Anonymise Dismissal Letters for HR Training and Legal Review – UK GDPR-compliant anonymisation per ERA 1996 s.94
Dismissal letters identify the dismissed employee by name, role, and often the specific conduct or capability reason that triggered termination under the Employment Rights Act 1996. anonym.legal pseudonymises this personal data so that dismissal correspondence can be used as training examples, reviewed by external advisers, or disclosed in internal audits without revealing the individual's identity.
When this applies
Use this workflow when dismissal letters need to be shared with employment solicitors for advice, used as training precedents for HR teams, or disclosed during internal investigations where the employee's identity is not directly relevant to the recipient.
How anonym.legal handles it
- Upload the dismissal letter or a set of dismissal letters to anonym.legal.
- The engine identifies personal data including the employee's name, job title, department, and any third-party names mentioned in the stated reason for dismissal.
- Each individual mentioned is pseudonymised consistently throughout the letter, including in any attached investigation summaries or hearing notes.
- Procedural content — dates, notice periods, appeal rights under the ACAS Code of Practice, and reference to ERA 1996 s.94 — is retained in plain text.
- The reversible mapping is stored encrypted with EU data residency.
- The pseudonymised letter is exported for sharing with solicitors or use as a training example.
What you provide
- Dismissal letters and any associated hearing notes or investigation reports
- Confirmation of which personal data fields should be pseudonymised
- Any attached appeal correspondence or outcome letters
Limitations & cautions
- anonym.legal does not assess whether the dismissal is fair or procedurally compliant under ERA 1996 s.94; legal advice remains necessary.
- Witness names or third-party references embedded in quoted speech or investigation summaries may require manual review in addition to automated pseudonymisation.
- The tool does not generate dismissal letters; it processes existing correspondence only.
FAQ
Will the stated reason for dismissal be retained after pseudonymisation?
Yes. The substantive reason — conduct, capability, redundancy, or other statutory reason — remains in plain text. Only the personal identifiers (name, job title, department) are pseudonymised, so the letter remains useful as a precedent or training example.
Can I use pseudonymised dismissal letters in employment tribunal proceedings?
Pseudonymised letters are useful for internal review and adviser consultation, but for tribunal bundles you must disclose the actual identity of the parties. The stored mapping key allows you to re-identify the document before including it in a formal ET bundle.
Does this cover letters for both misconduct and capability dismissals?
Yes. The workflow handles dismissal letters across all statutory reasons under ERA 1996, including misconduct, capability, redundancy, illegality, and some other substantial reason. The engine identifies personal data regardless of the grounds stated.
How does the tool handle letters that name witnesses or colleagues?
Third-party names mentioned in the letter body — witnesses, colleagues, line managers — are detected and pseudonymised alongside the dismissed employee's details. Each individual receives a distinct consistent pseudonym, preserving the narrative structure of the letter.