Allegations: The complainant organizations allege that 786 seafarers were
dismissed by a company in the maritime industry without prior notice or trade union
consultation, in breach of collective agreements concluded with two trade unions as well as
the national legislation, and subsequently rehired under lesser working conditions or
replaced by non-unionized agency workers
- 610. The complaint is contained in a communication dated 11 May 2022
submitted by the Nautilus International (Nautilus), the National Union of Rail, Maritime
and Transport Workers (RMT), the Trades Union Congress (TUC), the European Transport
Workers’ Federation (ETF), the International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF) and the
International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC).
- 611. The Government transmitted its observations in communications dated
9 March and 20 September 2023.
- 612. The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland has
ratified the Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organise Convention,
1948 (No. 87), and the Right to Organise and Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No.
98).
A. The complainants’ allegations
A. The complainants’ allegations- 613. In their communication dated 11 May 2022, the complainant
organizations – the Nautilus, the RMT, the TUC, the ETF, the ITF and the ITUC – allege
that on 17 March 2022, P&O Ferries (the company) summarily dismissed 786 seafarers
who were directly employed by the company. According to the complainants, the seafarers
were hand-delivered letters of instant dismissal. Those on board the vessels were
escorted off past waiting replacement crews in coaches by hired security. One crew
member, having been woken to be given the news, was given 15 minutes to collect his
things. Cabins were emptied of possessions and one crew member said that it took 15 days
before his belongings were returned to him. Two British crew members, sacked while their
ship was in Rotterdam, were bussed to Calais and left to make their own arrangements to
return home from there.
- 614. According to the complainants, there was no prior consultation with
the seafarers’ unions. No prior notice was given to the UK authorities or those of the
countries in which the ships were registered. No warning was given to the seafarers at
all.
- 615. The complainants indicate that the company had collective agreements
with the RMT and Nautilus. There was a “Recognition and Procedural Agreement” with each
of the unions which conferred recognition on them and set out the procedure for
negotiation with the employers. Pursuant to it, various substantive agreements setting
the terms and conditions of employment were concluded. The latter provided that the
agreements “remain in force indefinitely subject to ... a minimum of six months’ notice
in writing to the other parties of their/its intention to terminate this Agreement”. The
terms and conditions set out in these substantive agreements were expressly incorporated
(together with any variations by subsequent collective agreement) into the standard form
contracts of employment of the seafarers. Among the agreements on terms and conditions
were provisions setting out a disputes procedure, both individual and collective. The
latter provided a series of stages ending with the possibility of mediation and
arbitration and the involvement of advisory, conciliation and arbitration service or
third-party mediators or arbitrators and a status quo provision pending exhaustion of
the procedure. The complainants allege that these agreements were intentionally and
flagrantly breached by the company which disregarded the disputes procedure and, without
saying so, effectively terminated the agreements without giving the specified six
months’ (or any) notice.
- 616. The complainants allege that that under the UK law, the collective
agreements are not enforceable by the unions. The employer could and did breach them
with impunity. Moreover, since the dismissals were instantaneous, the possibility of
industrial action by the seafarers was denied to them. According to the complainants,
under the UK law, the unions are prohibited from calling on other workers to take
solidarity action in support of those dismissed. The RMT and Nautilus were thus denied
the possibility of taking either legal or industrial action to protect the collective
agreements, and the jobs, terms, and conditions of their members.
- 617. The complainants consider that in dismissing the workforce, the
employer completely failed to comply with its legal obligations to engage in
consultation with Nautilus and the RMT, set out in section 188 of the Trade Union and
Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 (TULRCA) (also referred to in the relevant
collective agreements between the company and the unions). According to the
complainants, the CEO of the company admitted to the Transport and Business Select
Committee of the United Kingdom’s House of Commons (Select Committee) that the company
had a statutory duty to consult the unions but decided to flout it.
- 618. In addition, the company failed to carry out its obligation to
inform and consult Nautilus and the RMT, as required by regulation 13 of the Transfer of
Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 2006 (TUPE Regulations). The
complainants indicate that the TUPE Regulations applied because the employer outsourced
crew management to Malta-based, International Ferry Management (a corporation registered
in Malta just one month prior to the mass dismissals international company), which
engaged new crew through agencies to replace the dismissed seafarers thus amounting to a
“service provision change”. Furthermore, according to the complainants, no individual
consultations with seafarers were carried out, rendering these dismissals procedurally
unfair under domestic law. They further allege that the dismissals were in any event
unfair since they were caused by the service provision changes (TUPE Regulations 3 and
7) and not redundancies, as characterized by the company, as the company intended to
(and did in fact) carry out the very same activities with new crew on board the
vessels.
- 619. The complainants allege that the company had long employed the
device of flags of convenience on their vessels. To preserve the secrecy of the ambush,
the company broke UK law by failing to inform the flag States of the alleged
redundancies within the prescribed timeframes contained in sections 193-193A of the
TULRCA. Whether or not this was a legitimate restructuring, which in the complainants
view it was not, the dismissed seafarers should have been transferred under the exact
same terms and conditions, and maintaining continuity of service duration, to the
incoming crew manager. After the dismissals, some (less than 100) were offered, and
accepted, jobs with the international company on inferior terms and conditions. The new
jobs were only offered on condition that the dismissed seafarers sign a settlement
agreement, barring them from claims against both companies.
- 620. The company offered the dismissed seafarers the so-called enhanced
redundancy packages which included compensation for the failure to consult the unions,
unfair dismissal and all other claims – subject to them signing a settlement agreement,
which bars them from commencing claims in the employment tribunal and contains a
non-disclosure agreement (NDA) barring them from discussing the dismissals. The breaches
of UK law entitle claims to be made in an employment tribunal. However, all such claims
are subject to statutorily fixed (and very modest) maxima. For this reason, the company
was able to quantify with precision what the cost of the dismissals by ambush would be
and to assess how long it would be before that cost could be recouped from future
profits generated by the poverty wages and diminished terms and conditions of the new
crews.
- 621. The complainants allege that months before the dismissals by ambush,
the company had decided to replace the dismissed seafarers with non-union low-cost
agency workers and made the arrangements to do so. The CEO of the company admitted to
the Select Committee that the average wage of the incoming agency staff would be £5.50
per hour, with some to be paid as low as £5.15 per hour, which does not reach the UK
National Minimum Wage. Furthermore, until their dismissal, crew worked on a pattern of
seven days of consecutive 12-hour shifts, sleeping on board, followed by seven days off,
all paid at the full rate; the replacement agency staff will, in some cases, work
12-hour days for 17 weeks. Not only will the hourly rate be lower, but the compensatory
time off will not be paid at all, as these are voyage only contracts.
- 622. Further still, the international corporation is discriminating
against seafarers on grounds of nationality. For example, an Indian able seafarer is
paid less to work far longer than a Georgian able seafarer doing the same job on the
same ship. This discriminatory employment model is common in the ferry and wider
shipping industry. The UK Government has pledged to review legislation (Equality Act
2010 (Work on Ships and Hovercraft) Regulations 2011, S.I. 1771 currently protecting
seafarers from nationality-based pay discrimination, outside of the Maritime 2050
Strategy.
- 623. At the Select Committee hearing, the CEO of the company stated that
any “consultation process would have been a sham” and that the unions would “not accept”
the new employment model, so the company decided to compensate staff instead. When asked
at the hearing whether he would make the decision again, he said categorically that he
would.
- 624. The complainants consider that the actions of the company and the
Government’s failure to enforce relevant labour laws and provide for dissuasive
sanctions to ensure compliance have highlighted serious violations of freedom of
association and collective bargaining. The company’s total disregard for the collective
consultation provisions in the applicable collective agreements amounts to a breach of
the principle of bargaining in good faith. The complainants point out that mutual
respect for the commitment undertaken in collective agreements is an important element
of the right to bargain collectively. Also, the failure to implement a collective
agreement, even on a temporary basis, violates the right to bargain collectively, as
well as the principle of bargaining in good faith. The failure of an employer to engage
in full and frank consultation with trade unions when elaborating restructuring,
rationalization or staff reduction plans constitutes a basic violation of the principles
of freedom of association since trade unions have a fundamental role to play in ensuring
that programmes of this nature have the least possible negative impact on workers.
- 625. Considering recent industrial disputes at the company, the
statements about trade unions made by the CEO of the company at the Select Committee
hearing, the company’s disregard for the collective agreements and their abrupt
termination, the absence of any attempt to negotiate replacement agreements, and the
company’s use of non-union agency workers, the complainants believe that the dismissals
of the 786 seafarers also constitute an act of anti-union discrimination. Dismissing a
unionized workforce to hire an entirely non-unionized group of workers to carry out the
job has the same chilling effect. It is also evident that existing legislation is
insufficient to deter anti-union discrimination as employers can, in practice, on
condition that they pay the compensation prescribed by law for cases of unfair
dismissal, dismiss any worker, for being a union member with better terms and conditions
under a collective agreement. Finally, the complainants consider that the United
Kingdom’s labour market enforcement and sanctions regimes are wholly inadequate when a
company can pay off its workforce so as not to pursue their rights under the law. The
complainants conclude that the Government has failed in its proactive duty, as a Member
of the ILO and as a party to Conventions Nos 87 and 98, to protect the fundamental
rights of all workers, including seafarers, to associate and bargain collectively. In
light of the above, the complainants call on the Committee to request the Government
to:
- call on the company to immediately reinstate the dismissed seafarers or
in the alternative, ensure that the newly recruited seafarers are provided the same
terms and conditions under the relevant collective bargaining agreements with the
successor company;
- introduce legislation to establish sector-wide collective
bargaining between unions and employers in respect of all ferries serving ports in
the United Kingdom, and make the collective agreements binding by law (as under the
Wages Councils Act 1976);
- remove the prohibition on secondary industrial
action where the employer in dispute has failed to fulfil a statutory obligation to
consult the recognized union;
- amend the TULRCA to: (a) introduce a statutory
right, where there is a failure to consult the recognized union, for the union to
apply for an injunction to prohibit dismissals from taking effect, or, where they
have taken effect, to reinstate the workers, until full and meaningful consultation
has been carried out; (b) consider how to make it a criminal offence for a company
and its directors to fail to consult the unions, punishable by unlimited fines; and
(c) to provide that compensation for a protective award for failure to consult the
unions be unlimited (it is currently capped at 90 days contractual
pay);
- amend the TUPE Regulations 2006 to introduce a statutory right, where
there is a failure to consult the recognized union in good time before a relevant
transfer takes place, for the union to apply for an injunction for the transfer
proceedings to be seized until full and meaningful consultation has been carried
out;
- amend the Employment Rights Act 1996, to prevent the “fire and rehire”
techniques that the company and the corporation were able to use in regard to the
seafarers it re-engaged, and which has the effect, in practice, of undermining
collective agreements to the detriment of trade union members;
- implement
stronger, flag-blind domestic legislation protecting all seafarers from all forms of
discrimination;
- work with trade unions to develop joint proposals for
possible amendments to the Maritime Labour Convention, 2006 (MLC, 2006), as amended,
to strengthen minimum standards on recruitment and placement and conditions;
and
- amend the Company Directors Disqualification Act (CDDA) 1986 to make for
failure to collectively consult an express ground for disqualification as a company
director.
B. The Government’s reply
B. The Government’s reply- 626. In its communications dated 9 March and 20 September 2023, the
Government indicates that it has condemned in the strongest possible terms the actions
of the company that gave rise to this complaint. The Government has provided support to
the affected workers and has taken steps to ensure they were signposted to access
appropriate support. It has also taken robust action to enforce the existing rules and
is determined to take further action where needed to protect seafarers. However, it
disagrees with the complainants that the law in the United Kingdom needs to be amended
in the ways they seek. The Government provides the following observations to provide an
explanation of the current law, the action the UK Government has taken, and how this
addresses the issues raised by the complainants in relation to this case.
- 627. In the United Kingdom, employers proposing to make more than 20
redundancies must in most circumstances consult employee representatives and notify the
Secretary of State (or in Northern Ireland, the relevant department) in advance of such
redundancies. The description below focuses on the relevant legislation in Great Britain
(that is, England, Wales and Scotland), but equivalent provision is made for Northern
Ireland by the Employment Rights (Northern Ireland) Order 1996. Section 188 of the
TULRCA requires employers proposing to make 20 or more employees redundant from one
establishment in a 90-day period to consult employees or their representatives in good
time and in any event: at least 30 days before the first dismissal takes effect; and
where 100 or more redundancies are proposed, at least 45 days before the first dismissal
takes effect. The consultation must include consultation on ways to avoid redundancies,
reduce the numbers of redundancies, and mitigate their impact. Section 189 of the same
Act allows a complaint to be presented to an employment tribunal where an employer has
not complied with the consultation requirement. If the Tribunal finds that the complaint
is well-founded it may make a protective award of up to 90 days’ pay, intended to
encourage compliance with the consultation requirement, and to punish employers who do
not comply with it. Section 193 provides that the employer must notify the Secretary of
State (in practice, the Insolvency Service, an Executive Agency of the Department for
Business and Trade) of proposed collective redundancies within similar timescales. Under
section 194, an employer who fails to give notice of proposed redundancies to the
Secretary of State in accordance with section 193 commits a criminal offence and is
liable to an unlimited fine. The notification requirement is modified in the case of
vessels registered outside of Great Britain (or in Northern Ireland legislation,
Northern Ireland). The European Union’s Seafarers Directive (Directive 2015/1794)
required that EU Member States, as the United Kingdom was at the time, legislate so that
in the event of collective redundancies aboard foreign-flagged vessels, the relevant
employer is obliged to notify the vessel’s flag State. This supports the flag State in
extending the protection of its employment law to seafarers aboard vessels they flag.
Section 193A of the Act implements the Directive, requiring that the competent authority
in the state where the ship is registered is notified of collective redundancies instead
of the UK Secretary of State. This applied in the instance of the company dismissals, as
the affected vessels were flagged outside of the United Kingdom (in addition to their
seafarers being employed by a company based outside of the United Kingdom).
- 628. The Government also indicates that as part of its long-term
commitment to improving seafarer welfare and working conditions, the Department for
Transport will keep under review the need for further legislative action. In particular,
the Department will review the employment protection of those who work at sea, taking
into account the comparable rights available to land-based workers and the
internationally regulated nature of the maritime sector. The review will include
consideration of whether the TULRCA provisions on notification of collective
redundancies are sufficiently robust.
- 629. The UK Government’s focus has been on the well-being of the 786
seafarers considering their appalling treatment by the company. As the complainants have
requested, following the announcement of the company decision on 17 March 2022, the
Government wrote to the company to express its anger and disappointment. In these
letters, it pressed for the company to reconsider their decision and offered to
facilitate any dialogue between seafarers, unions and the company. The Government made
similar representations to the parent company, DP World, and on 28 March 2022 it wrote
again to the company asking them to offer the workers their jobs back on the previous
terms, conditions, and wages. The Government has also supported seafarers in recovering
their belongings.
- 630. The Government also asked the Employment Agency Standards
Inspectorate to investigate the terms of agency workers’ contracts within its scope,
which they have done. The Government also asked HM Revenue and Customs to focus minimum
wage enforcement resources on the maritime sector to ensure companies in the sector are
complying with their legal obligations in relation to pay.
- 631. The Government does not believe that the current arrangements for
collective bargaining in the United Kingdom need to be strengthened. Workers have a
right to join a union, they have the right to organize and, in many workplaces,
employers choose to recognize a union voluntarily for collective bargaining purposes.
Where an employer refuses to recognize a union voluntarily, the union can obtain
statutory trade union recognition so long as it can demonstrate to the Central
Arbitration Committee (CAC) that there is majority support for union recognition in a
workplace. There is no indication that different arrangements, including a sectoral
bargaining framework, would have changed the decisions taken by the company in
question.
- 632. Similarly, the prohibition on secondary industrial action has no
bearing on the rights of the workers affected by the company’s actions. Secondary
industrial action is prohibited because it has proved to be highly damaging to the UK
economy in the past. In the United Kingdom, workers have the right to strike against
their direct employer where there is a trade dispute and where certain conditions are
met. This right is given effect in the trade union legislation. The prohibition on
secondary industrial action does not infringe the rights of the company’s workers to
take legal industrial action in anticipation or furtherance of a dispute with their
employer while they remain in employment. It also does not prevent those dismissed
workers using their rights for peaceful campaigning and protest action. It continues to
be open to them to seek redress in an employment tribunal, where they have been unfairly
dismissed by the employer, and a remedy in court, where a contractual obligation in
their terms and conditions of employment has been breached. The Government is therefore
not going to legalize secondary industrial action.
- 633. Making collective bargaining agreements legally enforceable would go
against the United Kingdom’s voluntarist approach to collective bargaining, where in the
great majority of cases many employers choose to recognize a union voluntarily. Most
employers and unions have traditionally preferred not to have legally enforceable
collective bargaining agreements, and the Government does not see why the law should be
changed in this area to try and deal with this exceptional case.
- 634. Furthermore, there are already clear rules in place requiring
companies to consult when making large scale redundancies. At this stage, the Government
does not believe that the issue here is the rules themselves but rather, as the company
has admitted, the fact that the company decided to completely ignore them.
- 635. The UK Government asked the Insolvency Service to review the actions
of the company. On 1 April 2022, the Insolvency Service wrote to the Secretary of State
for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy confirming that following its enquiries it
commenced formal criminal and civil investigations into the circumstances surrounding
the redundancies. The Insolvency Service’s criminal investigation into the events
surrounding the dismissal on 17 March 2022 of 786 seafarers employed by the company was
into whether there had been a failure to notify the competent authorities of the flag
States of the ships in breach of section 193 of the TULRCA as modified by section 193A
and, if there was such a breach, whether that amounted to a criminal offence contrary to
section 194(1) of the Act, and if it was, whether that was justiciable before the
criminal courts of England and Wales. It also considered whether there was any secondary
criminal liability on the parts of any individuals. On 19 August 2022, a Senior
Insolvency Service prosecutor considered that the chances of proving that the employees
were subject to section 193 were evenly balanced. Therefore, he could not say having
regard to the Evidential Stage of the Full Code Test of the Code for Crown Prosecutors,
by which he was bound, that the tribunal of fact was more likely than not to convict. As
result, the Code prevented a prosecution being instituted. The Insolvency Service’s
civil investigation into the circumstances surrounding the redundancies made by the
company remains ongoing. As such it would not be appropriate for the Government to
provide any further comment at this time.
- 636. In May 2022, the UK Government actively supported measures to
improve seafarer welfare at the International Labour Organization’s recent Fourth
Meeting of the Special Tripartite Committee of the MLC, 2006. The United Kingdom voted
in favour of the eight amendments to the MLC, 2006, proposed for adoption by the
Committee, including measures to improve minimum standards on recruitment, placement and
conditions. Measures to implement these provisions will be considered by the Maritime
and Coastguard Agency (MCA) Tripartite Working Group (TWG) on the MLC, 2006, which
includes seafarer unions. The MCA would be happy to receive proposals for future
amendments to the MLC, 2006, to further strengthen standards for recruitment and
placement for consideration by the TWG and with the Department for Business and Trade,
the Government department which regulates recruitment and placement services in the
United Kingdom.
- 637. Regarding the request to amend the Employment Rights Act 1996, the
Government indicates that it is taking action to address the practice of dismissal and
re-engagement, also known as “fire and rehire”. It has launched a twelve-week
consultation on a draft Statutory Code of Practice that will deter employers from using
controversial tactics and failing to engage in meaningful consultations with employees
and their representatives. The consultation process was concluded on 18 April 2023.
While the Government still analyses responses and indicates that it will take the views
expressed into account before publishing its response and the final version of the Code,
it explains that the Code sets out employers’ responsibilities when seeking to change
contractual terms and conditions of employment and seeks to ensure that dismissal and
re-engagement is only used as a last resort. Once in force, an employment tribunal will
be able to increase an employee’s compensation in certain circumstances by up to 25 per
cent if an employer has unreasonably failed to comply with the Code. The Government
considers that it would not be appropriate to impose an outright ban – there are some
situations in which businesses may need the flexibility to use this option to save as
many jobs as possible. The Code of Practice is a proportionate response, balancing
protections for workers with business flexibility.
- 638. The Government indicates that the Equality Act 2010 (Work on Ships
and Hovercraft) Regulations 2011 provide a cross-cutting legislative framework to
protect the rights of individuals and advance equality of opportunity for all; to
update, simplify and strengthen the previous legislation; and to deliver a simple,
modern and accessible framework of discrimination law which protects individuals from
unfair treatment and promotes a fair and more equal society. The Government has begun
work on the second post implementation review of the Equality Act 2010 (Work on Ships
and Hovercraft) Regulations 2011. It acknowledges the objections to nationality-based
differential pay as set out in the complaint and indicates that it will be consulting
with social partners and other interested parties on this, as part of that review.
- 639. Regarding the complainants’ call to amend the CDDA to make failure
to collectively consult an express ground for disqualification as a company director,
the Government indicates that although there is no finite list of conduct which may lead
to disqualification, given the grounds for disqualification under the CDDA are already
wide-ranging, it is not considered appropriate to seek amendment to include “failure to
collectively consult” as an express ground for disqualification. The Government points
out that section 12C and Schedule 1 of the CDDA already provide that the Court, when
considering whether someone should be disqualified, or the Secretary of State, when
deciding whether to accept a disqualification undertaking, must take into account, among
other things, the extent to which the person was responsible for a company contravening
any applicable legislative requirement. The extent to which the conduct of any director
leads to disqualification will depend on all the circumstances of the particular
case.
- 640. The Government states its commitment to protecting workers’ rights
and indicates that it has already brought forward several reforms to enhance seafarers’
employment protections. The National Minimum Wage is the statutory minimum wage for
almost all workers in the United Kingdom. Seafarers’ eligibility for this right is a key
concern for Government and other stakeholders. In 2017, a working group encompassing the
Government and industry was formed to explore providing greater eligibility for
seafarers of the National Minimum Wage. Included in this group were representatives from
government departments, shipping companies and the maritime unions. In response to the
recommendations of this working group, in 2020 the Government brought forward the
National Minimum Wage (Offshore Employment) (Amendment) Order 2020 to extend entitlement
to the National Minimum Wage to protect more seafarers. As a result, since 1 October
2020, seafarers ordinarily working in the UK territorial sea or UK section of the
continental shelf on domestic voyages are entitled to be paid the UK National Minimum
Wage. This change ensured fair pay for over 10,000 maritime workers across the country.
The National Minimum Wage also applies to agency workers in the United Kingdom. This
means that seafarers who are agency workers have the same entitlement to the minimum
wage as non-agency workers. In addition, the National Minimum Wage also applies to any
seafarers working in the UK Exclusive Economic Zone whose activities are in connection
with exploiting and exploring of the seabed or subsoil.
- 641. On 30 March 2022, the UK Secretary of State for Transport announced
a nine-point plan for seafarer protection, a package of measures to ensure there is no
repeat of the company’s actions. The plan boosts and reforms seafarer employment
protections and welfare, ensuring they are paid and treated irrespective of flag or
nationality, while closing down avenues that could give employers the ability to avoid
doing so.
- 642. In order to extend fair pay to more seafarers working in the United
Kingdom, the Government is changing the law so that seafarers with close ties to the
United Kingdom who work aboard services that call regularly at UK ports (more than once
every 72 hours over a year) and who do not qualify for UK National Minimum Wage, will
receive the equivalent of the National Minimum Wage through the Seafarers’ Wages Bill.
According to the Government, this legislation, which is now in its final stages in
Parliament, will achieve this by making access to UK ports conditional on vessel
operators demonstrating that they are paying at least an equivalent rate to the UK
National Minimum Wage to their seafarers while in UK waters. The plan is the centre of
the Government’s response to the company’s decision to dismiss 786 seafarers without
consultation or notice.
- 643. The Government indicates that its officials have worked
constructively and consistently with some of the complainants (RMT and Nautilus) since
the dismissals took place, that it has been clear in its intention to hold the company
to account and that the nine-point plan does exactly that. Under goal 8 of the
nine-point plan, the Government is pursuing a number of initiatives to advance and
protect the long-term working conditions of seafarers. For example, the Department for
Transport has engaged with trade unions, industry and the UK Chamber of Shipping to
develop a voluntary framework, the Seafarers’ Charter, to introduce a number of
employment and welfare protections for seafarers. The Government provides information on
the launch of the Seafarers’ Charter in Paris, alongside a similar initiative of the
French Government, and explains that the Charter is intended to encourage ferry
operators to commit to good working conditions for seafarers and that it is built upon
provisions of the MLC, 2006, such as in the areas of overtime pay and social protection,
and by recognizing good practice, incentivize it. The Government also continues to work
internationally to encourage other States to adopt similar measures. Further, the
Government is exploring welfare initiatives to improve the social connectivity available
to seafarers and to better understand seafarer fatigue. The Government believes that
this work will help it to make important steps to protect seafarers and ensure there is
not a repeat of the company’s actions. The Government indicates that it continues to
highlight its ambitious seafarer protections nine-point plan and the wider objectives of
Maritime 2050 to international partners both bilaterally and at the multilateral level
at every opportunity (including at the International Maritime Organization (IMO) and
ILO), as we work towards a step change in seafarer protections and welfare at the global
level.
C. The Committee’s conclusions
C. The Committee’s conclusions- 644. The Committee notes that the complainants in this case allege that
786 seafarers were dismissed by a company in the maritime industry without prior notice
or trade union consultation, in breach of collective agreements concluded with two trade
unions and the national legislation, and subsequently rehired under lesser working
conditions or replaced by non-unionized agency workers. The complainants further allege
that the Government’s failure to enforce relevant labour laws and impose dissuasive
sanctions to ensure compliance highlights violations of freedom of association and
collective bargaining. In this respect, they allege that the legislation in force does
not adequately protect against acts of anti-union discrimination and violation of
collective bargaining rights. While the complainants also refer to issues of
discrimination based on nationality, wages, work hours, and amendments to the MLC, 2006,
to strengthen minimum standards on recruitment and placement and conditions, the
Committee recalls that these questions fall outside its competence; it will therefore
proceed to examine only the alleged violations of freedom of association and collective
bargaining rights.
- 645. The Committee notes that the Government does not dispute the facts
of the case and condemns the actions of the company that gave rise to this complaint.
The Committee notes the Government’s indication that it has provided support to the
affected workers and has taken steps to ensure they were signposted to access
appropriate support. The Government indicates that it has taken robust action to enforce
the existing rules and that it is determined to take further action where needed to
protect seafarers. While the Government agrees that the legislation has been breached,
it disagrees with the complainants that the law in the United Kingdom needs to be
amended in the ways they seek.
- 646. The Committee notes that according to the complainants, under the
current legislation, collective agreements are not enforceable. It further notes that
the Government does not believe that the current arrangements for collective bargaining
in the United Kingdom need to be strengthened and that making collective bargaining
agreements legally enforceable would go against the United Kingdom’s voluntarist
approach to collective bargaining. The Committee recalls that agreements should be
binding on the parties and that mutual respect for the commitment undertaken in
collective agreements is an important element of the right to bargain collectively and
should be upheld in order to establish labour relations on stable and firm ground [see
Compilation of decisions of the Committee on Freedom of Association, sixth edition,
2018, paras 1334 and 1336]. It further recalls that failure to implement a collective
agreement, even on a temporary basis, violates the right to bargain collectively, as
well as the principle of bargaining in good faith [see Compilation, para. 1340].
Recalling that meaningful collective bargaining is based on the premise that all
represented parties are bound by voluntarily agreed provisions, the Committee urged the
Government to ensure the statutory enforceability of every collective agreement among
those represented by the contracting parties [see Compilation, para. 1335]. The
Committee considers that collective bargaining implies both a give-and-take process and
a reasonable certainty that negotiated commitments will be honoured. The Committee urges
the Government, with the social partners, to ensure mutual respect for the commitment
undertaken in collective agreements, which is an important element of the right to
bargain collectively and should be upheld in order to establish labour relations on
stable and firm ground.
- 647. The Committee further notes the complainants’ allegation that under
the legislation in force, trade unions are prohibited from calling on other workers to
take solidarity action in support of those dismissed. In this respect, the Committee
notes the Government’s indication that: (1) a prohibition on secondary industrial action
has no bearing on the rights of the workers affected by the company’s actions; (2) in
the United Kingdom, workers have the right to strike against their direct employer where
there is a trade dispute and where certain conditions are met; (3) secondary industrial
action is prohibited because it has proved to be highly damaging to the UK economy in
the past and (4) therefore, it is not going to legalize this type of industrial action.
At the outset, the Committee recalls that a general prohibition of sympathy strikes
could lead to abuse and workers should be able to take such action provided the initial
strike they are supporting is itself lawful [see Compilation, para. 770]. The Committee
recalls that it had previously requested the UK Government to take the necessary
measures to ensure that sympathy strikes were protected under the law (see Case No.
2473, Report No. 346, para. 1543 and Report No. 349, para. 277). The Committee requests
the Government to engage with the social partners to overcome challenges regarding the
legislative prohibition on sympathy strikes, in conformity with freedom of
association.
- 648. As concerns this particular case, Committee notes the Government’s
indication that the prohibition on secondary industrial action does not prevent those
dismissed workers using their rights for peaceful campaigning and protest action and
that they can seek redress in an employment tribunal, where they have been unfairly
dismissed by the employer, and a remedy in court, where a contractual obligation in
their terms and conditions of employment has been breached. The Committee understands,
however, that to be rehired (albeit, according to the complainants, on inferior terms
and conditions), some seafarers (less than 100) signed a settlement agreement, which
precluded them from commencing claims in the employment tribunal. While the complainants
do not indicate whether other seafarers applied to an employment tribunal, the Committee
notes their indication that while breaches of the UK law entitle claims to be made in an
employment tribunal, such claims are subject to statutorily fixed (and very modest)
maxima; for this reason, the company was able to quantify with precision what the cost
of the dismissals would be and to assess how long it would be before that cost could be
recouped from future profits generated by the poverty wages and diminished terms and
conditions of the new crews. The complainants thus allege that the dismissal of 786
seafarers to replace them with non-unionized agency workers constitutes an act of
anti-union discrimination. The complainants further allege that the existing legislation
is insufficient to deter anti-union discrimination as in practice, employers can, on
condition that they pay the compensation prescribed by the law for cases of unfair
dismissals, dismiss any worker for being a trade union member with better terms and
conditions under a collective agreement. The Committee recalls in this respect that
protection against acts of anti-union discrimination would appear to be inadequate if an
employer can resort to subcontracting as a means of evading in practice the rights of
freedom of association and collective bargaining [see Compilation, para. 1082]. The
Committee considers that it would not appear that sufficient protection against acts of
anti-union discrimination, as set out in Convention No. 98, is granted by legislation in
cases where employers can in practice, on condition that they pay the compensation
prescribed by law for cases of unjustified dismissal, dismiss any worker, if the true
reason is the workers trade union membership or activities [see Compilation, para.
1106]. The Committee recalls that the Government must ensure an adequate and efficient
system of protection against acts of anti-union discrimination, which should include
sufficiently dissuasive sanctions and prompt means of redress, emphasizing reinstatement
as an effective means of redress [see Compilation, para. 1165]. Furthermore, the
compensation should be adequate, taking into account both the damage incurred and the
need to prevent the repetition of such situations in the future [see Compilation, para.
1173]. The Committee therefore requests the Government to ensure an adequate and
efficient system of protection against acts of anti-union discrimination, which should
include sufficiently dissuasive sanctions and prompt means of redress, emphasizing
reinstatement as an effective means of redress.
- 649. The Committee requests the Government to provide information on all
developments in respect of the above recommendations to the Committee of Experts on the
Application of Conventions and Recommendations (CEACR) to which it refers the
legislative aspects of the case.
- 650. The Committee notes the information provided by the Government on
the measures it has taken to address the matters raised in this case. The Committee
notes, in particular, that the Government asked the Insolvency Service to review the
actions of the company and that a formal civil investigation is currently under way. The
Government has launched and concluded a 12-week consultation on a draft Statutory Code
of Practice that will deter employers from using controversial tactics, such as the
practice of dismissal and re-engagement, also known as “fire and rehire”, and failing to
engage in meaningful consultations with employees and their representatives. According
to the Government, the Code sets out employers’ responsibilities when seeking to change
contractual terms and conditions of employment and seeks to ensure dismissal and
re-engagement is only used as a last resort. The Government indicates that once in
force, an employment tribunal will be able to increase an employee’s compensation in
certain circumstances by up to 25 per cent if an employer has unreasonably failed to
comply with the Code. The Committee also notes the Government’s indication that as part
of the Government’s commitment to improving seafarer welfare and working conditions, the
Department for Transport will keep under review the need for further legislative action
and as part of this work, will review the TULRCA with a view to assessing whether its
provisions on notification of collective redundancies are sufficiently robust. The
Committee welcomes the Government’s indication that since the dismissals took place, its
officials have worked constructively and consistently with some of the complainants (RMT
and Nautilus) and that it has been clear in its intention to hold the company to account
and that it had developed a nine-point plan to that effect. Observing that in its 2022
direct request on the application of Convention No. 98 by the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Northern Ireland (published in 2023) the same issues had been raised by the
TUC, the Committee expects the Government to provide the CEACR with full and detailed
information on the measures it has taken to address the matters raised in this case and
the outcome achieved.
The Committee’s recommendations
The Committee’s recommendations- 651. In the light of its foregoing conclusions, the Committee invites the
Governing Body to approve the following recommendations:
- (a) Collective
bargaining implies both a give-and-take process and a reasonable certainty that
negotiated commitments will be honoured. The Committee urges the Government, with
the social partners, to ensure mutual respect for the commitment undertaken in
collective agreements, which is an important element of the right to bargain
collectively and should be upheld in order to establish labour relations on stable
and firm ground.
- (b) The Committee requests the Government to engage with
the social partners to overcome challenges regarding the legislative prohibition on
sympathy strikes, in conformity with freedom of association.
- (c) The
Committee requests the Government to ensure an adequate and efficient system of
protection against acts of anti-union discrimination, which should include
sufficiently dissuasive sanctions and prompt means of redress, emphasizing
reinstatement as an effective means of redress.
- (d) The Committee requests
the Government to provide information on all developments in respect of the above
recommendations to the Committee of Experts on the Application of Conventions and
Recommendations (CEACR) to which it refers the legislative aspects of the case. The
Committee expects that the Government will provide the CEACR with full and detailed
information on the measures aimed at addressing the matters raised in this case and
the outcome achieved.
- (e) The Committee considers that this case is closed
and does not call for further examination.