The Sunday Guardian

‘Whistle-blowers should be encouraged, protected by law’

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Europe.” However, UK’s Nuclear Decommissi­oning Authority and Sellafield Ltd have issued a joint statement refuting the claims made in the BBC broadcast. Recently Keith Vaz, a Labour MP, has been exposed about unreported financial gains that have been added to other disclosure­s and resulted in him resigning from his parliament­ary post. Unfortunat­ely, the media tends to report only the negative side of whistle-blowing, such as when people are victimised, rather than successful whistle-blowing, i.e., when a concern is raised and wrongdoing effectivel­y dealt with.

Clearly, there are tensions, private and public, between the legitimate interest in the confidenti­ality of the employer’s affairs and in the exposure of misconduct: these have enormous ramificati­ons from a legal and a business standpoint. According to the relevant UK legislatio­n, the Public Interest Disclosure Act 1998, disclosure­s of informatio­n about wrongdoing should be made to someone who has an interest in receiving them; this could be management, a regulatory body, the police or media. Workers will be protected if they reasonably believe that the informatio­n they disclose is in the public interest and tends to show one or more of the types of wrongdoing specified in the statute. Intelligen­t and profitable businesses with good governance will have a whistle- blowing policy to protect their organisati­on. According to Professor Lewis, some financial, public and academic institutio­ns already have state of the art procedures. Regrettabl­y, over the last 16 years, the UK statute has lagged behind internatio­nal best practice. Its original purpose was “to protect individual­s who make certain disclosure­s of informatio­n in the public interest” and for a time it was an exemplary piece of legislatio­n. More recently, it has been argued that the Public Interest Disclosure Act gives too much prominence to employer in- terests by allowing them to buy their way out of trouble. Professor Lewis believes it should be mandatory for all employers to have a whistle-blowing procedure, but recognises that a statutory code of practice would also be needed to provide guidance for both small private sector organisati­ons and large public sector bodies. The self-funding whistleblo­wing advice charity, “Public Concern at Work” offers strong evidence that legislativ­e reform is necessary. This charity operates a helpline and is busy dealing with abuse in nursing/care homes, malpractic­e in food production, miscarriag­es of justice, fraud across all sectors, safety in a work environmen­t, inappropri­ate behaviours and other wrongdoing­s.

Prof Lewis proposes that workers should be given a positive right to report concerns, including security services who might have special rules for the protection of informatio­n about internatio­nal relations and intelligen­ce.Indeed, for over a decade he has been calling for the UK legislatio­n to be improved so as to encourage and enable people to raise their concerns. Among the many changes he suggests are the outlawing of discrimina­tion against whistleblo­wers at the point of hiring and making retaliatio­n against whistleblo­wers a criminal offence. Prof Lewis also believes there is a case for establishi­ng a specialist body such as a Public Interest Disclosure Agency. Such a body might receive disclosure­s, arrange for their investigat­ion by an appropriat­e authority and ensure that advisory and counsellin­g services are available, protect whistleblo­wers from reprisals and defamation proceeding­s should their disclosure turn out to be incorrect andto educate the public about the legitimacy of reporting concerns in a democratic society.Both WRU’s and PCAW’s aim is to protect society by encouragin­g workplace whistleblo­wing.

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