The agreement and action plan comes after Ms Taylor successfully brought claims against Jaguar Land Rover, saying she had suffered abuse and a lack of support, in a tribunal case which saw an English court recognising non-binary or gender fluid identity as being protected under the Equality Act 2010 for the first time.
Under the terms of the agreement, Jaguar Land Rover agreed to develop an action plan to prevent future breaches of equality law. The plan, which includes recommendations made by the Employment Tribunal, commits Jaguar Land Rover to:
- publicising its newly developed diversity and inclusion strategy internally and externally to ensure transparency and accountability
- conducting an annual diversity and inclusion survey for staff and developing an Inclusion Index to track progress in the organisation
- working with employees to improve its diversity data self-identification rates to enable more effective equality monitoring
- working with an external consultant to review current diversity and inclusion practices and identifying any areas which require improvement, including taking steps to mitigate any risks of harassment identified
- requiring staff to complete mandatory e-learning modules on diversity and inclusion and bullying and harassment within 3 months of joining Jaguar Land Rover; with supplemental training for people managers and senior leaders
- updating its transitioning at work guidance and family policies to ensure they reflect best practice
- updating its bullying and harassment policy and training key employee networks on how to effectively support employees dealing with bullying and harassment issues
- launching inclusion councils at manufacturing sites so employees at these locations are engaged and have ownership of equality and diversity issues.
The EHRC will monitor the action plan to ensure the actions are completed within the agreed timescales. It can also use its legal powers to enforce the plan in the event of non-compliance by Jaguar Land Rover.
Commenting on the agreement, Marcial Boo, Chief Executive of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, said: