EU whistleblowing provisions need adjustments in member states
Seven months remains for EU member states to transpose the whistleblower directive into national legislation. The directive as such only offers protection when reporting about breaches of EU law in specific sectors. However, for an individual whistleblower to determine what is a breach of EU law and not national law is a difficult call to make. Member states still have an opportunity to fix this confusion. The directive sets out minimum standards and there is nothing that prevents member states to go further.
Here are a few suggestions to fix on national level:
1. Widen the material scope
The directive might come across as confusing, as it lists different material scopes of legislation that are covered by the directive.[1] What it does not cover are for example working conditions, non-discrimination, occupational health and safety. For individual workers it is a thin line to decide whether to blow the whistle on wrongdoings or not. Nobody wants to take the risk of falling outside the scope of protection. The simplest was forward is to include national legislation, and stretch the scope to include all areas horizontally – not only those listed in the directive. For example bad working conditions or lack of resources in the health care sector can easily lead to wrongdoings. How can an individual determine whether this falls within the scope of working conditions (not covered by the directive) or under public health (covered by the directive)? To avoid any pitfalls and to offer legal protection, we cannot have these kind of uncertainties.
2. Secure trade union rights
It is not self-evident that trade union rights are guaranteed in this directive. Trade unions are parties to collective bargaining and they should, whenever possible, negotiate suitable whistleblowing procedures with employers. Protection should be granted when an individual seeks advice from a trade union. Likewise, the right to be represented by a trade union has to be secured. Another welcomed addition would be to grant protection for unions carrying the report. Also, trade union representatives should also be designated as appropriate internal recipients of reports.
3. Protect reports to line manager and Human Resources department
It is not self-evident that the directive protects reports made to the line manager or to the human resources department. Therefore, it should be clarified on national level that protection is granted when reporting wrongdoings to the superiors or HR. This minimises the threshold for whistleblowers to report about wrongdoings.
4. Access to documents
When a whistleblower comes across sensitive information it will matter how the information was obtained – for example if it was found in stolen documents or acquired lawfully. The criminal liability clause is up to the member state to define. As a reminder, big media attention cases like LuxLeaks, would have never happened if the whistleblower would not have copied the documents “unlawfully”. Therefore, member states might want to carefully consider the formulation of this clause.
5. Definition of reasonable belief
The directive introduces the public interest test, which requires the whistleblower to have reasonable grounds to believe that something was true at the time of reporting in the public interest. The legal requirement of reasonable belief is problematic for the reporting person and the definition of this is not set out in the directive. This public interest test of reasonable belief should be clarified in national law. A common global definition is that a disinterested observer with similar knowledge, training and background could agree with the whistleblower’s concerns.[2]
6. Employers’ burden of proof
The burden of proof is mentioned in the directive, but the intention of it is watered down in the legal text of the directive. In the recitals of the directive, it is written that a whistleblower who reports about a wrongdoing and suffers a detriment, the burden of proof shifts to the person who took the detrimental action (i.e. employer) to prove that detriment was not a cause of the report. However, in the actual article in the directive the “employer” has “to prove that the measure was based on duly justified grounds”. This can leave some dangerous loopholes if not clarified in national context. A retaliation could otherwise become justified on any reasons that the employer can find.
----
[1] public procurement; financial services, products and markets and prevention of money laundering and terrorist financing; product safety; transport safety; protection of the environment; radiation protection and nuclear safety; food and feed safety, animal health and welfare; public health; consumer protection; protection of privacy and personal data, and security of network and information systems; financial interests of the Union and breaches of internal market rules.
[2] This definition has been highlighted by Government Accountability Project's Legal Director Tom Devine, and has been determined in case law in the US, e.g. Lachance v. White, 174 F.3d 1378, 1381 (Fed. Cir. 1999), cert. denied, 528 U.S. 1153, 120 (2000).
MORE ARTICLES
The European Council must ensure EU delivers on its promise to whistleblowers
The European Council has a responsibility to protect the positive amendments made to the proposal for a whistleblower protection directive adopted by the European Parliament’s legal affairs committee last month.
Rozière positions whistleblower protection law as response to public concerns
It would be a real shame if member states’ representatives were now seen as acting against public concerns, in resisting a whistleblower protection law which encourages the reporting of crime and wrongdoing.
Danske Bank whistleblower testifies at European Parliament
The now famous Danske Bank Whistleblower, Howard Wilkinson, testified before the TAX3 European Parliament Committee last week. Wilkinson reported suspicious financial transactions at Danske Bank’s Estonia branch, where he worked until 2014.
European Parliament takes stand on stronger whistleblower directive
The WhistleblowerProtection.EU platform is celebrating a job well done, after the Legal Affairs Committee of the European Parliament passed a strengthened whistleblower protection directive, on the 20th of November.
Political battles loom in fight for robust European whistleblowers Directive
The EU’s whistleblower protection directive, is in a state of flux, key political battles are being fought right now. The whistleblower proposals as they currently stand, have several Achilles heels tucked into the directive’s fine print.
The role of media and investigative journalism
The LuxLeaks revelations were unprecedented not only in the level of corruption they uncovered, but also in the vast array of journalists from different media organisations working together to uncover corruption.
Why cross-border coherence matters
Many of the biggest whistleblower disclosures of recent years have been international in nature – LuxLeaks and the Panama Papers in particular. As pointed out by the Greens in the European Parliament, there is a general European public interest that often supersedes the national interests of a single member state.
State of play
Protection for whistleblowers in Europe is currently a patchwork affair. Some countries, such as Ireland having robust laws in place, while others, such as Cyprus, have practically none. 16 EU member states have specific laws or provisions, and 10 of those adopted their laws or in the past 5 years.
- « Previous
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
