Authors: Stephen Booth (Principal)
and Lisa Qiu (Lawyer & Registered Migration Agent) (Coleman Greig Lawyers)
Sometimes it’s
difficult to ignore a friend request from a work colleague. Once you’ve
accepted, should you block or unfriend? A recent decision handed down by the
Fair Work Commission may cause you to rethink your next move.
In only the second
official stop bullying order handed down by the Fair Work Commission since the
introduction of new anti bullying laws in 2013, the Commission has held that
unfriending someone on Facebook was “belittling” and “aggressive” and
constituted unreasonable behaviour that warranted a stop bullying order.
Ms Roberts, the
applicant, was a real estate agent and had been working with VIEW Launceston, a
real estate franchise in Tasmania, for approximately two years (strangely
enough, the first official stop bullying order handed down by the Commission
also concerned events which took place in a real estate agency). Mrs Bird, the
alleged bully, was a Sales Administrator and the wife of Mr Bird, the Principal
and Co-Director of VIEW.
Ms Roberts was able
to prove unreasonable conduct on the part of Mrs Bird, including Mrs Bird:
• Belittling
Ms Roberts when she told her she wasn’t allowed to sign for parcels
• deliberating
delaying the processing of administrative tasks for Ms Roberts
• deliberately
attempting to damage the relationship between Ms Roberts and a client
•
acknowledging others in the morning and delivering photocopying and printing to
them, but not to Ms Roberts.
Mrs Bird also
unfriended Ms Roberts on Facebook immediately after a verbal confrontation
between them, in which Mrs Bird told Ms Roberts that her behaviour reminded her
of “a school child or girl going to the teacher to tell on the other child” (Ms
Roberts had complained to the director about Mrs Bird not publicising Ms
Roberts’ sale properties). Deputy President Wells, in reaching his finding that
there was bullying as defined under the Fair Work Act, commented that the
unfriending by Mrs Bird showed “a lack of emotional maturity and is indicative
of unreasonable behaviour.”
So what has this case
taught us? That unfriending someone on Facebook could lead to you being branded
as a workplace bully?
Well, probably not if
that’s the only thing you’ve done to potentially upset the other person (after
all, you can only unfriend someone once, and bulling involves repeated
behaviour and risk of the behaviour happening again). However, if there has
been a history of incidents between you and the other person, and if the person
doing the unfriending is in a more senior or somehow elevated position at work
(such as being the wife of a director), then unfriending someone could be
interpreted as unreasonable conduct, which may land you in hot water should you
see yourself on the receiving end of a stop bullying application.
The case also shows
us that the Commission recognises the importance of social media and the impact
it can have on our professional lives. For example, recently, a female
barrister in the UK lashed out against a male senior partner of a law firm, for
making a comment about her Linkedin profile picture and some have commented
that this was professional suicide on her part. These cases demonstrate that
now, more than ever, employers and employees need to think about the impact of
social media, whether it’s being used appropriately, and if not, what
safeguards are in place to deal with the fall out.
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