Home Media Centre News Archive When is it safe to dismiss employees?
When is it safe to dismiss employees?
Written by Stephanie Nicol and Meryl Remedios   
Tuesday, 06 December 2011 16:26

A string of recent unfair dismissal cases have seen employees reinstated to their former positions following dismissal for breaches of safety regulations and practices. They have created a considerable grey area for practitioners and employers navigating the minefield of competing obligations under occupational health and safety (OHS) laws and the unfair dismissal provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009.

In each case, subjective, mitigating circumstances have rendered dismissals harsh that were otherwise procedurally fair and for a valid reason. The cases reinforce that before dismissing an employee for a valid reason, such as a serious safety breach, not only must the employer afford the employee appropriate procedural fairness, it must also have regard to all of the prevailing circumstances, particularly where they may constitute persuasive, mitigating circumstances.

Valid reason

Earlier this year, in Wililo v Parmalat Food Products Pty Ltd, Fair Work Australia (FWA) considered whether a forklift operator was unfairly dismissed for, among other things, breaching safety regulations and practices by raising the tines of a forklift when they were not properly engaged and placing part of his body underneath an unsecured forklift load. At first instance, Commissioner Cargill found that the employee's conduct caused "serious and imminent risk to his own health and safety if not that of others" and constituted serious misconduct (as defined by the Fair Work Regulations), giving rise to a valid reason to terminate the employment. Commissioner Cargill was also satisfied that the forklift operator had been afforded procedural fairness prior to the dismissal because he was notified of the reasons for dismissal, was given an opportunity to respond to them and had a support person present at both the investigation interviews and the termination meeting.

Even though the forklift driver's dismissal was for a valid reason and was considered procedurally fair, Commissioner Cargill found that, on balance, the dismissal was harsh. She held this view because, among other things, the employee had not been shown CCTV footage during the investigation process, she considered the employee's actions were not willful or negligent, but merely careless and she was conscious that while the employer had a commendable focus on safety, it did "not have anything akin to a zero tolerance policy".

The employer appealed the decision and was successful. So what mitigating factors does FWA envisage are significant enough to render a procedurally fair dismissal for a valid reason to be unfair?

The full bench recently had cause to consider the issue in a decision which split the bench 2-1.

In his decision at first instance in Lawrence v Coal & Allied Mining Services Pty Ltd t/a Mt Thorley Operations/Warkworth, Commissioner MacDonald found that there was a valid reason for dismissing a mining production employee whose conduct amounted to a serious breach of safety policy. The employee deliberately breached the company's isolation procedure by removing personal locks which contractors had applied to isolate a water pump during maintenance.

The employee had 28 years of service and was aware of the safety requirements. However, at the time the employee removed the contractors' locks, the employee was aware that the contractors had finished their task and knew that no one was working on that section of pipeline, having driven the length of it immediately before removing the locks.

The employer argued that the employee had deliberately breached a safety procedure which risked possible injury to other workers, and the likelihood of the risk was irrelevant. The employer also submitted that safety and a safe working environment were an overriding priority. The Commissioner accepted these submissions and noted that the mining industry has a working environment that "requires workers to be safety conscious all of the time – because their lives depend on being safety conscious".

While the Commissioner had regard to, among other things, the employee's 28 years of unblemished service primarily in a safety-critical role, his age, his hardworking attitude, his financial and personal circumstances, his remorse and the fact the employee had checked the length of the pipe before removing the locks, he formed the view that there was a valid reason for the dismissal and it was fair.

The employee appealed to the full bench. The majority held that the dismissal was manifestly harsh in light of the length of the employee's service, his exemplary record and his personal circumstances. The employee was 55 and was likely to have difficulty securing alternative employment, particularly in the coal industry having been dismissed for a safety breach, let alone at the same level of remuneration. In ordering the employee's reinstatement, the majority said the employee was the primary breadwinner, the dismissal would cause his family serious hardship and his superannuation would be substantially adversely affected.

The employer's sanction of dismissal was found to be manifestly harsh in the circumstances, although it was conceded that the conduct warranted disciplinary action given the employer's statutory OHS obligations. While the majority made an order to restore lost pay, the equivalent of three months' pay was deducted to vindicate the importance of the employer's policies.

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Excerpt from Mondaq.

These recent cases underscore the importance of developing clear policies on OH&S, and ensuring sufficient, repeated training that keeps policies top-of-mind with employees. For help in drafting or training on your policies, contact PolicyPoint for a demonstration of the PolicyPoint platform.

 

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