| Statutory Rules of Northern Ireland 1999 No. 148 Fair Employment (Monitoring) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1999 - continued |
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1. Where the employer has a written statement made by an employee that he is Protestant or that he is Roman Catholic, the employer shall treat him as belonging to that community. 2. Where the employer does not have such a statement from an employee he shall ask that employee in writing whether he is Protestant or Roman Catholic or whether he is neither Protestant nor Roman Catholic. 3. Where in response to such a question, the employee makes a statement in writing that he is Protestant or that he is Roman Catholic, the employer shall treat him as belonging to that community. 4. Where the employer has no such statement from the employee as is mentioned in paragraph 1 and the employee, in response to the question asked under paragraph 2 -
(b) states in writing that he is neither Protestant or Roman Catholic;
he shall make no determination in respect of that employee under the method prescribed by this Schedule. 5. - (1) The employer shall, in writing, ask each applicant whether he is Protestant or Roman Catholic or whether he is neither Protestant nor Roman Catholic. (2) The question referred to in sub-paragraph (1) shall be -
(b) sent to the applicant separately by post and accompanied by a pre-paid envelope addressed to the employer.
6.
Where in response to the question put to him under paragraph 5, the applicant sends to the employer a statement in writing that he is Protestant or that he is Roman Catholic, the employer shall treat him as belonging to that community.
(b) sends him a written statement that he is neither Protestant nor Roman Catholic,
the employer shall make no determination in respect of that applicant under the method prescribed by this Schedule. 1. For the purposes of regulation 11(1) to (3) -
(b) a person's address will tend to show that he has a connection with a particular community if it is considerably more likely that a person belonging to that community would reside at that address than a person belonging to the other community; (c) a school that a person attended will tend to show that he has a connection with the Protestant community in Northern Ireland if (whether it was in Northern Ireland or elsewhere) it was, at the time he attended it, more likely to be attended by persons who belonged to Protestant denominations than by persons who did not; (d) a school that a person attended will tend to show that he has a connection with the Roman Catholic community in Northern Ireland if (whether it was in Northern Ireland or elsewhere) it was, at the time he attended it, more likely to be attended by persons of the Roman Catholic faith than by persons who were not; (e) a course such as is mentioned in regulation 11(3)(d) will tend to show that the person undertaking it has a connection with a particular community if it is considerably more likely that it would be undertaken by a person belonging to that community than a person belonging to the other community; (f) any sporting or other lesuire pursuit or interest of a person will tend to show that he has a connection with a particular community if it is considerably more likely that a person belonging to that community would have those pursuits or interests than a person belonging to the other community; (g) any club, society or other organisation to which a person belongs will tend to show that he has a connection with a particular community if it is considerably more likely that a person belonging to that community would belong to such a club, society or organisation than a person belonging to the other community; (h) the occupation as a clergyman or minister of any religious denomination will tend to show that the person nominating him as a referee -
(ii) has a connection with the Roman Catholic community in Northern Ireland if the referee so nominated is a clergyman of the Roman Catholic Church;
(i) the occupation as a teacher in a particular school of a referee nominated by any person will tend to show that the person nominating him has a connection with a particular community if it is considerably more likely that a person belonging to that community would nominate a referee who was a teacher in that school than a person belonging to the other community.
2.
For the purposes of regulation 11(1)(b) and (2)(b), where any of the relevant information about a person tends to show a connection between that person and a particular community, the less probable it is that that information would tend to show that connection in the case of a person who does not belong to that community, the stronger shall that connection be regarded. (This note is not part of the Regulations.) These Regulations revoke and remake with amendments the provisions of the Fair Employment (Monitoring) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1989 as amended. Part VII of the Fair Employment and Treatment (Northern Ireland) Order 1998 ("the Order") imposes duties on certain employers in Northern Ireland in respect of their workforces. The Order repealed and replaced the Fair Employment (Northern Ireland) Acts 1979 to 1995 ("the former legislation"). Article 47 of the Order requires the Equality Commission (formerly the Fair Employment Commission) to keep a register of trades, businesses and other activities (whether carried on for profit or not) in which people are employed. The employer in any of those concerns is required to apply for registration at the end of any week if in that week he employs more than ten people working more than sixteen hours a week ("full-time employees"). This duty does not apply to any person specified in the Fair Employment (Specification of Public Authorities) Order (Northern Ireland) 1989 (as amended) as a "public authority" for the purposes of Articles 52 to 61 of the Order or to any Minister of the Crown, Northern Ireland Minister, a body created by a statutory provision or the holder of any office so created. Articles 52 to 54 of the Order make provision for monitoring the workforce of those employers whose concerns are registered under Article 47 of the Order and those authorities who are "public authorities" for the purposes of those Articles. Under Article 52(1) of the Order such employers are required to prepare and serve for each year on the Commission a monitoring return to enable the composition of the workforce to be ascertained, that is the number of employees who belong to the Protestant community and the number of employees who belong to the Roman Catholic community. In addition, such employers are required to serve a monitoring return to enable the composition of applicants for employment to be ascertained. Article 52(3) and (4) of the Order requires a monitoring return from each public authority and the employer in each registered concern with more than 250 employees to enable the composition of those ceasing to be employed in the concern to be ascertained. The definition of"employee" in Article 69(1) of the Order includes for this purpose all employees including those working less than 16 hours a week ("part-time employees"). Under the former legislation, only employers in public authorities and in registered concerns with more than 250 full-time employees were required to include in the monitoring return information about applicants for employment. There was no requirement for any employer to include in a monitoring return information about former employees. In addition the definition of "employee" for the purposes of the former legislation excluded those working less than sixteen hours weekly. Part I of the Regulations contains introductory provisions. 1. Regulation 3 revokes the Fair Employment (Monitoring) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1989 and the Fair Employment (Monitoring) (Amendment) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1991 but provides that those Regulations shall continue to apply to any monitoring return prepared for a monitoring year which begins before 1st January 2001. 2. Regulation 4 applies these Regulations to any monitoring return to be prepared for any monitoring year beginning on or after 1st January 2001. Part II relates to the contents and serving of monitoring returns. 3. Regulation 5 and Schedule 1 prescribe the information which is to be contained in a monitoring return. Monitoring returns must identify part- and full-time workers separately. Returns from each public authority and the employer in each registered concern with more than 250 employees must also include details of promotees. For the purposes of monitoring, a promotee is a person who has moved from one situation to another within a concern as a result of which he has received an increase in pay but a person who was appointed to a situation for which persons not already employed in the concern could apply is not included. 4. Regulation 6 prescribes the date (in the case of employees) and the period (in the case of applicants, leavers and promotees) to which the prescribed information must relate. 5. Regulation 7 prescribes the period during which the information is to be obtained. 6. Regulations 8, 9 and 11 and Schedules 2 and 3 deal with the methods by which an employer can determine the community to which an employee or applicant belongs.
(b) When the principal method reduces no determination in any case, the employer has the option of applying the residuary methods (prescribed by regulation 11 and Schedule 3) in individual cases. (c) Where he chooses not to do so or where this method produces no determination, the employee or applicant is to be treated as if the community to which he belongs cannot be determined. (d) Where, in the case of employees only, a determination in respect of an employee is made under the principal method, that determination shall apply to him for all future monitoring returns unless the Commission gives the direction mentioned in regulation 14.
7.
Regulation 10 deals with the determination of the community to which a former employee belongs.
(b) any determination made by an employer of the community to which a person is to be treated as belonging for the purposes of monitoring.
12.
Regulation 17 requires an employer to retain certain information that he has obtained about his employees and a record of his determination in respect of each employee for a period of three years from the date when the person to whom the information relates ceased to be employed by him. Failure to comply with these requirements is an offence for which the maximum penalty is a fine not exceeding level 5 on the standard scale (currently £5,000).
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