Bossak v Murrumbidgee Local Health District
[2019] NSWIRComm 1054
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Industrial Relations Commission (NSW)
Decision date
2019-03-11
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (22 paragraphs)
DECISION
- On 30 October 2018, an Application for Relief from Victimisation was filed in the Office of the Industrial Registrar on behalf of the applicant, Dr Peter Bossak. The application sought the following relief: A. The applicant claims an order: 1. That the Performance Finding in the Report (as those terms are defined in Annexure A) is quashed and the Respondent may not take any steps in reliance on the Performance Finding. 2. that the Respondent is directed not to carry out a threat of victimisation being the institution of formal performance management proceedings against the Applicant. and claims an order for payment of the sum of $1,600,000 being for: 1. Reimbursement of lost earnings being the difference between advertised rates for his former position and the actual rates for his current position. 2. Compensation for pain and suffering.
- These proposed orders were sought against the Murrumbidgee Local Health District ("the respondent") where the applicant is currently employed in the capacity of Career Medical Officer in the Emergency Department of the Wagga Wagga Base Hospital.
The statutory scheme
- Relevant (to this case) provisions of the Industrial Relations Act 1996 ("the Act") are set out below. 210 Freedom from victimisation (1) An employer or industrial organisation must not victimise an employee or prospective employee because the person: …………………….. (d) exercises functions conferred under this Act, or (e) claims a benefit to which the person is entitled under the industrial relations legislation or an industrial instrument, or (f) informs any person of an alleged breach by an employer of the industrial relations legislation or of an industrial instrument, or (g) participates, or proposes to participate, in proceedings relating to an industrial matter, or ………………………….. (j) makes a complaint about a workplace matter that the person considers is not safe or a risk to health, or exercises functions under Part 5 (Consultation, representation and participation) of the Work Health and Safety Act 2011, or ………………………….. (2) In any proceedings under section 213 to enforce the provisions of this section, it is presumed that an employee or prospective employee who suffers any detriment as a result of action by the employer or industrial organisation was victimised because of a matter referred to in subsection (1) that is alleged by the applicant to be the cause of the detrimental action. That presumption is rebutted if the employer or industrial organisation satisfies the Commission that the alleged matter was not a substantial and operative cause of the detrimental action. 213 Enforcement (1) The Commission may, by order, enforce the provisions of this Part on the application of an industrial organisation or by any person affected by a contravention of this Part. (2) The Commission may, in particular, for that purpose do any one or more of the following: ………………………… (b) order the employer to promote or otherwise advance an employee in his or her employment, (c) order the employer to pay an employee or prospective employee the whole or any part of the amount of remuneration or other financial benefits lost or foregone, ……………………………... (e) order the employer not to carry out a threat to victimise an employee or not to make any further such threat, …………………………….. (3) An application for an order under this section must be made within 21 days after the contravention concerned. (4) The Commission may accept an application that is made out of time if the Commission considers there is sufficient reason to do so, having regard in particular to: (a) the reason for, and the length of, the delay in making the application, and (b) any hardship that may be caused to the applicant or other party if the application is or is not rejected, and (c) the conduct in relation to which the order is sought.