Sexual harassment: CCMA rules against Department of Agriculture
Department should have acted because harassment took place on its premises
- The Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) has ordered the Department of Agriculture to pay out an employee who was subjected to sexual harassment on its premises.
- The department did not act on her complaint because the sexual harassment took place during a union meeting which the department said was not authorised.
- But the CCMA ruled that the department should have investigated the complaint because both were employees âand it happened on the premises while they were on dutyâ.
An employer must act when sexual harassment takes place on its premises, even if this is during a meeting which the employer has not authorised, the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) has found.
An employee of the Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development, who was subjected to âgross sexual harassmentâ at a union meeting on the departmentâs premises, has been awarded 10 months salary by the CCMA.
And the department, which ignored her complaint telling her to âtake it up with the unionâ, has been found to be in breach of the Employment Equity Amendment Act and directed to take immediate steps to prevent any similar incidences against her or any other employee.
Evidence before commissioner Jackson Mthukwane was that the woman, a long-serving staff member, had attended a Public Servants Association shop stewardsâ meeting in June 2019.
The meeting was held during office hours at the departmentâs premises.
While seated at the table, she noticed a colleague, referred to only as âNeilâ, âstaring at her intenselyâ. His trousers were unbuttoned and he was masturbating.
Shocked, she leapt to her feet and cried out in protest. She wanted to leave but the chairperson told her not to. He then questioned Neil who admitted what he was doing and said he was sorry. He was ordered to leave the room.
The woman said she later went to the bathroom and cried. The next day she lodged a formal grievance of sexual harassment in terms of the departmentâs procedure. But more than a month later, she was informed that the department was âunable to assist herâ because the incident occurred between her and a fellow union member while they were meeting in the interests of the union. She was told to refer her grievance to the union. Instead she approached the CCMA.
âShe was traumatised by the experience, especially in light of the fact that no action was taken against âNeilâ. The first psychiatrist she consulted was a man who was insensitive. He told her he could not understand why it had affected her so badly as she was a married woman,â Mthukwane said in his recent ruling.
The department advised her that it would not pay her medical bills and she was later told that it would not investigate the claim because âthe meeting was not approvedâ.
An employee of an agency that was contracted to the department testified about another occasion when he caught Neil masturbating in front of another female employee who âput one hand over her eyes and walked very fast to her officeâ. He reported this incident to the manager in charge of Neil and later heard that Neil had been given a warning.
Mthakwane, in assessing the evidence, said the woman had been âclear and conciseâ and she was to be believed. He ruled that Neilâs conduct constituted sexual harassment as defined by law.
âSadly the department failed to investigate her grievance. It has a comprehensive sexual harassment policy which clearly states that all employees are bound by it. It is clear that it was seized with the jurisdiction to investigate the complaint. They were both employees and it happened on the premises while they were on duty. The fact that the meeting was allegedly unauthorised is an irrelevant consideration.â
The commissioner said the contractorâs evidence was also âtrustworthyâ and it showed a pattern on the part of âNeilâ to sexually harass employees.
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