This disclosure asks an organisation to explain the main actions it is taking, or plans to take, on its own workforce-related impacts, risks and opportunities, and to show what resources it is putting behind those actions. In practice, that means describing the measures in a way that lets a reader understand what is being done, why it matters, and whether the organisation has committed people, time, money or other support to make it happen.
The practical focus is on whether the response is real and organisation-wide, not just limited to a few visible initiatives. A useful report should make clear where the actions apply across the business, which parts of the workforce they cover, and how resources are allocated between different measures, rather than only highlighting flagship sites, pilot projects or one-off programmes.
This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official EFRAG source.
A quick mental checklist before you prepare this disclosure — tick each as you settle it.
Key datapoints to prepare
How to prepare it
Request the people actions and tracking evidence
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own terms first (for example, people plan, case handling, wellbeing action, conduct issue, manager follow-up, or employee relations log), then map those terms to the disclosure wording before sign-off. This is a possible LRA training template only; adapt it to your organisation and check the official source before sign-off.
Please send the ESRS S1-3 actions, prevention, mitigation, remediation, impact type, trade-offs, KPIs, monitoring systems, and evaluation results for the reporting period.
Why it fails: It uses framework labels that many teams do not use day to day, so the owner may not know which records to pull. It also does not say which system, boundary, period, or internal category names to use, so the response is likely to be incomplete or hard to map.
Please send the people action tracker or case summary for [period] covering [boundary]. Include the actions taken, the steps used to prevent, reduce, or put right the issue, the issue type as your team records it, any trade-offs considered, the measures used to track progress, and the latest results. Use your own team labels first, then we will map them to the reporting pack.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
For this disclosure, we describe the impact type, the actions already put in place, the main indicators used to track progress, the monitoring approach, and the latest evaluation outcome, using the same basis consistently across the reporting period.
These figures show how the organisation has responded to the identified impacts, what it is watching to judge progress, and where any trade-offs have been accepted in order to carry out the response.
If the numbers move materially, explain whether that reflects a change in the underlying impact, a shift in the response measures, a different monitoring result, or a revised assessment of effectiveness.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for S1-3 — free with an LRA Community membership. Register once (it's free) and every download unlocks, together with the Disclosure Library, templates and the LRA AI-assistant.
For each claim, check the evidence
Evidence pack to prepare
Common reporting gaps
Mistakes to avoid when collecting the data
Where judgement is often needed
Illustrative examples
Synthetic, written by LRA — not from a company report, not text from any standard.
We describe one issue affecting our own workforce: repetitive strain linked to manual packing, which we addressed through line redesign, extra lifting aids and refreshed supervisor training. We also set out the practical steps we used to reduce the risk, the support we gave to affected workers, and the business choices we made where faster throughput had to be balanced against safer working methods. - Actions already in place: 14 prevention steps and 6 follow-up measures were rolled out across 3 sites; 2 worker cases received direct support and 1 case required a formal remedy plan. - For the impact itself, we recorded a physical health issue affecting 18 workers; we responded with job rotation, adjusted shift patterns and targeted training, while accepting a 3% reduction in hourly output at the busiest site. - To track progress, we used three indicators: 92% of supervisors completed the new training, 87% of high-risk tasks were covered by the monitoring checks, and the review found a 28% fall in reported strain incidents versus the prior quarter.
This is a synthetic, internally consistent example showing how to narrate the actions taken, the nature of the workforce harm, the trade-off with output, and the measures used to monitor and assess progress.
We report a case involving fatigue and stress among night-shift staff after a period of sustained peak demand, and we explain the steps we took to prevent recurrence, lessen the harm and support recovery. Our response included roster changes, extra rest breaks, a confidential support route and a review of overtime limits, even though this meant slower parcel turnaround for a short period. - We put in place 11 preventive controls, 5 harm-reduction actions and 4 recovery measures; 3 employees received direct follow-up and 1 team was offered a formal repair process. - The issue we identified was mental well-being strain affecting 26 workers; we acted with revised shift planning, workload caps and manager coaching, while accepting a 5% drop in same-day dispatch performance during the adjustment period. - We monitored the situation with four measures: 95% of night supervisors completed the new briefing, 90% of high-load shifts were checked weekly, 8% of staff used the support route, and the latest review showed a 31% decline in fatigue-related complaints.
This is a synthetic, internally consistent example showing how to describe the impact type, the response taken, the operational trade-off, and the indicators, monitoring and review results used to judge whether the response is working.
How companies report S1-3 in practice
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A group has rolled out a new grievance channel for its own workforce, but the first reporting draft only describes the channel and leaves out the training sessions, policy updates and staffing added to make it work. The team also has a separate note on a pay review that was used to address a known concern.
A preparer is drafting a section on a workplace safety issue and has a long list of controls, but the draft does not say which part of the workforce was affected, what the organisation actually did, or what trade-off was accepted when production targets were adjusted to allow extra training time.
The sustainability team has introduced a supplier audit programme and a new whistleblowing hotline, and it wants to report both as part of its people-related actions. However, the draft does not say how the team will track whether those measures are working, or what indicators will be used to judge progress over time.
A company has completed a remediation process after a complaint about working conditions, but the draft report only says the complaint was closed. It does not explain what was done to address the harm, whether the fix was aimed at the people affected, or whether the result was reviewed afterwards.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
Start with the plain-language explainer, then work through the step-by-step preparation section and the datapoints to prepare. The page is designed to help you turn source data into a draft narrative, supported by the example disclosures and draft-output section.
The page says to prepare data on implemented actions, prevention steps, reduction measures, repair actions, impact category, response actions, trade-off assessment, performance indicators, tracking systems, and review findings. Use that list as your collection checklist so you can see what is available, what is missing, and what needs owner sign-off.
Use the page’s step-by-step preparation guidance to decide what sits in scope and how each datapoint will be treated consistently. The page is meant to help you define the working method for the disclosure, rather than giving a fixed reporting template.
The page is aimed at sustainability and ESG managers, HR teams, data owners, and assurance reviewers, so ownership should sit with the people who can evidence the actions, indicators, and review findings. A practical approach is to assign one lead for the draft and named owners for each datapoint and evidence item.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items to support assurance readiness, alongside six assurance claims to verify. Use those sections to build a file that links each claim to the relevant risk and evidence before the draft is finalised.
The page says there are six assurance claims to verify, each framed around claim, risk, and evidence. It does not list them in the source text here, so you need to use the page itself and the evidence pack to work through them.
The page lists common reporting gaps and mistakes so you can spot weak drafting before sign-off. A practical use is to compare your draft against those gaps, then check whether each datapoint is supported by evidence and whether the narrative matches the underlying data.
Use the synthetic examples as a model for structure, level of detail, and how quantitative information can be presented in a table. They are illustrative only, so they should help you draft your own wording without treating the example as a reporting requirement.
The page gives draft-output ideas including visualisation options, narrative starters, and a content-index line. Use those to turn your prepared data into a readable draft that is easier for reviewers and assurance teams to follow.
The Download Centre includes a Prep & Assurance workbook in .xlsx format and a printable Library Card in .pdf format. Use the workbook to organise preparation and assurance checks, and the Library Card as a quick reference while drafting or reviewing.
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