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Sponsored by Supported by Séamus Given Head of Employment Law Strikes and Picketing and Trade Union Immunity Strikes and Picketing and Trade Union Immunity Time to Reform the Law? Séamus Given Arthur Cox 24 November 2016 Industrial Relations Act 1990 3 Current Law (1) Freedom to engage in industrial action/strike/picket: Trade Dispute (contemplation or furtherance) Secret Ballot One Week’s Strike Notice Freedom to picket “any place their employer works or carries on business” 4 Current Law (2) Acts done in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute Registered Trade Union has an absolute immunity from suit in tort in respect of losses suffered by others 5 Current Law (3) Acts done in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute Not actionable as a conspiracy/inducement of breach of contract of employment/interference with trade, etc unless in disregard of or contributory to outcome of a secret ballot 6 United Kingdom • Trade Disputes Act 1906 • Industrial Relations Act 1971* • Trade Union and Labour Relations Act 1974 • Employment Act 1982** • Trade Union Act 1984* • Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 • Employment Relations Act 1999 • Trade Union Act 2016 7 *ballots **removal of trade union immunity Ireland • Trade Disputes Act 1906 • Trade Disputes (Amendment) Act 1982 • Industrial Relations Act 1990 8 The Dispute 1. Must a trade dispute be related to employees’ legal entitlements? Yes No 9 √ The Dispute 2. If there is also a legal remedy, can there be a trade dispute? Yes No 10 √ The Dispute 3. Can there be a trade dispute relating to a claim that breaches a collective agreement? Yes No 11 √ The Dispute 4. Is there any limit on the quantum of a claim grounding a trade dispute? Yes No 12 √ The Dispute 5. Are there any special arrangements for essential services? Yes No √* *minor exception relating to secondary picketing in health services 13 The Dispute 6. Can there be a trade dispute about the employer’s treatment of other /future employees? Yes No 14 √ The Union 7. Must a union be recognised by the employer before it can declare a dispute and conduct a ballot? Yes No 15 √ The Union 8. Must a union have a minimum number of members in the employment of the employer before it can declare a dispute and conduct a ballot? Yes No 16 √ The Ballot 9. Who votes in the secret ballot? All employees All employees in the affected category Union members in the employment 17 √ The Ballot 10. What majority must vote in favour of strike/industrial action? A majority of union members in the employment A majority of the union members in the employment who vote in the ballot 18 √ The Ballot 11. Is there a minimum turnout and/or minimum overall yes vote? Yes No 19 √ The Ballot 12. Are there specific requirements with regard to giving advance notice of the ballot to union members/employer? Yes No 20 √ The Ballot 13. Who supervises and counts the ballot? Union Independent person/scrutineer 21 √ The Ballot 14. Who supervises the counting of the ballot? Union Independent person/scrutineer 22 √ The Ballot 15. Must the ballot paper specify the details of the strike/industrial action to be taken? Yes No 23 √ The Ballot 16. Must the ballot outcome be time limited before it needs to be refreshed? Yes No 24 √ The Ballot 17. Is there any regulation of the content of the ballot paper (summary of dispute/nature of action/dates of action)? Yes No 25 √ The Ballot 18. Must there be a separate ballot at each workplace? Yes No 26 √ The Ballot 19. Is there any requirement that ballot papers be sent to members’ homes, etc to allow independent voting ? Yes No 27 √ The Ballot 20. Is the union obliged to put any employer’s settlement proposal/WRC recommendation/Labour Court recommendation to a ballot? Yes No 28 √ The Ballot 21. Is there any statutory regulation of any ballot on settlement terms offered/recommended? Yes No 29 √ The Location of the Picket 22. Can third party premises be picketed? Yes No Sometimes 30 √ The Location of the Picket 23.When can third party premises be picketed? 31 When the third party is assisting the employer in dispute to frustrate √ When the employer in dispute works on the third party site √ The Location of the Picket 24. Which premises of the employer can be picketed if the employer in dispute happens to have employees (perhaps not in union/dispute) working at the third party premises? 32 Only the workplace of the employees in dispute with the employer? Any place (including third party premises) where the employer works or carries on business? √ The Location of the Picket 25. If the employees of the employer in dispute are taken off site after the picket starts, must the picket of a third party site be discontinued? Yes No 33 √ The Conduct of the Picket 26. Is there any statutory limit/control on the number of people who can picket? Yes No 34 √ The Conduct of the Picket 27. Must the union dedicate someone (picket supervisor) who supervises/is answerable for the conduct of the picket? Yes No 35 √ The Union Immunity 28. Does anybody have legal recourse against the union in tort for losses suffered by reason of such strike/picket, etc? Yes No 36 *provided union acted in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute √* The Union Immunity 29. Is the trade union’s immunity from civil liability dependent on: i. there being a proper or secret ballot? ii. any picket being at a permitted location? Yes No Yes No 37 √ √ The Union Immunity 30. Is the trade union immunity limited to claims brought by the employer party to the dispute? Yes ER No 38 √ The Union Immunity 31. Is the union’s immunity constitutional? 39 Yes ? No ? Industrial Relations (Amendment) Bill 2017 40 Thank you for your time today For further information, please contact: Séamus Given Arthur Cox Earlsfort Terrace Dublin 2 Ph: 6180565 [email protected]