The man worked at a government job (in other words, paid for with my tax dollars) and he was fired for surfing porn on the internet over 7 months.
He appealed to the labour board and got his job back.
His employer argued that it was "time theft".
His job pays between $76,010 and $104,026 a year, and he admits to spending from 50 to 75 per cent of his time surfing porn for a period of 7 months, yet he argues that it was not time theft.
Now that he is reinstated, they are asking for back pay.
His lawyer says that time theft would be more like falsifying a time card, and constitutes actual intent to fraud.
They argue that he was not intending to defraud, but that his superiors did not provide him with enough work, and obviously did not follow through on supervision, or he wouldn't have been left so idle for such a long period of time.
I can't understand this.
Were his coworkers picking up the slack for him?
Did that involve any overtime for them?
If someone in any other type of job was so lacking in work to keep busy, the company would downsize.
This is a government job. If he had that much free time on his hands, why does that job even exist?
He appealed to the labour board and got his job back.
After an internal investigation found 335 sexual images on his work computer, Franklin Andrews, a policy advisor at Citizenship and Immigration Canada, admitted that between September and November of 2008 and between May and August of 2009 he spent 50%-100% of his paid time at work finding and looking at pornographic pictures.
Consequently, he was fired.
But after appealing to the decision and basing his defense on the grounds that he was bored and didn't have a sufficient amount of work to keep him busy, the Public Service Labour Relations Board reinstated his position in early August.
The labour board decided that because Andrews' mangers had failed to manage him, because Andrews had been a government employee, with an otherwise clear record, for such a lengthy period of time, and because Andrews had freely admitted guilt, less "heavy-handed" forms of discipline, like rehabilitation and correction, would be more appropriate.
Consequently, he was fired.
But after appealing to the decision and basing his defense on the grounds that he was bored and didn't have a sufficient amount of work to keep him busy, the Public Service Labour Relations Board reinstated his position in early August.
The labour board decided that because Andrews' mangers had failed to manage him, because Andrews had been a government employee, with an otherwise clear record, for such a lengthy period of time, and because Andrews had freely admitted guilt, less "heavy-handed" forms of discipline, like rehabilitation and correction, would be more appropriate.
His employer argued that it was "time theft".
His job pays between $76,010 and $104,026 a year, and he admits to spending from 50 to 75 per cent of his time surfing porn for a period of 7 months, yet he argues that it was not time theft.
Now that he is reinstated, they are asking for back pay.
His lawyer says that time theft would be more like falsifying a time card, and constitutes actual intent to fraud.
They argue that he was not intending to defraud, but that his superiors did not provide him with enough work, and obviously did not follow through on supervision, or he wouldn't have been left so idle for such a long period of time.
I can't understand this.
Were his coworkers picking up the slack for him?
Did that involve any overtime for them?
If someone in any other type of job was so lacking in work to keep busy, the company would downsize.
This is a government job. If he had that much free time on his hands, why does that job even exist?
Comment