Is it privately owned? He should ask for a written copy of their staff disciplinary procedure, dispute resolution procedure and his contract or statement of employment (Scroll here to “written statement of employment”, this is required by law https://www.charliehr.com/blog/do-all-employees-need-a-contract-of-employment/amp/)They are, they have a new female in working so basically want him out an are throwing false allegations around, he only got told today he's to go tomorrow which I thought you needed 48h notice as it's left us basically little to no time to get anything sorted
I know, my papa an great aunt had it, but the thing is, he's not aggressive in any way, he has the very very start of it which is more forgetfulness but only when you ask him something an he's not fully paying attention an he then forgets, I know myself when it comes to cooking which is his job he's still fully all there, he still can remember recipes an cook from scratch, they take the absolute piss out him because he won't say no to them
This is also the same place that harassed him constantly on the phone to cover shifts when it was his day off then when I kept putting the phone off they had random staff members show up to our private home address looking for him to go in, he barely gets a day off cause as soon as they ask he won't say anything an just goes in to cover them
I honestly don't know what the procedures are with this place, it's a care home, an this is all going to be a case of their word against his, they done this with another male at the work months back
They mightn't have these, it seems like they’ve broken GDPR rules by turning up to his private residence so not clued up on HR, but it’ll be a good indication of what you can do from your side, how sewn up they have things.
They can’t discriminate against him for anything dementia/age related, that’s against the law so if he needs someone to attend the meeting because his memory may be flawed, they have to allow it or you can be straight on them for discrimination.
If he’s genuinely done nothing wrong, the law is absolutely on his side, you have to advocate for him and make them realise he’s not going to be a push over. However, If you get the impression they really want rid of him and he’s not prepared to fight or purse a legal claim, he can ask for a payout with the agreement to leave and take it no further. They might find that preferable than the threat of legal action resulting in costs plus a payout. I believe somewhere between what he’d get as redundancy pay and 6 months wages plus unused annual leave pay is what you’d aim for.
It might not be what he wants but it’s better than being forced out by malicious claims that he can’t prove wrong and having nothing.
Call the ACAS helpline first thing if you haven’t already. They’ll give you everything you need.