Sir, - There has been significant and welcome media coverage recently of the decision of an equality officer to award £3,000 to a CERT trainee. The officer found that CERT directly discriminated against the trainee on the gender ground when it insisted that its standard female uniform be worn for interviews held on its premises and thereby caused her to miss job opportunities.
We wish to clarify some points which may have caused confusion in this coverage. These relate to the role of the Equality Authority, the content and the implications of the decision.
It is important to distinguish the role of the Equality Authority from that of the Office of the Director of Equality Investigations (ODEI). The ODEI is the principal forum for seeking redress under the equality legislation. This is the institution where the equality officers are located. The Equality Authority does not decide on claims under the legislation. We have the mandate to work towards the elimination of discrimination and to promote equality of opportunity in employment and the provision of goods, services and facilities. In this case we provided legal support to the CERT trainee in taking her case.
It is also important to clarify that decisions of the ODEI on employment equality issues can be appealed to the Labour Court. The recommendations of the Labour Court can be appealed to the High Court on a point of law. In relation to the content of the decision it is important to note that the discrimination was found to be on the gender ground. A number of references have been made to the age of the CERT trainee, but this was not material to the case.
As far as the implications of the decision are concerned, it may well be that this case, as suggested in the coverage, will be used as a precedent in future clam under the Equal Status Act 2000 in relation to the compulsory wearing of skirts as standard female uniforms in schools. However, seeking to extend the precedent beyond this could well be to read too much into the finding of the equality officer. - Yours, etc.,
Niall Crowley, Chief Executive Officer, The Equality Authority, Clonmel Street, Dublin 2.