News

How your work WhatsApp group could get you sacked – and how to avoid it

WhatsApp messages are increasingly being used as evidence during bitter employment tribunals, with companies warned they could be at risk of having to pay out hefty fines if they aren’t monitored.

The number of tribunals that have referenced the messaging app has almost tripled since 2019, from 150 to 427 hearings in 2023, according to figures from the HM Courts and Tribunals Service.

The data was obtained by law firm Nockolds as employers were warned misuse of the platform could see them having to pay out thousands of pounds in compensation.

NatWest this month announced it was banning staff from using WhatsApp, Skype and Facebook in an effort to stick to rules over workers’ use of unauthorised electric messaging as well as to avoid fines.

Lawyers have warned employees could be sacked for sending derogatory private messages about their managers or colleagues.

Making jibes about someone’s age, 𝑠e𝑥, 𝑠e𝑥ual orientation, gender reassignment, or religious beliefs could also land staff in hot water.

Jokes about someone’s appearance are also ‘big risks’ as they could be seen as offensive.

Ian Jones, the director and principal solicitor at Spencer Shaw, told The Telegraph: ‘If there is a sufficient work connection to the WhatsApp group, almost inevitable if the members are a group of work colleagues exclusively, then any wrongdoing by employee – harassing comments, discriminatory behaviour (even if unintended), bullying, reference to 𝑠e𝑥 or 𝑠e𝑥ual issues – will mean that the employee may be liable to disciplinary or even legal action.’

Dawn Dickson, a partner at Anderson Strathern, added that it didn’t matter what the sender intended but how the message is perceived and the impact it had.

‘If this kind of behaviour continues unchecked, it could lead to harassment claims or even constructive dismissal, which can be expensive for employers,’ she warned.

A judge ruled in October 2023 that excluding colleagues from WhatsApp group chats can be discrimination.

Employment Judge Sarah George said bosses need to have a good justification for failing to include staff in chat groups – even if they are absent.

Being left out of messages while workmates are included can be viewed as an ‘unfavourable act’, she added at an employment tribunal hearing in Watford.

Her ruling came in the case of Mark Brosnan, 60, who was awarded compensation after claiming he was discriminated against while suffering from a bad back.

One of Mr Brosnan’s complaints was that he was left out of a work group chat to ‘communicate important safety information’ because he was off sick with the recurring injury. And a tribunal agreed that being left out was unjustified.

He was awarded £134,411 in compensation for the company’s ‘completely unreasonable’ conduct in proceedings where they did ‘literally nothing’ to aid his ability to return to work.

This included £15,000 in injury to feelings, £7,000 personal injury and over £25,000 in loss of future earnings.

Related Posts

Keir Starmer refuses to say taxes won’t rise AGAIN during PMQs clashes despite Rachel Reeves making the vow to business – as Labour’s Budget descends deeper into shambles

Sir Keir Starmer today refused to say that taxes will not rise again despite Rachel Reeves making the pledge to business. In bad-tempered clashes at PMQs, the premier insisted he was ‘not going to write the next five years of Budgets right here at this despatch box’. Tory leader Kemi Badenoch swiped that the burden would inevitably rise again under Labour – and also goaded Sir Keir over millions of Brits signing a petition demanding a fresh general election.

Iconic butchers say ‘it is sad for London and a nightmare for us’ as historic meat market is set to close after 900 years

Butchers at Smithfield Market told of their devastation today as City bosses took the decision to close the world’s oldest meat market after 900 years at the heart of London life. Traders at the iconic English institution, which will close along with Billingsgate fish market – itself established in 1850 – described the move as a ‘sad day’ for the capital and a ‘nightmare’ for them personally. Butcher Joe Howgate, 25, told MailOnline: ‘It’s been here for 800 or 900 years, it’s not nice the corporation has said “it’s done”. It’s sad for London, there is a lot of history here, it’s a long time and for them to say ‘‘that’s it, we’re going to call it a day’’ is sad and unusual.’

Britain’s car industry is in crisis due to lack of demand for electric cars, warns boss of Ford – as she demands incentives to convince drivers to switch from petrol or diesel motors

Britain’s car industry is in crisis due to a lack of demand for electric cars, the boss of Ford’s UK arm has warned. Lisa Brankin, the chairman and managing director of Ford UK, called for the Government to urgently introduce ‘incentives’ such as tax breaks to convince drivers to switch away from petrol and diesel. She said Ford has invested ‘significantly’ in the production and development of EVs, with ‘well over’ £350million invested around electrification in the UK, adding: ‘So we kind of need to make it work.’

Netflix reality star is caught trying to smuggle £150,000 of drugs into UK after a friend offered her £18,000 and an all-expenses paid trip to Thailand

A Netflix reality star has avoided jail after she was caught trying to smuggle £150,000 worth of drugs into the UK on a flight back from Thailand. Olga Bednarska, 27, was arrested in October after being stopped by customs officers at Manchester Airport with two large suitcases containing 40kg of cannabis. According to The Manchester Evening News, the Too Hot to Handle star claimed she was given the bags by a friend called ‘Tex’.

Labour is accused of putting off urgently needed reforms to cure sicknote Britain and get two million people into jobs

Labour was last night accused of putting off urgently needed reforms to cure sicknote Britain. Ministers are launching a drive to ‘get Britain working again’ and achieve an ‘ambitious’ target of getting another 2 million people into jobs. But the white paper published today is solely focused on employment support, including a revamp of Jobcentres as well as extra NHS appointments in unemployment hotspots.

Tucker Carlson gives grim prediction for the future of mainstream media

Tucker Carlson made the brutally grim prediction that mainstream media and cable news will meet its downfall in the next decade. The ex-Fox News anchor – who has thrived hosting his show on X ever since his departure from the network in 2023 – said in an interview released Monday that the networks will become extinct in the near future. ‘There’s nothing shallower, dumber, more repetitive, more controlled than cable news. I think I can say that with authority,’ he told The Chief Nerd on X show, citing his decades at MSNBC, CNN and Fox News.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *