Senior executive unfairly dismissed for posting 'very offensive' WhatsApp messages

Employer told to pay €7,000 compensation to former head of operations

The head of operations for the Irish arm of the company was one of seven senior staff members sacked for their messages posted to the WhatsApp group.  Photograph: Bloomberg
The head of operations for the Irish arm of the company was one of seven senior staff members sacked for their messages posted to the WhatsApp group. Photograph: Bloomberg

An award-winning senior executive at a company in the Republic was unfairly dismissed for posting “very offensive” messages on a WhatsApp group.

The former head of operations for the Irish arm of the company was one of seven senior staff members sacked for their messages posted to the WhatsApp group.

The other six senior managers were based in the UK.

Now, the company has been ordered to pay its former Irish head of operations €7,000 compensation after the Workplace Relations Commission (WRC) found that he was unfairly dismissed.

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In her ruling, WRC Adjudication Officer, Valerie Murtagh found that there were a number of procedural defects which rendered the dismissal unfair.

She added: “However, I am satisfied that the complainant has contributed to his dismissal by his participation in the WhatsApp group, accordingly, the quantum of award has been reduced on that basis.”

Ms Murtagh stated that the executive accepted that his actions “were ill-judged and inappropriate”.

The man – who oversaw a workforce of 40 and helped increase revenues to €13 million – secured alternative employment within six weeks of being unfairly dismissed at the end of September last year.

Ms Murtagh said that in dismissing the executive, the company did not give sufficient weight to any mitigating circumstances relating to him.

She stated that he had a clean disciplinary record, undertook 60-hour weeks on many occasions and grew the business turnover in Ireland since taking on the role of sales manager in 2014.

She said it may not have been best practice or prudent for the company to have two members of staff to oversee the investigation who were referred to in the WhatsApp group in derogatory terms.

Gross misconduct

Defending its decision to sack the executive for gross misconduct on September 28th 2018, the company said “the messages he posted on the WhatsApp group were very offensive including posting derogatory comments about (company) employees”.

It said that the employee’s actions “were completely at odds with the company’s value systems” and that trust and confidence in the complainant had broken due to his actions.

The dismissal was due to extremely serious breaches by the complainant of the company’s Social Media Policy and Code of Conduct arising from his participation in the WhatsApp Group with other senior commercial team managers, the company said.

The company told the WRC that the actions of the senior employee are the type of behaviours which it cannot tolerate and cannot reasonably be expected to tolerate.

It mounted an investigation into the WhatsApp group after a protected disclosure from one of its UK-based members.

The group had been in existence for eight months and consisted of the complainant, four of his peers based in the UK, their manager and also a more senior manage, also based in the UK.

Ms Murtagh stated that the complainant’s activity on the WhatsApp group was roughly 15 per cent when compared to other members of the group.

The head of operations told the WRC hearing that he was aware that certain content of the group was inappropriate, however he did not accept that he was a major contributor to the group or that he was encouraging of the posting of inappropriate material.

Change the focus

He contended that he actively sought to change the focus of the group from such material and that he did so in circumstances where he felt peer pressure to be involved in the group and not to leave it.

The worker submitted that there were many times when he was the subject of racial abuse and slurs on the WhatsApp group from UK-based colleagues.

He said his own protected disclosure concerning the anti-Irish content of the group was ignored and brushed aside.

He also contended that at no point during the course of the investigation and disciplinary process was the content of the messages put to him in any meaningful way nor was it indicated to him how the messages were in breach of the company’s code of conduct nor how they could have amounted to gross misconduct

The head of operations told the WRC hearing that he felt isolated within the company in terms of being the only member of the group based in Ireland.

He said there was pressure put on him to contribute to the group – otherwise, he would be viewed as not being trustworthy.

He said he did confide in a UK colleague about wanting to leave the group.

However, the complainant submitted that the overriding factor for him was that he felt if he left the group, he would be out of the loop and it would be detrimental to his career.

He contended that the WhatsApp group provided a good platform for the managers to network, share ideas and indeed to vent issues as necessary and if he exited the group, he would be cut off from the other managers.

Gordon Deegan

Gordon Deegan

Gordon Deegan is a contributor to The Irish Times