A hangover is the least of your worries
Office parties should be treated as any other work gathering.
I’m looking forward to our Christmas party this year. The
wine is on offer and it gives me a legitimate reason to wear a silly
hat, something I’m usually not allowed to do.
However, Christmas parties are also a fruitful source of work for
employment lawyers. Thankfully to date this hasn’t included
ours and my aim in writing this column, which I have done with full
acceptance of the risk of shouts of “bah humbug!” and
other such festive objections, is to ensure that it doesn’t
include yours either.
Year on year, ACAS publish the same guidance on the dos and don’ts
for company’s handling Christmas parties. It’s well
worth a look at despite being criticized in some quarters as being
overly PC.
Urging caution about selling raffle tickets because it may upset
Muslims and carrying out proper risk assessments before putting
up decorations are examples which have, seemingly, caused particular
distress to some commentators but the advice about a company being
legally obliged to ensure its staff don’t drink and drive
is quite prudent.
The point here really is that Christmas parties should be treated
like any other work gathering. They are, at the end of the day,
an extension of the employer / employee relationship and, as such,
the obligations that both parties owe each other by virtue of the
their contracts (oh, yes, including those whose contracts aren’t
in writing) and by virtue of various statutes aren’t suddenly
extinguished simply because everyone is wearing jeans (or, in my
case, a silly hat).
So, for instance, where sexual harassment takes place in the pub
after working hours between colleagues without the employer knowing
about it, then I bet you can guess who remains liable to compensate
the victim. It certainly isn’t Santa.
http://thelincolnite.co.uk/2011/12/lincoln-lawyer-a-hangover-the-least-of-your-christmas-party-woes/
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