2023-08-06
The complainant is Ethiopian and has black skin. He was employed as a coordinator with the respondent charity. He claimed that members of the Anglo-Australian leadership team discriminated against him because of his race and colour, including by falsely blaming him for unexpected staff departures, falsely accusing him of being idle, suggesting they were unique people and did not need his leadership, and fabricating allegations of misconduct against him. He claimed they were trying to persuade him to quit.
The charity denied that any of the alleged conduct arose due to the complainant’s race. The charity claimed tensions arose between the complainant and long-standing staff with a charity background because the complainant had previously been employed in the corporate sector. The charity acknowledged that there was poor communication with staff about the complainant’s role and objectives and robust change-management processes were not in place.
The complaint was resolved. The parties agreed to end the employment relationship. The charity agreed to pay the complainant his statutory entitlements, pay him $22,000 as general damages, write to him expressing regret for the events giving rise to his complaint and provide him with a statement of service.
Year
Discrimination type
Racial Discrimination Act
Grounds
Colour
National origin/extraction
Race
Areas
Employment
Other section 9
Compensation;
Statement of regret - private;
Statement of service
Amount
$22,000