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Law expects employers to go the extra mile

Case shows injured employees must be accommodated

By Ivan Israelstam

The Labour Relations Act requires that employers consider dismissing incapacitated employees only as a last resort. While every employer is expected to go the extra mile, the larger and stronger the employer is the more it will be expected to do to accommodate the employee.

For example, in the case of Standard Bank of SA v CCMA (2008, 4 BLLR 356) the employee, after 15 years of loyal and exemplary service, was injured on duty. The damage to her back made it impossible for her to carry on with her normal duties.

The employee was eventually dismissed for incapacity, but this was after a long period during which the employer made continued efforts to accommodate the employ including the following: 

  • The bank requested advice from a medical practitioner on how to help the employee.
  • It looked for and found a series of alternative positions for the employee.
  • Even though the alternative posts were more junior than her original job, the bank did not reduce the employee's pay.
  • When the employee was in pain, her boss would send her home for the day.
  • On one occasion, the employer gave the employee four months' paid leave in order to allow her to get well.


All of the above did not satisfy the court, because the employer had failed to:

  • Act on the medical practitioner's recommendation to get advice from an occupational therapist on how to accommodate the employee.
  • Give the employee a telephone headset and a comfortable chair in order to assist her to work with less pain.
  • Allow the employee to do the job of entering computer data out of fear that her medication might interfere with her concentration.
  • Consider the employee's request to work half-day.
  • Allow the employee to state a case for herself on her own behalf, before dismissing her.
  • Consult technical experts before taking the dismissal decision.


The court concluded from the above that the employer had not really wanted to keep the employee.

It was acknowledged that the employer had genuine problems in keeping the employee on in its employ because:

  • The employee had been absent for 74 days in one year and 116 days in the following year.
  • The employee admitted that she struggled to cope with the alternative jobs.
  • The employee often needed to go home early due to pain.


Despite the above, the court found that:

  • The bank would have been able to accommodate the employee because the cost of doing so would have been affordable for the bank.
  • The employee's inability to cope with the new work was partly due to the employer's reluctance to give her headphones and a comfortable chair.


The court therefore found that the dismissal was unfair and that the bank had discriminated unfairly against the employee.

This outcome confirms that any employer in such a situation must:

  • Try to change the physical work station of an injured employee if such injury interferes with the employee's ability to work.
  • Try to change the employee's tasks.
  • Consult with the employee on these matters before dismissing him/her.
  • Obtain and carry out the recommendations of medical experts, unless it can prove that this is truly not viable.
  • Before deciding that nothing more can be done to save the employee's job, get advice from a reputable labour law expert.

 

Ivan Israelstam is chief executive of Labour Law Management Consulting. He can be contacted on 011-888-7944 or This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Our appreciation to Ivan and The Star newspaper for permission to publish this article.

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