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©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 7404 6609 CIPFA NW Audit Risk and Governance Group 9 October 2015
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A worker raising a concern about wrongdoing, risk or malpractice with someone in authority either internally and/or externally (i.e. regulators, media, MPs) Source: PCaW What is whistleblowing? ©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 7404 6609
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Public Concern at Work PCaW is an independent charity, founded in 1993. We provide: 1.free confidential advice to people concerned about wrongdoing in the workplace who are unsure whether or how to raise their concern; 2.training to organisations on policy and law of whistleblowing; 3.campaign on public policy; and public interest whistleblowing laws. ©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 7404 6609
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Source: PCaW Advice line We have advised over 18,000 whistleblowers to date. Top sectors: health, care, education, charities, financial services. Top concerns: financial malpractice, public safety and patient safety. ©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 7404 6609
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Key questions: Who or what is at risk? Who knows? What is stopping you from raising this? Legally privileged Practical and solution focussed Empowering individuals Working together with unions Public Concern at Work - Advice ©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 7404 6609
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The majority of whistleblowers (44%) raise a concern only once and a further 39% go on to raise their concern a second time. Majority (83%) will only try internal options once or twice and then give up Small window of opportunity to address wrongdoing Importance of front line and middle management training Very few persist - only 22 individuals from our research went on to raise their concern 4 or more times. Worryingly, 74% say their concern was ignored Myth 1: Whistleblowers are persistent ©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 7404 6609
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83% of whistleblowers blow the whistle internally 0.5% go directly to the media Our YouGov 2013 survey : The majority of working adults in Great Britain (83%) said if they had a concern about possible corruption, danger or serious malpractice at work they would raise it with their employers Myth 2: Whistleblowing is always going outside ©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 7404 6609
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Of the 40% who told us of a response, the most common action is formal action short of discipline and 15% were dismissed Senior employees are more likely to be dismissed 60% of those who called our advice line did not report any response from management (either negative or positive) Myth 3: Whistleblowers are always trashed ©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 7404 6609
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1 in 10 workers said they had a concern Two thirds of workers raised their concern Of those that felt unable to raise their concern, most common barriers are fear: nothing will be done reprisal Myth 4: Whistleblowing is unusual ©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 7404 6609
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E&Y Survey Headlines 93% of respondents said they have formal whistleblowing arrangements in place (… but only 43% of UK workers say they have a whistleblowing policy at work) But 1 in 3 think their whistleblowing arrangements are ineffective 54% said they do not train key members of staff designated to receive concerns 44% confuse personal complaints with whistleblowing 1 in 10 say their arrangements are not clearly endorsed by senior management ©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 7404 6609
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Applies to almost every worker Wide definition of wrongdoing Application overseas Full compensation Impacts on gagging clauses and secrecy offences The Scope of PIDA ©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 7404 6609
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Lord Nolan’s praise for ‘so skilfully achieving the essential but delicate balance between the public interest and the interest of the employers’. The Public Interest Disclosure Act 1998 ©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 7404 6609
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Good faith only relevant to compensation when a claim is won (the tribunal may deduct up to 25% of the compensation if found the claimant made the disclosure in bad faith) Liability for co-workers who victimise whistleblowers. Employers can be held vicariously liable for these employees. Reasonable steps defence for employers. MPs are now prescribed persons under PIDA (i.e. same legal tests for disclosure to a regulator) 2013 Changes to PIDA ©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 7404 6609
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A duty on prescribed persons to report annually about whistleblowing concerns raised with them (Small Business, Enterprise and Employment Bill 2015) Changes to the scope of the whistleblower protection to include student nurses and NHS job applicants Employers best practice guidance / Non-statutory Code of Practice Guidance for individuals and regulators Review of the Employment Tribunal regulatory referral process Options for celebrating employers who embrace whistleblowing Recent Changes ©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 7404 6609
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©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 3117 2520 Awareness, trust and confidence Communications Training Policy and process Audit, review and oversight Investigation, feedback and resolution Support and protection Whistleblowing Culture
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©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 3117 2520
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Conduct periodic audits of effectiveness of whistleblowing arrangements: The number and types of concerns raised and outcomes of investigations Feedback from individuals who have used the arrangements Complaints of victimisation Complaints of failure to maintain confidentiality Other existing reporting mechanisms Adverse incidents that could have been identified by staff (eg consumer complaints, publicity or wrongdoing identified by third parties) Any relevant litigation Staff awareness, trust and confidence in arrangements Code of Practice Audit and Oversight
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©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 3117 2520
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©PCaW 2015 - 00 44 20 7404 6609 Q&A Alexandra Smith Trainee Solicitor as@pcaw.org.uk 0203 117 2530
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