FULL RECOMMENDATION
SECTION 13(9), INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS ACT, 1969 PARTIES : ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY - AND - A WORKER (REPRESENTED BY SERVICES INDUSTRIAL PROFESSIONAL TECHNICAL UNION) DIVISION:
SUBJECT: 1.Appeal Of Adjudication Officer Decision No(s) ADJ-00037911 CA-0049304. On 4 May 2023 the Adjudication Officer issued the following Recommendation: "I recommend that the employee accept that the issues he raised against other employees by way of a formal complaint/grievance in July 2020 were investigated and that, albeit reluctantly, he now accepts the outcome of that investigation." A Labour Court hearing took place on 26 September 2023.
This is an appeal by the Worker from a Recommendation of an Adjudication Officer (ADJ-00037911, dated 4 May 20223) under section 13 of the Industrial Relations Act 1969. Notice of Appeal was received in the Court on 9 June 2023. The Court heard the appeal in Sligo on 26 September 2023. Summary of the Factual Background The Worker (who retired on 21 July 2023) was employed by the Environmental Protection Agency (‘the Employer’) as a Scientific Officer Grade 1 (Level 3) based in Castlebar, County Mayo. His career – which commenced with An Foras Forbartha – spanned forty-three years. It is accepted by the Employer that the Worker had an unblemished employment record throughout his employment and no complaint had been made in relation to him or his work prior to the events that gave rise to the within proceedings. It appears that the onset of the Covid pandemic gave rise to the backdrop to the events that culminated in the within dispute. The Employer’s senior management instructed staff whose role involved field work to continue to perform that work as the organisation was regarded as providing an ‘essential service’ to the public. The Worker did not concur with this view and, therefore, refused to approve the travel and subsistence claims of a Scientific Officer Grade II (Level 4) (‘Mr X’) reporting to him where the claims in question were connected to that officer’s performance of field work. Mr X commenced an official grievance against the Worker in May 2020. The Worker was relieved of his line management responsibility for Mr X in or around this time for reasons unconnected to the within dispute. The Worker submitted a counter-grievance and simultaneously lodged a Dignity at Work complaint against Mr X, the Worker’s Line Manager and the Worker's Programme Manager. The Employer proceeded to conduct an investigation into both matters under its Dignity at Work Policy. This was conducted by an external Human Resources Consultant who concluded that the Worker’s complaints were not well-founded but were, in fact, vexatious. The Worker lodged an appeal against the External Consultant’s findings. In July 2021, the Employer appointed Mr Tom McGuinness “to undertake a review of the Dignity at Work investigation and the subsequent outcome, to determine whether an appeal is upheld or rejected”. Mr McGuinness issued his report on 13 August 2021 in which he concluded that:
The Employer next convened a disciplinary meeting with the Worker to determine whether or not a disciplinary sanction was warranted having regard to the findings of the External Consultant. This led to the imposition of Final Written Warning on the Worker. The Worker successfully appealed this and the sanction was reduced to a First Written Warning. On 23 March 2022, the Worker referred a dispute under section 13(2) of the Industrial Relations Act 1969 to the Workplace Relations Commission. The dispute was investigated by an Adjudication Officer who recommended as follows:
Submissions The Worker submits that the Employer’s procedures were tainted in a number of ways such that he was not afforded natural justice throughout the process that culminated in the imposition of a disciplinary sanction on him. He points, in particular, to four aspects of the procedures he believes were flawed:
It is submitted on behalf of the Employer that:
Discussion and Decision Having carefully considered the Parties’ written and oral submissions, the Court finds that there are well-founded criticisms that can be made of aspect of the approach taken by the Employer to both the grievance raised against the Worker by Mr X and the investigation of the Worker’s complaints under the Dignity at Work Policy. There can be no doubt that the Worker was entitled to receive a copy of Mr X’s written complaint about him: the Employer’s mere recitation of the substance of the complaint at an investigatory meeting is no substitute for this. The Court also finds that the quality of the communications from senior management and the Human Resources Department throughout the process regularly fell short of best practice. For example, the Worker should have been put on full notice by means of a written communication as to how Mr McGuinness’s review would proceed. Nevertheless, there is nothing before the Court to substantiate the Worker’s claims that the shortcomings identified above resulted in a process that was fundamentally detrimental to him or caused him to suffer an injustice. Taken in the round, the investigation of the Worker’s complaints under the Employer’s Dignity at Work Policy was comprehensive, thorough, balanced and fair; the resulting disciplinary and appeals process yielded an outcome that was proportionate and reasonable in all the circumstances, in the Court’s view. For these reasons, the Court uphold the Adjudication Officer’s Recommendation and strongly urges the Worker to accept the outcome of the process he set in train over three-and-a half years ago now. The Court so decides.
NOTE Enquiries concerning this Decision should be addressed to Therese Hickey, Court Secretary. |