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Beware Victimising Workplace Grievants

BY Ivan Israelstam, Chief Executive of Labour Law Management Consulting. He may be contacted on (011) 888-7944 or 0828522973 or via e-mail address: ivan@labourlawadvice.co.za. Website: www.labourlawadvice.co.za.


All grievances should be treated with great care in order to establish their validity and to ensure that they are given appropriate attention. Some employers are too soft and trusting when receiving grievances and give in even before establishing whether the grievance has merit.

However, more often employers go to the opposite extreme and brush all grievances aside because they feel that they are not there ‘to deal with employees’ sob stories’ or because the statutes do not provide for the lodging of grievances. While it is true that no statute specifically requires employers to solve their employee’s personal problems there are many circumstances under which employers would be foolish to ignore grievances. For example:

Employers are reminded of the expensive consequences for the employer in the Real Security case we discussed some months ago. There the employer had to pay tens of thousands of rand in compensation to the employee who had been sexually harassed by a supervisor because the employee’s grievances were ignored by the employer.

Employees whose salaries are not paid to them and receive no satisfaction from the employer when expressing such grievances are, under specific circumstances, entitled by law to resign and take the employer to the CCMA or bargaining council for constructive dismissal (a type of forced resignation).

Some employers not only ignore all employee grievances but also victimise certain employees for raising those grievances. Such employees are arbitrarily labelled as ‘trouble-makers’ and are told to ‘like it or take a hike’. In Sweet (James) v Namcon Logistics (Pty) Ltd[2021] 1 BLLR 104 (LC) a warehouse manager was dismissed for negligence. He claimed that his dismissal was automatically unfair because it was implemented in response to grievances he had lodged. The Court found that:

The applicant was awarded compensation equal to 24 months’ remuneration and the respondent was directed to pay his costs. In the light of the above it is crucial for employers who receive grievances:

To book for our 5 November webinar on BALANCING WORKPLACE EFFECTIVENESS WITH LEGAL COMPLIANCE please contact Ronni on ronni@labourlawadvice.co.za or 0845217492.