Women win equal pay claim against local authority
A group of local authority care workers have won an equal pay claim after discovering that men in comparable jobs were receiving bonuses.
The women were all employed by Sheffield City Council which introduced a productivity scheme for a section of workers who were predominantly male. It argued that this did not contravene the Equal Pay Act 1970 because the bonuses could not be applied to the care staff due to the nature of their work.
Both the Employment Tribunal and the Employment Appeal Tribunal rejected the women’s claims on the basis that the bonus scheme was a genuine initiative to increase productivity among a group of local authority workers who just happened to be male. It was not therefore tainted by any issues relating to sex.
The women refused to accept the decision, however, and took the case to the Court of Appeal. It has now ruled in their favour.
It held that the tribunal decisions were perverse because the productivity bonus created a disparity of pay between the men and the women – even though that had not been the intention when it was introduced. The authority had failed to show that the scheme was objectively justified.
Please contact us if you would like more information about employment law.
March 2010
The views expressed in this article are those of the article contributors, for which Judge & Priestley LLP accepts no responsibility. Readers should take appropriate legal advice before acting on any issues raised
-
Judge & Priestley awarded Lexcel standard
Judge & Priestley is delighted to announce that we have recently been accredited with the highly prized Lexcel Practice Management Standard.
-
LBAs only £2 inc vat.
A letter before action sent on Solicitor’s letterhead can nudge your debtors to pay their outstanding debts.
-
Credit Solutions June Newsletter
Read the latest legal information on pursuing debts, prompt payments and insolvencies.
-
'No win - no fee' debt recovery
If your organisation has large volumes of debt to collect, we may be able to offer you a 'no win - no fee' cost structure.

