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Worker fired for supplying drugs gets payout

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A worker fired for supplying drugs has been paid compensation (file pic)

A worker fired for supplying drugs has been paid compensation (file pic)

Thu, 07 Jan 2010 11:28a.m.

An appliance repairman sacked for supplying cannabis to a workmate has been awarded about $12,000 in compensation for distress and loss of income.

The Employment Relations Authority ruled that Corey Wilkinson was unfairly dismissed by Saxon Appliances in Christchurch last March after the discovery of a suspicious message on his company cellphone.

The message from a workmate asked if Mr Wilkinson was "able to get any stuff".

When Saxon general manager Geoff Trotter confronted Mr Wilkinson about the message, he said he had acquired two tinnies the previous year which he had either sold or given away to a workmate.

At a subsequent meeting, Mr Wilkinson asked if he was going to lose his job, to which Mr Trotter said there was a possibility, as set out in a letter two days earlier.

Mr Wilkinson said that he would start looking for another job and was asked to take his personal belongings and hand over his keys, job book, cellphone and company jacket.

He was dismissed later that month.

In its ruling issued yesterday, the authority found that the initial meeting had been semi-formal and Mr Wilkinson should have been given due notice of the allegation and its potential consequences.

Authority member Philip Cheyne also ruled that Saxon had failed to give Mr Wilkinson the opportunity to seek representation and to provide copies of notes from the meeting to his lawyer.

In its dismissal letter, Saxon said it had a "zero tolerance" policy on illegal drug use at work, although the authority found it had no policy on drug use outside work.

Mr Wilkinson had not sold drugs in the workplace, as Saxon had alleged, but had given his co-worker the cannabis off-site and outside work hours, Mr Cheyne ruled.

Saxon was ordered to pay three month's lost income and $6000 in compensation.

The company, which employs 28 staff, was disappointed with the ruling.

"It's just so unbalanced it's not funny," spokesman Michael Hodges told the New Zealand Herald. "We think employers are being shafted."

The authority was "heavily weighted in favour of the employee" and the ruling showed companies needed clear policies on alcohol and drug use in their employment agreements, he said.

Mr Wilkinson said yesterday he was in a new job and "just moving on and upwards" after the stressful dismissal.

NZPA

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Comments [3]

urban druid
07 Jan 2010 10:07p.m.

Hi cynical, hey are you out there?

urban druid
07 Jan 2010 5:52p.m.

"Can you get any stuff?" "Have you got any of those things left?" Could be anything eh?
In Holland people who like cannabis products can buy them over the counter. It looks and sounds really civilised. Cannabis leaf and hash and so on, to the connoiseur, is a lot like wine is to the wine buff. The Dutch can discreetly take themselves off to a cannabis cafe and buy exactly the style, strength, and strain they wish.
Such a system has advantages. People with certain medical needs can buy the cannabis product that suits their particular complaint(s). People who use cannabis for fun can get the type they enjoy. There is an age limit at point of sale. This helps keep cannabis out of the hands of minors. Prices are reasonable and contain a component of tax for "the man". People can work as legitimate employees in the cannabis retail business. In fact, coffeeshop owners are now considered legitimate and respected business owners.
Everyday people, who may enjoy a puff from time to time, need not mix with the "criminal element" in their society to purchase "stuff". Similarly, one does not have to risk one's job helping out a workmate who needs one of those "things".
Cannabis is a natural product, part of the same "creation" and planet we all find ourselves on together. It's about time that all those who stand in front of progressive moves forward took a good hard look at their beliefs and the chaos wrought in our communities because of those outdated ideas.
Simply making drugs illegal, and blaming certain plants, and inert chemicals when something goes wrong in our society is really a copout.
About 15% of the population use cannabis regularly. Isn't it time we gave them similar rights to the rest of the population? for people who do no harm to others, should not be harmed by others, and particularly not by the State...
We have the highest use and arrest stats for cannabis in the world. Clearly our present ideas are not working.
Functional regulation is the way.

Ian
07 Jan 2010 2:56p.m.

The so called employment authority has displayed an abysmal
lack of common sense; it could have been a lot more proactive in it's dealings with the employers failure to follow perfectly the method of dealing with a druggie on its payroll. All these clowns have done now, is to say, it's OK to to take and deal drugs at work, employers can't touch you!! WELL DONE EMPLOYMENT AUTHORITY

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