Terms of Disability Discrimination Act ‘redefined’

-

A discrimination act has been redefinedThe terms of the Disability Discrimination Act have been redefined following a decade long, "landmark" employment case.

Elizabeth Boyle, 58, from Northern Ireland, who suffers from vocal chord problems, began legal proceedings against SCA Packaging after they suggested making changes to her working environment, the Associated Press reports.

Ms Boyle felt that plans to remove a partition wall that separated her office from the rest of the workforce would put an increase strain on her voice, revealing that her condition had once left her unable to speak.

Nine months after she took action, where she was supported by the Equality Commission for Northern Ireland, she was made redundant, leading her to bring a further case of discrimination against her former employer.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

SCA Packaging has settled the case without an admission of liability and paid Ms Boyle £125,000.

Following the case, the House of Lords has redefined the Disability Discrimination Act, meaning disabled people now have enhanced legal protection.

Elsewhere, the Chartered Management Institute has called on whichever party is successful at the General Election to focus less on regulations in the workplace.

Posted by Colette Paxton

Latest news

Curtis Holmes: Payroll is the driver for employee engagement

Payroll has long been treated as a back-office necessity: essential, but not something that shapes culture or drives engagement. This no longer stands.

Labour market yet to show major AI impact on jobs, govt adviser says

A government economic adviser has challenged predictions of widespread AI-driven unemployment, arguing labour market data has yet to show disruption.

Young workers ‘pressured into signing NDAs after workplace injuries’

Workers say injuries are being hidden behind confidentiality agreements while financial pressures leave many afraid to challenge unsafe conditions.

CIPD recognises 30 HR leaders driving change across UK workplaces

The CIPD has unveiled its HR30 list for 2026, recognising senior people leaders whose work has delivered measurable impact across organisations and workforces.
- Advertisement -

Brits dream of being their own boss, but still cling to the monthly pay cheque, survey reveals

Britons say they like the idea of self-employment, but most still value the security and stability of traditional jobs.

AI Coaching Won’t Replace Managers. It Will Expose Coaching Debt.

As AI coaching expands, employers may gain a clearer view of where manager support is falling short.

Must read

Catherine Trombley: Holidays are in the eye of the beholder

The end-of-the-year customer satisfaction surveys were in. As I...

Gary Cattermole: Do Zero-Hours Mean Zero Profit?

The debate around zero-hour contracts rages on with the...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you