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Sex Discrimination: White Paper Consultation – March 2014.

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STATES OF JERSEY

SEX DISCRIMINATION: WHITE PAPER CONSULTATION – MARCH 2014

Presented to the States on 18th March 2014 by the Minister for Social Security

STATES GREFFE

2014   Price code: C  R.34

Social Security Department

White Paper

L  aw to protect against Sex Discrimination  14th March 2014 Purpose and type of consultation

To invite comments on the proposed scope of protection against discrimination on grounds of sex, prior to the Minister requesting law drafting.

Closing date 30th May 2014

 ______________________________________________________________________

CONTENTS   Page

Summary .............................................................................................................  3 Section 1 –  Background ..............................................................................  4 Section 2 –  Other jurisdictions ....................................................................  8 Section 3 –  Existing concepts .....................................................................  9 Section 4 –  Policy issues for consultation ...................................................  11 Section 5 –  Responding to the consultation ................................................  30 Appendix  List of questions .......................................................................  31

SUMMARY

The Minister for Social Security (the "Minister") proposes to lodge for States debate draft Regulations that would introduce protection against discrimination on grounds of sex and related characteristics.

The purpose of this consultation is to invite comments from stakeholders on a number of issues that must be addressed in relation to the details of that proposal, including –

  1. How to deal with the issue of discrimination and equality in pay systems
  2. What characteristic(s) should be protected?

- Sex

- Pregnancy and maternity

- Sexual orientation

- Gender re-assignment

- Marriage and civil partnership

  1. What  exceptions  should  apply  so  that  an  act  is not  an  act  of  sex discrimination?

- Religion

- Pay during maternity leave

- Positive discrimination

- Charities and associations.

The Minister wishes to consider fully any concerns and questions that arise in order to introduce  appropriate  protection.  The  Minister  is  inviting  representations  from stakeholders on a number of policy issues, which are outlined in this White Paper. The Minister  will  consider  any  comments  received  before  preparing  law  drafting instructions.

SECTION 1 – BACKGROUND Discrimination (Jersey) Law 2013

The Discrimination (Jersey) Law 2013 (the "Discrimination Law") was adopted by the States of Jersey on 14th May 2013 and sanctioned by Order of Her Majesty in Council on 9th October 2013. At the States Sitting of 18th March 2014, the Minister will ask the States to approve an Appointed Day Act1 that would bring the Discrimination Law into force on 1st September 2014, with race as the first protected characteristic.

In order to prepare appropriate legislation, the Minister had taken into account –

  • the need to keep the Law as simple and clear as possible
  • changes in the UK as a result of the Equality Act 2010
  • Guernsey's experience of sex discrimination legislation
  • comments received from stakeholders during consultation.

Consultation on the Discrimination Law had indicated that employer representatives were concerned about the cost to business; primarily the anticipated cost of dealing with  complaints  to  the  Jersey  Employment  and  Discrimination  Tribunal2  (the "Tribunal").  That  cost  has  been  restricted  in  terms  of  the  compensation  that  is available from the Tribunal.

The  Minister  has  committed  to  conducting  further  consultation  with  stakeholders before introducing other protected characteristics.

When preparing the legislation, the Minister recognised that sex discrimination is likely  to  be  more  complex  than  race  discrimination,  because  sex  discrimination necessarily involves issues relating to equal pay, pregnancy, maternity and family- friendly rights. These issues are discussed in Section 4.

Protected characteristics

Article 5 of the Discrimination Law allows the States to introduce further protected characteristics by Regulations. This enables a consistent and equitable approach to different types of discrimination, and simplifies the complexity that has resulted in other  jurisdictions  as  a  consequence  of  having  separate  and  different  Laws.  The Minister intends to propose the protected characteristics in the following order –

1 P.5/2014

2 If the Draft Employment and Discrimination Tribunal (Jersey) Regulations 201- are adopted

by the States on 18th March 2014 (P.4/2014), the Employment Tribunal will become the Employment and Discrimination Tribunal on 1st September 2014.

  1. Race
  2. Sex (in conjunction with family-friendly legislation)
  3. Age (in conjunction with changes to the State pension age)
  4. Disability.

The priority order takes into consideration –

  • States' priorities
  • Co-ordinating the work with other States' policies as far as possible
  • International obligations
  • Anticipated cost implications of compliance, and
  • The need to reflect the proportion or number of people likely to be affected.

This approach will also enable public consultation to be undertaken at each stage, and to spread any potential administrative burden for employers, organisations and other individuals over a period of time. The Minister is committed to ensuring that the legislation  is  extended  in  a  way  that  is  sympathetic  to  the  difficulties  faced  by businesses, particularly small businesses.

Timetable

Subject  to  the  States  Assembly  approving  the  proposed  Appointed  Day  Act,  the Discrimination Law will come into force on 1st September 2014. This means that acts of discrimination on the grounds of race will be prohibited from that date. The interim period will allow sufficient time for employers, organisations and other individuals to make any necessary preparations.

The Minister hopes that the following timetable will be achieved in relation to sex discrimination –

March to May 2014 – Sex Discrimination consultation

June to July 2014 – review outcomes of consultation and agree proposals August to December 2014 – request and undertake law drafting

January 2015 – lodge Sex Discrimination Regulations

March 2015 – States to debate Regulations

September 2015 – Sex discrimination and family-friendly rights in force.

Family-friendly rights

Preparations are underway for an amendment to the Employment (Jersey) Law 2003 (the "Employment Law"), that would introduce the following new rights –

  1. Paid time off work to attend ante-natal care appointments.
  2. A maximum of 18 weeks' maternity leave, including 2 weeks' compulsory leave immediately after childbirth at full pay.
  1. Two weeks' unpaid paternity leave for an individual who has, or expects to have, parental responsibility for a child.
  2. The  right to unpaid adoption leave,  equivalent to maternity  and  paternity leave, for adoptive parents.
  3. The  right  for  employees  to  request  a  change  to  their  working  conditions (e.g. hours,  times  or  location)  where  they  are  providing  care  for  another person (adults and children).
  4. A  right  not  to  be  dismissed  (from  day  one  of  employment)  in  specified circumstances relating to pregnancy, childbirth or maternity.

The  family-friendly  proposals  reflect  the  recommendations  of  the  Employment Forum3, as approved by the former Minister for Social Security4. The Minister intends

that the family-friendly rights and the Sex Discrimination Regulations would come into force on the same date in 2015.

The proposed family-friendly rights will be achieved via a primary Law amendment, and so will take longer to progress than the Sex Discrimination Regulations, because sanction by Order of Her Majesty in Council will be required. For this reason, the family-friendly legislation has been given priority.

Is there any evidence of sex discrimination in Jersey?

Proposals  to  introduce  discrimination  legislation  have  been  widely  supported. However, during consultation on the Discrimination Law itself, some stakeholders suggested that a Law should not be introduced without evidence that discriminatory behaviour exists in Jersey and that legislation will remove or reduce inequalities. It is not  realistic  to  expect  the  draft  Law  to  prevent  all  discrimination  or  eliminate inequality entirely. What legislation can realistically achieve, however, is to provide legal protection where a person has, for example, been refused a job or a service because of their sex.

In the absence of legislation that prohibits discriminatory acts from taking place, it is difficult to assess the prevalence of unacceptable discriminatory acts. Without a legal benchmark against which behavioural standards can be assessed, and with no recourse to justice or compensation, it is probable that acts of discrimination do not currently come to light. However, there is some evidence that sex discrimination occurs in Jersey.

The States of Jersey Statistics Unit included questions about discrimination in the 2012 Jersey Annual Social Survey (JASS). A quarter (25%) of adults reported having been discriminated against in the previous 12 months. 9% of women and 2% of men reported having been discriminated against on the grounds of gender.

During the year 2013, JACS recorded 22 clients with issues relating to discrimination, 9 of which related to sex discrimination. During the same period, JACS recorded

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89 clients with issues relating to maternity, and 5 clients with issues relating to parental leave. To compare with data for the year 2012; JACS recorded 47 clients with issues relating to discrimination, 10 of which related to sex discrimination, 149 clients with issues relating to maternity, and 19 clients with issues relating to parental leave.

International obligations

In jurisdictions worldwide, it is taken for granted that laws exist to protect people against discrimination. There has been consistent and overwhelming support for the introduction of legislation in Jersey to address discrimination issues generally.

The introduction of the Discrimination Law will have wide-ranging implications for Jersey as a whole. However, Jersey must have legislation in place in order to command respect internationally as a jurisdiction that promotes modern standards of respect for individuals' rights and equality.

Legislation is required for Jersey's international reputation and particularly to comply with the requirements of –

  • the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights[5] (ICCPR), and
  • the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination[6] (ICERD).

Discrimination legislation is also essential in terms of Jersey signing up to a number of international covenants, conventions and treaties, including the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW).

CEDAW was adopted in 1979 by the UN General Assembly and it was ratified by the UK in April 1986. CEDAW has not yet been extended to Jersey, and it is understood that one of the main reasons for this is the absence of sex discrimination legislation in Jersey.

CEDAW defines discrimination against women as  "any distinction, exclusion or restriction made on the basis of sex which has the effect or purpose of impairing or nullifying the recognition, enjoyment or exercise by women, irrespective of their marital status, on a basis of equality of men and women, of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the political, economic, social, cultural, civil or any other field."[7]

By accepting the Convention, the States commit to taking measures to end discrimination against women in all forms, including –

  • to incorporate the principle of equality of men and women in their legal system, abolish all discriminatory laws and adopt appropriate ones prohibiting discrimination against women;
  • to establish tribunals and other public institutions to ensure the effective protection of women against discrimination; and
  • to  ensure  the  elimination  of  all  acts  of  discrimination  against  women  by persons, organisations or enterprises.

The Convention provides the basis for realising equality between women and men through ensuring women's equal access to, and equal opportunities in, political and public life, including the right to vote and to stand for election, as well as education, health and employment.

Following a Jersey Community Relations Trust (JCRT) seminar in October 2013 – Advancing Women in Politics & Public Life' – the JCRT has discussed plans with the Chief Minister to move equality up the political agenda, including the need for more  affordable  childcare,  maternity  legislation,  flexible  working  laws  and  sex discrimination legislation. The JCRT has also announced its intention to launch a campaign to redress the under-representation of women in positions of influence, and to promote the equal participation of women in politics and public life8.

SECTION 2 – OTHER JURISDICTIONS UK

Discrimination based on sex has been unlawful in the UK since 1975, when the Equal Pay  Act  1970  and  the  Sex  Discrimination  Act  1975  came  into  force.  Case  law developments led the concept of sex' to include discrimination based on pregnancy, maternity and gender re-assignment. Both Acts have since been subsumed into the Equality  Act  2010  (the  Equality  Act')  which  now  lists  pregnancy  and  gender re-assignment as protected characteristics in their own right.

Despite the discrimination laws being subsumed into one law, the Equality Act retains a legal distinction between discrimination in the treatment of employees and service users – for which a straightforward claim of direct or indirect sex discrimination is required – and discrimination in contractual pay, in relation to which an equal pay claim must be brought.

Claims based on equal pay can result, if successful, in an award of back-pay going back up to 6 years. Claims for discrimination can result in an award of compensation including compensation for injury to feelings. There is no cap on the amount of compensation that may be awarded.

Isle of Man

The Isle of Man's Employment (Sex Discrimination) Act 2000 makes it unlawful to discriminate in employment on the grounds of –

  • a worker's sex; or
  • because he or she is married; or
  • because he or she is in a civil partnership.

The Equal Pay provisions require employers to treat men and women the same for the purposes of pay and other terms of employment where the man or woman is engaged –

8 www.jerseycommunityrelations.org/  

  • on the same or broadly similar work ("like work"); or
  • on work rated as equivalent under a job evaluation scheme.

There are currently a number of different laws and provisions in the Isle of Man that deal with discrimination. An Equality Bill, based on the UK Equality Act, is being drafted which is intended to deal with discrimination comprehensively across a range of protected characteristics. It was reported by the media in May 2013 that the Chief Minister of the Isle of Man intends to accelerate that law drafting, after a church minister refused to allow a gay couple to rent a flat of which he was the landlord on the grounds that the couple did not constitute a family.[8]

Guernsey

The Sex Discrimination (Employment) (Guernsey) Ordinance 2005 came into force in March 2006 under enabling legislation that allows Guernsey to legislate to prohibit discrimination on the basis of any protected characteristics. The law currently prevents discrimination in employment and related matters on the basis of sex only, which includes marital status and gender re-assignment. The legislation does not cover sex discrimination in areas outside of employment (e.g. services, education and clubs).

The law arose from political pressure to comply with the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) which had highlighted the lack of sex discrimination legislation in Guernsey.

Guernsey has dealt with few complaints of sex discrimination, and even fewer that have been heard by the Employment and Discrimination Tribunal. Around 30 complaints have included sex discrimination in the first 5 years of the legislation, and only 6 of those resulted in a hearing.

If a complaint of discrimination is upheld by the Employment and Discrimination Tribunal, the award is based on three months' pay, or six months' pay if there has been a discriminatory dismissal.

SECTION 3 – EXISTING CONCEPTS

The Discrimination (Jersey) Law 2013 makes the following provisions which apply to discrimination on the grounds of race, and which will also apply to discrimination on the grounds of sex when Regulations are introduced.

Types of discrimination

- A person directly discriminates against another person if he or she treats that person less favourably than another person because of a particular characteristic.

- A person indirectly discriminates against another person where they apply a provision, criterion or practice, which the person cannot show to be a

proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim, that disadvantages (or would, if applied, disadvantage) people with a particular characteristic.

- Victimisation – protects those who raise a complaint of discrimination (or assist others in doing so) from suffering less favourable treatment as a result.

- Harassment  involves unwanted conduct which relates to a protected characteristic that violates the dignity of the victim or creates, for example, an intimidating or offensive environment, e.g. sexual harassment.

Areas in which discrimination is prohibited

  1. Paid work, including recruitment, terms of employment and termination of employment
  2. Contract workers
  3. Partnerships
  4. Professional or trade organisations
  5. Professional bodies
  6. Vocational training
  7. Employment agencies
  8. Voluntary work
  9. Education
  10. Goods, facilities and services
  11. Access to and use of public premises
  12. Disposal or management of premises, e.g. letting property
  13. Clubs.

Exceptions

Exceptions set out the circumstances in which an act will not be treated as a prohibited act of discrimination. The Discrimination Law currently includes general' exceptions that will apply to all protected characteristics, and exceptions that are specific to certain protected characteristics.

The general exceptions relate to –

  • acts done to comply with a law or an order of a court of tribunal, and
  • acts done to comply with the law of another country.

Exceptions that relate specifically to race discrimination include –

  • selection of people of a specified nationality for national sports teams;
  • clubs and associations where their essential character is to provide benefits to a particular racial group (unless identified by colour);
  • where a person of a particular race is crucial for the job. This is likely to be very rare in the case of race (e.g. out-reach work), but less rare in the case of sex (e.g. jobs requiring intimate care or shared accommodation).

A number of exceptions specific to sex are also likely to be required: for example, in relation  to  pregnancy  and  childbirth-related  rights,  maternity  pay  and  single-sex schools, clubs, services and accommodation.

Enforcement and remedies

The Employment and Discrimination Tribunal will hear complaints about acts of discrimination that occur in all areas. All complaints will be referred for conciliation or mediation, if both parties agree –

- Complaints relating to employment will be referred to JACS for conciliation.

- Complaints not relating to employment will be referred to the Community Mediation  Service  (via  the  Citizen's  Advice  Bureau)  for  mediation  by  a qualified mediator.

A  complainant  will  need  to  demonstrate  to  the  Tribunal  that,  on  the  balance  of probabilities, he or she has been discriminated against. If the Tribunal finds that a complaint has been proved, it may –

  1. make an order declaring the rights of the complainant and the respondent;
  2. order compensation of up to £10,000 for any financial loss and up to £5,000 for hurt and distress, subject to an overall limit of £10,000; and
  3. recommend that the respondent takes certain action to reduce the adverse effect of the act of discrimination on the particular complainant.

SECTION 4 – POLICY ISSUES FOR CONSULTATION

The Minister believes that it should be unlawful to discriminate on the grounds of sex, pregnancy, sexual orientation and gender re-assignment in each of the areas covered by  the  Discrimination  Law.  These  protected  characteristics  are  discussed  in paragraphs 1 to 5 below, and you are invited to give your views.

The Minister believes that this protection can be provided without placing an unfair burden on employers and businesses in Jersey, provided that appropriate exceptions are made for certain specific situations. Some exceptions are matters of common-sense and unlikely to be controversial. It is therefore proposed to include exceptions similar to those found in the Equality Act that will, for example, allow for single-sex schools and services which, by their very nature, are provided for members of a particular sex. Other  exceptions  will  require  more  detailed  consideration.  Your  views  on  these exceptions are invited in paragraphs 6 to 10 below.

  1. Sex discrimination and equal pay

The Minster proposes that sex should be included as a protected characteristic under the Discrimination Law. This would make it unlawful to discriminate against either a man or a woman in relation to recruitment, promotion, treatment at work or any of the other circumstances in which discrimination is prohibited in relation to race. Sexual harassment will also be prohibited.

Including sex as a protected characteristic under the Discrimination Law will mean that it will be unlawful to pay a woman less than a man (or vice versa) because of sex. Also outlawed will be unfair pay practices which place women (or men) at a particular disadvantage.  However,  the  Minister  does  not  propose  to  include  any  specific measures relating to equal pay.

This will mean that Jersey's law will be different from the UK. Under the Equality Act, issues relating to the equality of terms and conditions of employment are dealt with in a separate chapter of the law, with its own specific rules and requirements. This only applies where the protected characteristic is sex. Claims based on any other protected characteristic such as race or religion are dealt with through a normal claim of direct and indirect discrimination, even where the discrimination is in relation to terms and conditions of employment. If the protected characteristic is sex, however, a normal direct or indirect discrimination claim cannot be brought in relation to terms and conditions of employment, and the employee's only option is an equal pay claim.

An equal pay claim requires the claimant to identify an actual comparator who is employed on equal work with the claimant. Work is equal if it is essentially the same, has been rated as equivalent' under a job evaluation scheme, or if it is of equal value'. A detailed procedure exists to assess whether 2 jobs (which may be completely different) are of equal value', which may involve the appointment of an independent expert to carry out a detailed assessment. If the 2 jobs are found to be equal, then the claimant is entitled to equal pay and does not need to show that the difference in pay is actually based on sex. However, the employer has a defence if it can show that the difference in pay is due to a material factor' which is not the difference in sex. Whether this defence can be established will generally depend on whether the reason for the difference in pay is tainted by direct or indirect discrimination.

UK equal pay law is complicated and the litigation can often take years to complete. The  outcome  of  cases,  however,  often  simply  depends  on  whether  there  is  sex discrimination in the employer's pay system.

The  Minister  feels  that  there  is  no  need  to  adopt  such  a  complicated  and  time- consuming process for Jersey. Instead, pay inequality between men and women can be dealt with as a normal discrimination claim. This would mean that the claimant would have to show that the reason for the difference in pay was either direct or indirect sex discrimination. However, it would not be necessary to follow a complicated and time- consuming procedure deciding whether 2 very different jobs are actually equal'.

The Isle of Man law also makes a distinction between sex discrimination and equal pay complaints. Guernsey, however, was advised to avoid the costly and complex UK route, and so the law protects against sex discrimination in relation to terms and conditions, including pay. Few sex discrimination complaints have arisen in Guernsey.

Employers were assisted to make preparations prior to the law coming into force, particularly surrounding pay in the public sector.

The  Minister  intends  that  sex  discrimination  in  relation  to  pay  (as  part  of  an employee's  terms  and  conditions  of  employment)  should  be  treated  as  an  act  of discrimination under the Discrimination Law in the same way that discrimination in relation to pay on grounds of race is already present in the Discrimination Law. There is no need to make specific provision for separate equal pay claims.

Questions

1a.  Should  discrimination  based  on  sex  be  unlawful  in  broadly  the  same circumstances that the Discrimination Law makes it unlawful to discriminate on the grounds of race?

Yes   No

Please give any reasons for your response.

1b.  Should the issue of pay and other terms and conditions be dealt with as an issue of discrimination (as it is with race) rather than as a separate provision dealing specifically with equal pay?

Yes   No

Please give any reasons for your response.

1c.  What unintended consequences might result from a decision  not to make separate provision for equal pay claims? Please set out any concerns you have

  1. Pregnancy and maternity

Careful consideration must be given to how the Law should deal with pregnancy, as this is a condition unique to women which has a major impact in the workplace. Simply put, should less favourable treatment on the grounds of pregnancy (or a matter related to pregnancy) amount to sex discrimination?

This caused much debate in the UK in the 1990s, culminating in a reference to the European Court of Justice (ECJ)10, in which it was held that since only women could

be pregnant, any less favourable treatment on the grounds of pregnancy was direct sex discrimination. This means that there is no opportunity for employers to argue that, in the  particular  circumstances  of  their  case,  they  took  action  that  was  justified.  In Guernsey, discrimination on grounds of pregnancy is also direct discrimination.

The Tribunal would not be bound by the UK case law which established that any less favourable  treatment  on  the  grounds  of  pregnancy  is  direct  sex  discrimination. However, if pregnancy is not explicitly dealt with in the Discrimination Law, then both employers and employees would be left in doubt as to what protection pregnant employees and those who have recently given birth will have, and when issues relating to pregnancy can and cannot be taken into consideration by an employer when making decisions about recruitment, promotion, redundancy selection, etc. The only way to resolve  the  issue  would  be  through  litigation  in  the  Tribunal,  which  would  be controversial, time-consuming and expensive for those involved.

The Minister believes that a Law against sex discrimination will not be effective if it does not also protect against discrimination based on pregnancy, and believes that the Discrimination  Law  should  specify  that  discrimination  against  a  woman  on  the grounds that she is, has been, or may become pregnant, should be unlawful. The Law should also prevent discrimination based on the direct consequences of pregnancy such as absence from work, or the taking of maternity leave.

UK case law11 has confirmed that fertility treatment is not the same as pregnancy and so, less favourable treatment on the grounds that an employee is undertaking in vitro fertilisation (IVF) does not constitute direct sex discrimination. However, a pregnancy

10 Webb -v- EMO Air Cargo (UK) Ltd. (No. 2) [1995] IRLR 645 11 Sahota -v- Home Office and Pipkin UKEAT/0342/09

achieved as a result of IVF is no different from any other pregnancy in terms of protection against discrimination on grounds of pregnancy.

There may be very specific and limited circumstances in which an employer may have a compelling business need to discriminate. A blanket rule against discrimination based on pregnancy could place an unfair burden on some employers. For example, an employer  recruiting  for  a  temporary  position  which  requires  the  employee  to  be working at a particular time may legitimately want to recruit somebody who will be available for work at that time.

The Minister invites views on whether and in what circumstances it may be legitimate to discriminate against an employee or job applicant on the grounds of pregnancy or maternity.

It is widely recognised that breastfeeding is important in the first months of a baby's life. The Equality Act specifically outlaws discrimination by service providers based on the fact that a customer is breastfeeding a baby and the Minister proposes that the same rule should apply in Jersey.

Questions

2a.  Should  discrimination  based  on  pregnancy  and  maternity  be  unlawful  in broadly the same circumstances that the Discrimination Law makes it unlawful to discriminate on the grounds of race?

Yes   No

Please give any reasons for your response.

2b.  Are there any circumstances in which discrimination based on pregnancy or maternity should be permitted?

Yes   No

If yes, please set out any circumstances in which discrimination based on pregnancy or maternity should be permitted.

Please give any reasons for your response.

2c.  Are there any businesses or service providers that should have the right, in certain circumstances, to discriminate on the grounds that a woman is breastfeeding a baby?

Yes  No

If yes, please set out any circumstances in which businesses or service providers should have the right to discriminate on the grounds that a woman is breastfeeding a baby.

Please give any reasons for your response.

  1. Sexual orientation

A law prohibiting discrimination based on sex will not, on its own, be wide enough to cover discrimination based on sexual orientation. However, the Minister believes that it would be appropriate to make sexual orientation a protected characteristic at the same time as sex.

In the employment sphere this is unlikely to cause any practical difficulties. In the UK, sexual orientation discrimination has been outlawed since 2003, but has generated only a small number of claims.

Sexual orientation would be defined so that it includes sexual orientation towards persons of the same sex, persons of the opposite sex or persons of either sex. The Law would therefore protect people against discrimination whether they were gay, straight or bi-sexual.

In relation to the provision of goods and services, a rule against sexual orientation discrimination should again cause very few problems. In the vast majority of cases, a service provider will not even know what the sexual orientation of their customer is.

In the UK there has been some controversy over the provision of hotel or bed and breakfast accommodation to gay couples, where the owner of the business has had a strong  religious  objection  to  a  same-sex  couple  being  given  a  double  bed.  The Supreme Court ruled in 2013 that insisting on only allowing married couples (as opposed to civil partners) to sleep in a room with a double bed amounted to direct discrimination[9].

The Minister feels that if hotel accommodation and other services are provided to the public, then the same rules against discrimination should apply whatever the beliefs of the individual business owner. The Minister does, however, wish to consider whether it is appropriate to allow for exceptions where services are provided by or on behalf of an  organised  religion.  Further  exceptions  are  also  being  proposed  in  relation  to employment for the purposes of an organised religion (see paragraph 7 below).

Questions

3a.  Should discrimination based on sexual orientation be unlawful in broadly the same circumstances that the Discrimination Law makes it unlawful to discriminate on the grounds of race?

Yes   No

Please give any reasons for your response.

3b.  Are there any businesses or service providers that should have the right, in certain circumstances, to discriminate on the grounds of sexual orientation?

Yes  No

If yes, please set out any circumstances in which businesses or service providers should have the right to discriminate on the grounds of sexual orientation.

Please give any reasons for your response.

  1. Gender re-assignment

Gender re-assignment is inherently bound up with gender identity and therefore needs to be considered in any discussion of sex discrimination.

In the case of P -v- S and Cornwall County Council, Case C-13/94, [1996] IRLR 347, the European Court of Justice held that discrimination against someone on the grounds that they had undergone gender re-assignment was tantamount to sex discrimination and was accordingly covered by the Equal Treatment Directive. UK legislation was amended  to  reflect  this  ruling,  and  gender  re-assignment  is  listed  as  a  protected characteristic in its own right under the Equality Act.

The Tribunal would not be strictly bound by the Cornwall County Council case, but if the  Discrimination  Law  does  not  deal  with  the  issue  expressly,  there  will  be uncertainty about the extent to which transgender people will be protected. The main form of discrimination faced by transgender people is harassment.

The Minister considers that gender re-assignment should be included as a protected characteristic under the Discrimination Law at the same time as sex. Views are invited as to whether any exceptions (in addition to those already set out in the Discrimination Law) will need to be included to avoid any unintended consequences, or to avoid placing too great a burden on employers and businesses.

The  UK  introduced  protection  against  discrimination  on  grounds  of  gender re-assignment in 1993. The Equality Act provides that a person has the protected characteristic  of  gender  re-assignment  where  he  or  she  has  proposed,  started  or completed a process to change his or her sex.

This should not be confused with cross-dressing, where there is no change in the gender of the person concerned. What is required is that the individual has begun or completed a process of living as a person of the acquired gender. This usually, but not always, includes surgery and other forms of medical intervention. A person does not have to be under medical supervision to be protected against gender re-assignment discrimination.

The Equality Act also provides that absences arising from the process of gender re-assignment should be treated equally with absences arising from sickness or injury.

Once a person has completed the process of gender re-assignment they should, for all purposes,  be  accepted  as  being  of  their  acquired  gender.  However,  it  may  be appropriate to provide for exceptions to deal with situations during the period of transition  involving  privacy  and  intimate  contact:  for  example,  the  provision  of communal changing facilities or shared accommodation. It may also be appropriate to provide for occupational requirements where it would not be appropriate to employ someone who was going through the process of transition.

Questions

4a.  Should discrimination based on gender re-assignment be unlawful in broadly the same circumstances that the Discrimination Law makes it unlawful to discriminate on the grounds of race?

Yes   No

Please give any reasons for your response.

4b.  Are  there  any  circumstances  in  which  discrimination  based  on  gender re-assignment should be permitted?

Yes   No

If yes, please set out any circumstances in which discrimination based on gender re-assignment  should  be  permitted,  including  any  circumstances  in  which discrimination during the period of transition may be appropriate.

Please give any reasons for your response.

  1. Marriage and civil partnership

The Equality Act includes marriage and civil partnership as a protected characteristic, however it only protects those who are married or in a civil partnership and not those who are single.

Discrimination based on marriage was initially outlawed in the Sex Discrimination Act 1975, at a time when it was assumed that women would leave their job when they got married. In the modern context, very few claims of marriage discrimination are actually brought. Many couples choose to cohabit, and it seems unlikely that anyone would be treated less favourably because they were or were not married.

The Minister considers that adequate protection will be provided by a Law prohibiting discrimination based on sex. Provided that both men and women are treated equally, the Minister considers that there is no need to provide for a separate protected characteristic relating to marital status.

Questions

5a.  Should discrimination based on marriage and civil partnership be unlawful in broadly the same circumstances that the Discrimination Law makes it unlawful to discriminate on the grounds of race?

Yes   No

Please give any reasons for your response.

5b.  If you have answered yes to question 5a, are there any circumstances in which discrimination based on marriage and civil partnership should be permitted?

Yes   No

If yes, please set out any circumstances in which discrimination based on marriage and civil partnership should be permitted.

Please give any reasons for your response.

  1. Exceptions – religion

The Minister recognises that organised religions may have particular beliefs about the role  of  women  and  the  importance  of  gender  identity  or  sexual  orientation.  The Equality Act provides exceptions for religious requirements relating to sex, marriage and  sexual  orientation.  Where  employment  is  for  the  purposes  of  an  organised religion, the employer is allowed to apply a requirement to be of a particular sex or not to  be  a  transsexual  person,  or  to  make  a  requirement  related  to  the  employee's marriage or civil partnership status or sexual orientation, but only if

  • appointing a person who meets the requirement in question is a proportionate way of complying with the doctrines of the religion; or
  • because of the nature or context of the employment, employing a person who meets the requirement is a proportionate way of avoiding conflict with a significant  number  of  the  religion's  followers'  strongly-held  religious convictions.

The requirement must be crucial to the post, and not merely one of several important factors. It also must not be a sham or pretext. Applying the requirement must be a proportionate way of meeting either of the 2 criteria.

The Minister considers that it would be appropriate to provide a similar exception to that found in the Equality Act for recruitment to a role which is for the purposes of an organised religion.

Questions

6a.  Should an exception be provided for recruitment to a role which is for the purposes of an organised religion, as is currently provided in the Equality Act?

Yes   No

If yes, please state any specific circumstances that should be covered by such an exception.

Please give any reasons for your response.

6b.  Should  any  other  exceptions  relating  to  religion  be  provided  for  acts  of discrimination on the grounds of sex?

 Yes   No

If yes, please state any specific circumstances that should be covered by such an exception.

  1. Exceptions – pay during maternity leave

The Minister is preparing legislation so that a woman who is absent from work on maternity  leave  will  have  the  right  to  2 weeks'  paid  leave  as  part  of  an  overall maternity leave entitlement of either 8 weeks or 18 weeks, depending on her length of service. This amount has been carefully arrived at to minimise the administrative and financial burden on employers and should be seen alongside the 18 weeks of maternity allowance which the majority of pregnant women will also be entitled to claim.

It is intended that an employer who meets the statutory obligations in relation to maternity leave and pay should not be subject to a complaint of sex discrimination if the maternity pay is lower than the amount that would be available to an employee who was on sick leave.

The Minister therefore proposes that an exception should be made in relation to pay during the maternity leave period.

Questions

7a.  Should an exception be provided so that an employer who meets the statutory obligations in relation to maternity leave and pay is not subject to a complaint of sex discrimination if the maternity pay is lower than the amount that would be available to another employee who was on sick leave?

Yes   No

If yes, please state any specific circumstances that should be covered by such an exception.

Please give any reasons for your response.

  1. Exceptions – positive discrimination

The Equality Act provides that it is not prohibited to use positive action measures to alleviate disadvantage experienced by people who share a protected characteristic, reduce  their  under-representation  in  relation  to  particular  activities,  or  meet  their particular needs. It will, for example, allow measures to be targeted to particular groups, including training to enable them to gain employment, or health services to address their needs. Any such measures must be a proportionate way of achieving the relevant aim.

The extent to which it is proportionate to take positive action measures, which may result  in  people  who  do  not  have  the  relevant  characteristic  being  treated  less favourably,  will  depend  on  factors  such  as  the  seriousness  of  the  relevant disadvantage, the extremity of need or under-representation and the availability of other means of countering them. In the UK, this is interpreted in accordance with European law.

Also,  an  employer  may  take  a  protected  characteristic  into  consideration  when deciding who to recruit or promote, where people having the protected characteristic are at a disadvantage or are under-represented. This can be done only where the candidates are equally qualified. Each case must be considered on its merits. Any action taken must be a proportionate means of addressing such disadvantage or under- representation. The Equality Act does not allow the employer to impose quotas on the number of women or minorities who will be employed in a particular post, nor does it

allow  particular  jobs  to  be  reserved  for  candidates  with  a  particular  protected characteristic.

Guernsey's law does not include any provision for positive sex discrimination.

The Discrimination Law does not include an exception to allow positive action in relation to race. However, the position of women in the workplace is a particular concern,  as  demonstrated  by  the  Jersey  Community  Relations  Trust  in  a  current campaign to highlight and redress the under-representation of women in positions of influence (see page 8). It is unlikely that significant progress will be made without some sort of positive action being permitted in relation to certain roles.

The Minister wishes to consider whether it would be appropriate to make limited provision  for  positive  action  where  women  (or  men)  are  under-represented  in  a particular role, provided that the person who is selected is as qualified for the role as any other candidate.

Questions

8a.  Should an exception be provided to permit positive action where men or women are under-represented in a particular role?

Yes   No

8b.  Should  such  an  exception  apply  only  if  the  person  who  is  selected  (via positive discrimination) is as qualified for the role as any other candidate?

Yes  No Please give any reasons for your responses.

8c.  Are  there  any  other  circumstances  in  which  positive  action  should  be permitted?

Yes   No

If yes, please state any specific circumstances that should be covered by such an exception.

  1. Exceptions – charities and associations

Section 193 of the Equality Act allows charities to provide benefits only to people who share the same protected characteristic (for example: sex, sexual orientation or race), if this is in line with their charitable instrument and if it is objectively justified or to prevent or compensate for disadvantage.

It  remains  unlawful  for  charities to limit their  beneficiaries  by  reference to their colour. Charities must not restrict benefits consisting of employment, contract work or vocational  training  to  people  who  share  a  protected  characteristic  (other  than supported employment for people with the same disabilities).

Single-sex activities are allowed for the purpose of promoting or supporting a charity. For example, Race for Life, a women-only event which raises money for Cancer Research UK, is lawful. It would clearly make sense to allow a similar situation in Jersey.

There  are  also  associations  and  clubs  that  are  clearly  aimed  at  members  of  one particular  sex.  Private  clubs  with  25  or  more  members  are  covered  by  the Discrimination Law, which means that discrimination is prohibited in the running of the club, in the treatment of applications for membership and in the treatment of members13. There is an exception in relation to race, where the essential character of the club is that it provides benefits to a particular racial group (unless identified by colour)14. A similar exception in relation to associations and clubs that are aimed at providing benefits for members of one sex would seem appropriate.

Questions

9a.  Should an exception be provided for charities to provide benefits only to people who share the same protected characteristic, as is provided in the Equality Act?

Yes   No

If yes, please state any specific circumstances that should be covered by such an exception.

13  Article 25  of  the  Discrimination  Law  defines  clubs'  and  excludes  professional  trade

organisations and organisations of voluntary workers.

14 Discrimination Law, Schedule 2, paragraph 14.

Please give any reasons for your response.

9b.  Should an exception be provided for clubs and associations that are aimed at providing benefits for members of a particular sex?

Yes   No

If yes, please state any specific circumstances that should be covered by such an exception.

Please give any reasons for your response.

  1. Any other exceptions

The Minister wishes to ensure that extending the characteristics that are protected under the Discrimination Law should not lead to unintended consequences that limit the legitimate activities of businesses, organisations, or individuals in Jersey. Views are therefore invited from any stakeholder who feels that special provision should be made in particular cases in respect of sex, maternity, sexual orientation or gender re-assignment.

10a.  Are there any other circumstances in which an exception should be provided that has not been covered in any of the questions listed above?

Yes   No

If yes, please state any specific circumstances that should be covered by such an exception.

Please give any reasons for your response.

  1. Other comments

11a.  Do  you  have  any  other  comments  relating  to  the  issues  raised  in  this consultation that you would ask the Minister to take into account?

  1. About you

12a.  Please tick which of the following you are responding as:

Employer   Employee

Employers' association   Trade Union/staff association

Other, please specify below

12b.  If you are an employer or an employee, please specify your sector. Agriculture

Construction

Electricity, gas and water

Financial services

Manufacturing

Hotels, restaurants and bars

Public sector

Wholesale and retail

Transport, storage and communications

Other sector, please specify below

12c.  Do you give the Minister permission to quote your comments publicly? Yes, anonymously   Yes, attributed to me   No

12d.  If your comments are to be quoted, who should they be attributed to?

SECTION 5 – RESPONDING TO THE CONSULTATION Please submit your comments by 30th May 2014.

You can respond to the consultation in the following ways –

  • complete the online survey at www.gov.je/consult  
  • e-mail or post your comments to Kate Morel
  • ask to be involved in a focus group to discuss the issues

Kate Morel

Policy Principal

Social Security Department Philip Le Feuvre House

La Motte Street

St. Helier

JE4 8PE

Telephone: 01534 447203 E-mail:  K. Morel @gov.je  

NOTE – Consultation responses may be made public (sent to other interested parties on request, sent to the Scrutiny Office, quoted in a published report, reported  in  the  media,  published  on  www.gov.je,  listed  on  a  consultation summary, etc.)

APPENDIX

LIST OF QUESTIONS

  1. Sex discrimination and equal pay

1a.  Should discrimination on the grounds of sex be unlawful in broadly the same circumstances that the Discrimination Law makes it unlawful to discriminate on the grounds of race?

1b.  Should the issue of pay and other terms and conditions be dealt with as an issue of discrimination (as it is with race) rather than as a separate provision dealing specifically with Equal Pay?

1c.  What unintended consequences might result from a decision  not to make separate provision for equal pay claims? Please set out any concerns you have.

  1. Pregnancy and maternity

2a.  Should  discrimination  based  on  pregnancy  and  maternity  be  unlawful  in broadly the same circumstances that the Discrimination Law makes it unlawful to discriminate on the grounds of race?

2b.  Are there any circumstances in which discrimination based on pregnancy or maternity should be permitted?

If yes, please set out any circumstances in which discrimination based on pregnancy or maternity should be permitted.

2c.  Are there any businesses or service providers that should have the right, in certain circumstances, to discriminate on the grounds that a woman is breastfeeding a baby?

If yes, please set out any circumstances in which businesses or service providers should have the right to discriminate on the grounds that a woman is breastfeeding a baby.

  1. Sexual orientation

3a.  Should discrimination based on sexual orientation be unlawful in broadly the same circumstances that the Discrimination Law makes it unlawful to discriminate on the grounds of race?

3b.  Are there any businesses or service providers that should have the right, in certain circumstances, to discriminate on the grounds of sexual orientation?

If yes, please set out any circumstances in which businesses or service providers should have the right to discriminate on the grounds of sexual orientation.

  1. Gender re-assignment

4a.  Should discrimination based on gender re-assignment be unlawful in broadly the same circumstances that the Discrimination Law makes it unlawful to discriminate on the grounds of race?

4b.  Are  there  any  circumstances  in  which  discrimination  based  on  gender re-assignment should be permitted?

If yes, please set out any circumstances in which discrimination based on gender re-assignment  should  be  permitted,  including  any  circumstances  in  which discrimination during the period of transition may be appropriate.

  1. Marriage and civil partnership

5a.  Should discrimination based on marriage and civil partnership be unlawful in broadly the same circumstances that the Discrimination Law makes it unlawful to discriminate on the grounds of race?

5b.  If you have answered yes to question 5a, are there any circumstances in which discrimination based on marriage and civil partnership should be permitted?

If yes, please set out any circumstances in which discrimination based on marriage and civil partnership should be permitted.

  1. Exceptions – religion

6a.  Should an exception be provided for recruitment to a role which is for the purposes of an organised religion, as is currently provided in the Equality Act?

If yes, please specify any specific circumstances that should be covered by such an exception.

6b.  Should  any  other  exceptions  relating  to  religion  be  provided  for  acts  of discrimination on the grounds of sex?

If yes, please specify any specific circumstances that should be covered by such an exception.

  1. Exceptions – pay during maternity leave

7a.  Should an exception be provided so that an employer who meets the statutory obligations in relation to maternity leave and pay is not subject to a complaint of sex discrimination if the maternity pay is lower than the amount that would be available to another employee who was on sick leave?

If yes, please specify any specific circumstances that should be covered by such an exception.

  1. Exceptions – positive discrimination

8a.  Should an exception be provided to permit positive action where men or women are under-represented in a particular role?

8b.  Should  such  an  exception  apply  only  if  the  person  who  is  selected  (via positive discrimination) is as qualified for the role as any other candidate?

8c.  Are  there  any  other  circumstances  in  which  positive  action  should  be permitted?

If yes, please specify any specific circumstances that should be covered by such an exception.

  1. Exceptions – charities and associations

9a.  Should an exception be provided for charities to provide benefits only to people who share the same protected characteristic, as is provided in the Equality Act?

If yes, please specify any specific circumstances that should be covered by such an exception.

9b.  Should an exception be provided for clubs and associations that are aimed at providing benefits for members of a particular sex?

If yes, please specify any specific circumstances that should be covered by such an exception.

  1. Any other exceptions

10a.  Are there any other circumstances in which an exception should be provided that has not been covered in any of the questions listed above?

If  yes,  please  specify  any  specific  circumstances  that  should  be  covered  by  an exception.

  1. Other comments

11a.  Do  you  have  any  other  comments  relating  to  the  issues  raised  in  this consultation that you would ask the Minister to take into account?

  1. About you

12a.  Please tick which of the following you are responding as:

12b.  If you are an employer or an employee, please specify your sector. 12c.  Do you give the Minister permission to quote your comments?

12d.  If your comments are to be quoted, who should they be attributed to?