Thursday, 11 August 2016

Please ask nicely

Peter Lambos was a bus driver with the ACT Internal Omnibus Network.
In September 2014 he was having problems with his driver’s seat and complained about it to a manager.
Three months later, the problem persisting, he contacted his employer’s workplace health and safety coordinator.
There was a dispute as to what Mr Lambos actually said to the coordinator in their conversation but it was not disputed that he mentioned “Columbine”, a reference to the spree killings at Columbine High School in the United States in 1999.
Mr Lambos was suspended on full pay whilst the employer investigated what it regarded as serious misconduct constituted by:
  1. Mr Lambos allegedly saying “If ACTION touch me this will be another Columbine”;
  2. Inappropriate behaviour to colleagues in breach of the respect equity and diversity framework constituted by accusing management of being corrupt.
After the investigation was held, which took some months, Mr Lambos was terminated from employment for serious misconduct.
Commissioner Kovacic found the serious misconduct established and that the consequent dismissal was not a harsh, unjust or unreasonable response: Lambos v ACT Government as represented by the Territory and Municipal Services Directorate [2016] FWC 3835.
All Mr Lambos wanted was a driver’s seat that did not “bottom out” causing jarring injuries but the way he went about trying to get something that was perfectly reasonable led to him not only not having a proper seat but also not having a proper job.

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