steps in this example include separate training for managers and staff (including training on handling complaints and being an active bystander), leadership intervention/engagement, setting up a senior management development programme for women, writing to contractors to confirm that sexual harassment will not be tolerated, implementing a speak up channel, setting up a complaints record, monitoring complaints received/trends, repeating an anonymous staff survey and engaging with the relevant employee resource group.
The second example involves a hospital where sexual harassment by a senior consultant has gone unchallenged because of his position. The guidance says that reasonable steps to prevent further sexual harassment taking place could include suspending him, considering a referral to the regulator, investigating current allegations, training the manager who has failed to act on concerns, putting in place support for affected staff, reviewing the effectiveness of policies/training, establishing a regular workplace climate survey, logging all incidents and reviewing trends.
What comes across from these examples is the need to take a whole range of operational measures over and above simply having policies in place.
The key consequence is the potential for higher compensation to victims of sexual harassment. The preventative duty cannot be enforced by workers directly; it depends on a worker succeeding in a claim that involves sexual harassment. The worker’s compensation can be increased by up to 25% if the employer is found to have breached the preventative duty as well as being liable in the worker’s case. The amount is not subject to any legal cap.
The other consequence is the risk of EHRC enforcement action. The EHRC has the power to conduct investigations and enforce the new preventative duty independently of any incident taking place. With limited resources, the EHRC is likely to target enforcement action carefully. Larger employers and ‘household names’ tend to be at particular risk of attracting EHRC attention.
The guidance sets out an extensive range of measures that employers could take to prevent sexual harassment. Most of these recommendations are not new (they come from earlier guidance published in January 2020), but they have taken on a new significance with the law requiring all employers to take preventative steps.
To help simplify things, the EHRC has published an 8-step guide for employers. This says that employers should (in summary):
Complying with the new duty is an ongoing process, not just a one-off exercise that must be completed by 26 October. So, even if you have already taken measures to comply, you will need to continue to review and improve on those measures where appropriate. On the other hand, if you have not taken action yet, or are concerned that you have not done enough to be able to demonstrate compliance, there is still time to put in place measures and build on them over the next few months.
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