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Industrial Relations Commission of New South Wales |
Last Updated: 11 March 2010
Industrial Relations Commission
of New South Wales
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CITATION :
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Australian Services Union of New South Wales (o/b J Davidson) and Hunter
Water Corporation [2004] NSWIRComm 7
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PARTIES :
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Australian Services Union of New South Wales (o/b J Davidson)
Hunter Water Corporation |
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FILE NUMBER:
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IRC 5277 of 2003
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CORAM:
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Harrison DP
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CATCHWORDS :
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Application re unfair dismissal - alleged misconduct - overtime payments
claimed - work not performed or required to be performed.
Held - misconduct proven - termination not harsh, unreasonable or unjust. |
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LEGISLATION CITED :
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CASES CITED :
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Electricity Commission of New South Wales t/as Pacific Power v Nieass and
Others (1995) 81 IR 46
Four Sons Pty Limited v Sakchai Limsiripothong [2000] NSWIRComm 38 Lorenzato and Sydney Water Corporation [2002] NSWIRComm 277 |
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HEARING DATES:
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12/01/2003; 12/04/2003; 12/05/2003
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DATE OF JUDGMENT:
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02/05/2004
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LEGAL REPRESENTATIVES: |
APPLICANT Ms A Milson Australian Services Union of NSW RESPONDENT COUNSEL Mr R Warren |
JUDGMENT:
- 1 -
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS COMMISSION OF NEW SOUTH
WALES
CORAM: HARRISON DP
Thursday, 5 February
2004
MATTER NO IRC 5277 OF 2003
AUSTRALIAN SERVICED UNION
OF NEW SOUTH WALES (O/B JEFFREY RAYMOND DAVIDSON) AND HUNTER WATER
CORPORATION
Application re unfair dismissal pursuant to s84 of the
Industrial Relations Act 1996 ("the Act")
DECISION
[2004] NSWIRComm 7
1 The
application in this matter was filed on 23 September 2003 and subject to
proceedings for the purpose of Conciliation and Directions
on 8 October 2003.
The proceedings established that the matter could not be settled by
conciliation. Directions were issued to bring
the matter to hearing on 1, 4 and
5 December 2003 on the estimate of three days required.
2 On hearing Ms A
Milson of the Australian Services Union, New South Wales Branch
(“the union”) appeared on behalf of Mr J Davidson (“the
applicant”).
3 Mr R Warren of Counsel appeared on behalf of
the respondent, Hunter Water Corporation (HWC).
4 Ms Milson
brought evidence from the applicant who was subject to cross examination by Mr
Warren. Ms Milson tendered affidavits from Mr Donahoo, Mr Hughes,
Mr Bucci, Mr Matthews, and Mr Watts, employees of the respondent at the relevant
time. The respondent did not require these deponents for cross examination.
5 Mr Warren brought evidence from Mr Witherdin, the applicant’s
supervisor at the relevant time; Ms Postlethwaite, employed by the respondent
as
Manager, Compliance and Review; and Mr Hinchy employed by the respondent as
Manager, Operations Group.
THE EVIDENCE
6 The applicant has been employed by the respondent since 1978. Employment
was terminated on 17 September 2003 on the grounds of serious
misconduct.
7 The misconduct alleged is that the applicant wilfully and knowingly
claimed overtime payment for work either: not performed, or
not requested and
not authorised to be performed.
8 The letter of termination handed to
the applicant on 17 September 2003 (Att. 6 to Exhibit 1 and elsewhere in
evidence) further states:
Your actions are entirely unsatisfactory in that they reflect a pattern of wilful conduct over a period of time designed to deceive and thus obtain for yourself a financial benefit to which you were not entitled. It is fundamental to the employment relationship that the Corporation has trust and confidence in its employees particularly where they are a supervisor. It is not acceptable to continue the employment of a person where we have a reasonable satisfaction that their behaviour has been dishonest and they have acted contrary to the best interests of the Corporation and its staff.
Consequently, the decision has been taken to summarily dismiss you from the service of the Corporation on the grounds of your serious misconduct, effective immediately. This decision has not been taken lightly and consideration has been given to your record in the organisation and your total length of service with the Corporation.
It should be noted that the Corporation is obliged to refer this matter to the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC). It should also be noted that investigations into your overtime claims are continuing.
9 The allegations are denied on
the grounds that:
· The applicant applied the overtime policy put in
place by the respondent;
· The allegations arose from an interpretation
of the policy and flawed procedures regarding overtime;
· Claims have
never been queried in the past;
· Denial of substantive and procedural
fairness arising from an absence of warning over a period of six years that the
applicant
has applied consistent work practices.
The duties and
responsibilities of the applicant
10 The applicant is a licensed
electrician and holds Post Trades Electronic Certificates 1 and 2, Electrical
Trades Certificate, and
a Qualified Supervisor's Certificate.
11 The
applicant commenced employment with the respondent in 1978 as an electrical
fitter. From that time until 1996 he occupied various
positions with the
respondent and a subsidiary company, Hunter WaterTech. In 1996 the applicant
commenced as a technical officer
with the respondent in the establishment of an
internal services group known as "Electrical Mechanical Maintenance" (EMM). In
1997
the applicant was appointed Supervisor Communications and Electronics with
the responsibility to manage and control telemetry and
instrumentation systems.
This work entailed managing day to day and after hours work relating to all
facets of the maintenance contract
for telemetry and instrumentation. It is the
applicant's evidence that he held an autonomous role within the group and dealt
with
after hours work as required.
12 The evidence is that around the
year 2000 EMM and Operations were amalgamated and in 2001 came under the
management of Mr Hinchy
as Operations Manager. The applicant's evidence is that
his duties and the way in which he discharged them did not change.
13 The
respondent operated a system known as "Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition"
(SCADA) for the maintenance and control of
all assets. An associated system,
described as "Assets Operation Maintenance System" (AOMS) is a computer based
system on which work
required to be done is described and allocated a job number
for communication to field personnel. A control room operator takes information
from SCADA to determine work requirements. The process of job allocation and
communication by AOMS includes information on job priority
which has significant
impact on overtime authorisation discussed later.
14 The applicant
deposed that his duties involved the authorisation of all work to be undertaken
as well as response to failures as
required. The applicant deposed that this
duty included the authorisation of overtime of employment for whom he was
responsible and
that his personal overtime claims were submitted to Mr Witherdin
for approval.
15 The applicant's evidence at point 8 of his affidavit is
that his understanding of the overtime authorisation procedure was that
in his
position as supervisor he was authorised to undertake overtime of work he
considered necessary in the maintenance and repair
of the respondent's assets.
16 The applicant deposed that not all work needed to be performed on
site, putting that telemetry system failures could be rectified
using one or
more of the following methods:
· Attending site to replace faulty
equipment;
· Remote log in via Hunter System Access Network;
· Peer to peer (site to site) routing via laptop computer and radio
interface; and
· Program testing on laptop computer remote from site
with on site follow-up.
OVERTIME POLICY
17 Overtime is
paid in accordance with the Hunter Water Corporation Employees (State) Award
1999 332 IG 1307 ("the Award"). Overtime occurs either as: "continuous
overtime", i.e. when work continues uninterrupted beyond normal
closing time;
"call-out overtime", i.e. when staff are recalled to work after cessation of
normal work; "pre-planned overtime" which
occurs on a needs basis and relevant
circumstances; or "call support overtime", i.e. when staff are called but not
required to leave
home to respond to a problem. Call support overtime is a
minimum one hour payment at overtime rates irrespective of the number of
calls
dealt with in the hour.
18 Mr Hinchy's evidence, which is not contested,
is that the type of work required of electrical/mechanical staff is classified
into
breakdown and non-breakdown, the latter further categorised as scheduled
maintenance, condition-based maintenance, miscellaneous
work, and "other" which
includes external work. Mr Hinchy deposed that all jobs issued by AOMS are coded
accordingly.
19 Mr Hinchy's evidence in respect to documentation and
communication of overtime policy is found in his affidavit (exhibit 10) at
points 14 to 18 below:
14. The Corporation's requirements for response and completion times for different priority works are documented and have been communicated to staff through specific training sessions, for example in January 1999 and again in early 2000. Priority 1 jobs are highest priority and require commencement within two hours and completion within four hours. Priority 2 jobs normally require commencement within one working day.
At weekends however, these Priority 2 jobs are referred to the No. 1 on call electrical person for review as to whether the job can be held until the next working day. If they are unsure on these or wish to discuss with someone they are able to contact a rostered senior engineering officer. Priority 3 jobs require response within three working days and completion within five working days. Priority 4 jobs have a specific timeframe nominated.
15. In response to rising overtime costs within the electrical/mechanical group during the 2001/02 financial year, I formed the view that greater rigour was required by Field Supervisors for controlling non-essential overtime and my memorandum of 8 March 2002 (copy attached as Annexure 2) was issued. This memo was addressed to the three electrical/mechanical supervisors and I requested Mr David Witherdin to issue it to them. A further clarifying memorandum to them was issued by Mr David Witherdin on 26 February 2003 which also had attached the 8 March 2002 memo. A copy is attached at Annexure 3.
16. In respect to the overtime approval process, there is a clear distinction between that for breakdowns compared to that for non-breakdowns. Also in respect to breakdowns there are clear distinctions for approval of overtime between those of a high priority compared to those of a low priority.
17. For non-breakdown categories of work, ie scheduled maintenance, condition based maintenance, miscellaneous work and other work, the guidelines are that the working of overtime requires prior approval of the Operations Engineer, Mr David Witherdin or myself. Refer to my memorandum of 8 March 2002, Annexure 2.
18. For breakdown work on priorities lower than Priority 1, staff require prior approval to work overtime at Supervisor level or above (Monday-Friday) ie on the one (1) up principle (for example a tradesman would be expected to seek approval from a Field Supervisor, and a Field Supervisor would be expected to seek approval from the Operations Engineer or myself). At weekends the attendance of Priority 2 jobs is subject to review by the No. 1 "on call" Electrical/Mechanical person as noted under 14 above. In respect to Priority 1 breakdowns (Monday-Friday) overtime maybe worked on these jobs without prior approval when the overtime is worked continuously on the same day the job is allocated. Overtime work on subsequent days on these Priority 1 jobs however, requires approval at supervisor level or above, on the one (1) up approval principle, outlined above.
20 The memorandums referred
to by Mr Hinchy are annexed to exhibit 10 and set out below.
Annexure 2.1 Memorandum from Mr Hinchy of 8 March 2002:
As Field Supervisors within the electrical/mechanical group you have accountability for authorisation of overtime for staff under your control.
As a general principle all overtime is subject to approval of supervisory/management staff and the concept of blanket approval for work on 'breakdown' type jobs irrespective of priority is fundamentally flawed as it bypasses this accountability.
There are concerns that overtime on low priority jobs and 'non-contract' type jobs is not adequately scrutinised and justified and is being done without any reference to yourselves.
The following actions are required for immediate implementation:
1. Each of you is to enforce with your respective staff the requirement for prior approval of overtime on low priority works. A record of approvals/non-approvals shall be submitted to David Witherdin weekly. The record shall include brief reasons for approval.
2. 'Non-contract', miscellaneous or scheduled maintenance works requiring overtime shall be subject to approval of David Witherdin or Manager Operations (in David's absence). A weekly record is to be kept of approvals indicating reason.
3. If any Supervisor is required to work overtime as under 1 or 2 above then prior approval shall be sought from David Witherdin (or Manager Operations in his absence).
Annexure 3, Memorandum from Mr Witherdin, 26 February 2003:
Further to the Manager Operations memorandum of 8 March 2002 (attached), further clarification on the authorisation of overtime is detailed below:-
Prior approval of planned overtime is required for Priority 1 jobs where further work is required on days subsequent to the start date of the job. For example where a job is logged on 5/2/03 no prior approval is required to undertake overtime on 5/2/03 but if subsequent overtime work is considered necessary on 6/2/03 or subsequent days then prior authorisation must be obtained.
The basis for this is that once the first response has been completed and service has been restored the overall completion of the job generally no longer requires an urgent response.
The following actions are required for implementation:
1. Each of you is to communicate this clarification with your respective staff. As with other works requiring authorisation of overtime a record of approvals/non-approvals shall be submitted to myself weekly. The record shall include brief reasons for approval.
2 If any Supervisor is required to work overtime as under 1 above then prior approval shall be sought from myself (or Manager Operations in my absence).
21 The procedures
detailed in the above annexures are supported by form stationery providing for
detail of work and approvals as required
by the policy.
22 Despite
substantial evidence of compliance with overtime policy and procedures and use
of approval forms by Mr Davidson in respect
to subordinates (where he has
approved overtime), and himself (where Mr Witherdin has approved overtime), Mr
Davidson maintains that
the policy does not apply to him in his supervisory role
and that he retains an authority to exercise his own discretion to work
overtime
regardless of job priority or authority constraints found in the policy.
23 The evidence of Messrs Donahoo, Hughes, Bucci, Matthews and Watts
does not assist. Each attests to the technical competence and
application toduty
of Mr Davidson, suggesting that the EMM group operated in a semi-autonomous
manner set apart from the supervision
of Mr Hinchy and Mr Witherdin on a
"technical basis". Mr Donahoo's evidence is that in the time he supervised Mr
Davidson prior to
Messrs Hinchy and Witherdin, overtime claims put to him were
all reasonable and approved. The evidence of the other witnesses is
that they
regarded Mr Davidson as the effective leader who controlled overtime in a proper
and effective manner having regard to
responsibility for after hours maintenance
of assets.
24 This evidence is contradictory to the extent that it
suggests proper compliance with overtime policy and semi-autonomous operation
and engages in a denial of management authority which is impossible to sustain.
INCIDENT GIVING RISE TO ALLEGATIONS
25 The evidence of Mr
Witherdin is that he held Mr Davidson in a position of trust and respect,
accordingly not subjecting requests
for overtime approval to detailed scrutiny,
however, held concerns at the level of overtime worked.
26 Mr Witherdin
describes his concerns and relationship with Mr Davisdon at points 15 and 16 of
his affidavit (exhibit 8) in the following
terms:
15. Mr Davidson was paid a high level of overtime, almost double the next highest overtime earner over the last two financial years. Although he claimed a high level of overtime, I believed that the basis for the overtime claims was legitimate. I did have concerns for Mr Davidson's health and family circumstances given the high number of hours he was apparently working. I made a mobile phone call to Mr Davidson in early 2003 and raised my concerns with him. I said words to the effect of "Is your level of overtime impacting on your health and your family life?" Mr Davidson paused for a long while and that said words to the effect of "It's not a problem, things are going fine and you should not be concerned." The tone of his voice indicated that he was agitated by my question. I then said words to the effect to Mr Davidson of "I have responsibilities for your safety as your manager and I don't want you to fall asleep behind the wheel of your car one day due to being overworked."16. During my time working with Mr Davidson I consider I established a good professional relationship with him. Mr Davidson appeared to be technically competent. I had fairly regular contact with Mr Davidson but it was usually at my initiation. It was clear to me that he preferred to run his own area with minimal involvement from management.
27 It is Mr Witherdin's evidence
that on 12 August 2003 he undertook a routine review of overtime for the period
4 August to 10 August
2003, noting that both Mr Davidson and a Mr Terry Hughes
had submitted claims for overtime payment for Job No 27100 at Silver Ridge
Water
Pumping Station on 10 August 2003. Mr Witherdin deposed that this was not
unusual and he assumed that it must have been an
"involved job", approving both
claims for payment.
28 Mr Witherdin's evidence is that on the morning of
13 August 2003 he encountered Mr Hughes during the course of routine field
visits
to supervisors and enquired about the complexity of Job No 27100. Mr
Witherdin describes Mr Hughes' response at point 21 of exhibit
8 in the
following terms:
Mr Hughes gave me a shocked look and said "No, as far as I know Jeff was not involved with the job". I then said "Did you call Jeff to offer you some assistance with the job?" Mr Hughes then said words to the effect of "I provided call support to Louise Benson in Dispatch and I was not required to attend the site as the fault eventually self-corrected".
29 Mr Witherdin's evidence is that
he subsequently reviewed SCADA and AOMS records in respect to Job No 27100 and,
subsequent to discussion
with Mr Hinchy, spoke with the Control Centre Operator,
Ms Benson, who informed him that she had allocated the job to Mr Hughes and
that
there were no other staff involved with the job and further that the fault had
"self-corrected". Mr Witherdin's evidence is
that on review of AOMS Ms Benson
was surprised to see that Mr Davidson had time charged to the job.
30 Mr
Witherdin's evidence is that he subsequently met with Mr Hinchy, Ms
Roach(Relieving Manager, Employer Services) and Ms Postlethwaite
to inform them
of the circumstances. This meeting resolved that Mr Witherdin would undertake a
review of SCADA, AOMS and overtime
records back to 30 June 2003.
INVESTIGATION AND REVIEW
31 Mr Davidson was invited to a
meeting with Management representatives on 20 August 2003. He was informed that
the meeting concerned
problems with overtime claims and that he would not be
required to answer any questions at this meeting "although it is a serious
matter". Mr Davidson was informed that he could have a witness present.
32 At this meeting Mr Davidson was provided with a document setting out
details of ten overtime claims requiring explanation (Att.
4 to Ex 10). Mr
Davidson was suspended on full pay and advised that he should seek appropriate
advice.
33 A detailed written response was provided by the ASU on behalf
of Mr Davidson on 22 August 2003 (Att.2 to Ex 1).
34 The Union contends
that Jobs No 26959, 26960 and 26963 are resolved issues, putting that these and
all other claims are valid and
consistent with policy. The Union notes that from
4 July 2003 Mr Davidson worked 109 jobs and been absent on various forms of
leave
for seven working days in the relevant period.
35 This response by
the Union on behalf of Mr Davidson was subject to further detailed investigation
and discussion between the parties.
Subsequent to this process six specific
allegations of improper claims for overtime were put to Mr Davidson in writing
on 29 August
2003.
36 Mr Hinchy's evidence is that the six specific
allegations were based on incidences where sufficient evidence was available at
the
time. Mr Hinchy deposed that sufficient evidence did not exist in respect to
other matters, however Mr Davidson and the Union were
advised that the
investigation was ongoing.
37 A written response to the six specific
allegations was received from Mr Davidson on 4 September 2003.
38 The
six specific allegations upon which the decision to terminate Mr Davidson's
employment was taken are set out in the correspondence
of 29 August 2003 (Att. 6
to Ex 10).
39 A further written response was received from the Union on
behalf of Mr Davidson in respect to these six matters. Attached to these
explanations is a plea by the Union that Mr Davisdon's length of unblemished
service and contribution to the HWC be taken into consideration,
as well as
personal difficulties associated with a long illness and the passing of his
father in the months preceding the events
giving rise to the allegations.
40 All of the information then available to the HWC (and the Union on
behalf of Mr Davidson) was subject to further detailed investigation
and
analysis by Ms Postlethwaite (whose report is found as Annexure 8 to Ex 10, Mr
Hinchy's affidavit) and in her own evidence (Ex
9).
41 Ms
Postlethwaite's report acknowledges that each of the jobs identified in the
allegations are legitimate priority 1 breakdown
jobs, or priority 2 breakdown
jobs arising at the weekend, and as such covered by a blanket authorisation to
work continuous overtime,
or are authorised by dispatch under clear guidelines.
Ms Postlethwaite notes that: "The issue of the allegations goes to whether
Mr
Davidson's claimed involvement actually occurred and if so whether is was
appropriate and in accordance with the authorisation
policy".
42 The
relevant detail of Ms Postlethwaite's report is set out below.
Job
26512 Medowie 4 July
Job Details
§ Priority 1
breakdown. Telemetry Fault.
§ Allocated to Mr Davidson at
9.42am
§ Time booked by Mr Davidson 3pm to 5.30pm - 2.5 hours of which 2
hours is overtime.
Why did the claim initially appear
suspicious?
This Priority 1 job was logged at 9.42 am. It was not clear
why response to the job had been delayed well beyond the 2 hour response
target
until 3pm resulting in an overtime payment, particularly when, in the interim
period, Mr Davidson had worked on lower priority
jobs.
Mr Davidson's
Initial Responses
§ First Written (22 August)
o He was contacted
by Dispatch at approximately 10am in the morning
o He instructed Dispatch to
monitor and the fault cleared so he did not attend the job
o He visited the
site around 3pm as he lives in the area
o He removed a length of chain from
the antennae
o Poll and error counts were checked on SCADA
§
Interview (22 August)
o "My records show I was there around 3pm"
o "There
was a bit of chain around the antennae which I removed and left it at
that"
Relevant Evidence Obtained
§ Mr Davidson's mobile
phone records show him making a call via New Lambton mobile base at
3.28pm.
§ Mobile base station access between Newcastle and Medowie was
tested by Manager Compliance and Review. In the Medowie area connection
occurred
only via Salt Ash and Raymond Terrace mobile bases.
§ The Medowie site
was visited by Manager Compliance and Review. The antennae is placed low on the
building and potentially would
require access by a low step ladder to clear a
chain wrapped around it.
§ SCADA log in records were checked and show no
log in by Mr Davidson on that day.
§ Mr Davidson's home is very close to
the Medowie site. Within 2 to 3 minutes drive.
Mr Davidson's
Subsequent Written Response
§ He must have been in transit from
Lambton to Medowie at approximately 3.30pm
§ He had to travel to his
home to obtain a ladder in order to remove the chain from the
antennae.
§ Time booked to the job was warranted on the basis of "travel
times and time taken to complete the work in failing
light".
Analysis
§ On the basis that the fault had cleared
early in the day, it is legitimate that Mr Davidson did not attend on
site within the required response time.
§ Given that the fault had
cleared in the morning it was not necessary to subsequently attend the site,
however, on the basis
that the site was very close to his home, it is not
unreasonable that Mr Davidson may have elected to drop in on his way home to
double check.
§ It is not possible to confirm whether Mr Davidson did or
did not actually attend on site at Medowie.
§ Mr Davidson's description
of events changed when confronted with the evidence of his mobile phone records
and in response to
the claim put to him that he had booked an excessive amount
of time to the job
o The time on which he was on site changed from 3 pm to an
unspecified later time
o He did not initially mention the need to return to
his house to obtain a ladder
§ If we accept this revised description
of events the approximate time spent on the job would be reduced from 2.5 hours
to a
minimum 1 hour (allowing 30 minutes travel from New Lambton at 3.30pm to
Medowie and 15 minutes for a round trip visit to collect
a ladder). Having
visited the site and taken into account Mr Davidson's description of removing
the chain from the antennae, 1 hour would still appear to be an excessive
amount of time.
§ The SCADA logs for 4 July do not support the claim
that poll and error counts were checked
Finding
That on the
balance of probability Mr Davidson's claim of 2 hours overtime on job 26512 is
excessive and not an honest reflection
of any time which may have actually been
worked on the job.
Job 26617 Dora Creek 9 July
Job
Details
§ Priority 1 breakdown. Telemetry Fault.
§ Allocated
to Robert Rogers at 5.02pm. Passed from Robert Rogers to Joe Wise via mobile
phone at 5.03pm. Attended on site by
Joe Wise from approximately 6pm.
§
Time booked by Mr Davidson 5pm to 7pm
Why did the claim initially
appear suspicious?
The AOMS Job Details sheet shows three people
associated with this job which appeared unusual given the nature of the fault.
Mr Davidson
claimed call support for two hours from the time of the original
alarm, but was not shown in AOMS as the contact person.
Mr Davidson's
Initial Responses
§ First Written (22 August)
o He had installed
equipment at the site earlier that day and deliberately left the radio data
cable unplugged so as not to cause
interference with other sites
o He had
instructed Dispatch to not log any jobs for the site as it was not fully
commissioned
o He was at home modifying the RTU database for the site and
rectifying link problems on SCADA
o The electrician on the job was attempting
to contact him whilst he was on SCADA and left messages on his phone.
§
Interview (22 August)
o The equipment installation work was "pretty well
completed but I had to do some work on the SCADA and some work on the database
so I instructed Dispatch not to log any jobs"
o Joe Wise "was trying to ring
me with messages on my mobile phone when I was on the SCADA doing database work
for that site so he
could recommission it the-next day"
o "I got involved
when I got a message on my phone that there was a problem out there"
o Joe
Wise "was ringing my home number when I was on (SCADA). I've only got one phone
line"
Relevant Evidence Obtained
§ Network logs show Mr
Davidson logged on to the HWC network at 6.07pm. There is no log information
regarding the corresponding
log out time.
§ SCADA logs show Mr Davidson
logged in from 6.06pm to 6.38pm, a total of 32 minutes
§ Mobile phone
records for Mr Wise show a single connected call to Mr Davidson's mobile phone
number at 6.23pm. This call was
routed directly through to Messagebank and a
message of approximately 28 seconds duration was left.
§ Mr Davidson's
mobile phone records were reviewed and confirm the incoming message from Mr
Wise. The records show that Mr Davidson
did not clear his mobile phone messages
until 7.46am the next day.
Mr Davidson's Subsequent Written
Response
§ "I did not speak to Mr Wise until the next day as
indicated by phone records"
§ "His number was in my call register and I
knew the job had been allocated to Mr Wise whilst accessing AOMS"
§ "I
modified SCADA diagrams and RTU points and also marked up schematic diagrams for
this site and used 26617 to cover my time
worked"
§ "I did not consider
there to be any impropriety on my behalf as the work I did was necessary to
commission the site. The job
was a priority 1 and worked on the same day of
issue"
§ "If Dispatch had followed my instructions no job would have
been logged and the work I carried out would have been done in
my own time that
night for the next day's commissioning as is the case on many
occasions."
Analysis
§ It is not possible to confirm
whether or not Mr Davidson was carrying out the work as described between 5pm
and 7pm, however,
network and system logs indicate that he spent at least some
of that time (from approximately 6.06pm) logged on to HWC systems.
§ Mr
Davidson's description of events regarding calls from Joe Wise was not
consistent with the phone evidence and changed when
confronted with that
evidence.
o There was only a single message from Mr Wise, not multiple
messages
o He initially claimed that receipt of messages from Mr Wise was the
trigger for his "involvement on the job", however, the message
was not accessed
until the next day
o Mr Davidson's subsequent claim that he had checked his
mobile phone handset call register and saw a call from Mr Wise is possible,
but
it is not plausible to believe that having done so he would not then listen to
the message left by Mr Wise.
§ Mr Davidson clearly describes the work
which he was undertaking as related to the commissioning of new equipment at the
site.
Such work is not breakdown work and as such is specifically subject to the
memo of 8 March 2002 requiring pre-authorisation.
§ Mr Davidson clearly
states that he was aware that there was not a genuine breakdown situation at the
site and instructed Dispatch
to this end.
§ Mr Davidson clearly states
that in the normal course of events he would not be paid for the commissioning
work he was carrying
out.
Finding
That Mr Davidson's claim for
2 hours overtime on job 26617 is in breach of the relevant policy which states
that prior approval is
required for non-contract, miscellaneous or scheduled
maintenance works (Operations Manager memo of 8 March 2002, addressed to Mr
Davidson). No pre-authorisation was sought for the work claimed to have been
performed.
The claim constitutes a deliberate action to obtain a payment
to which Mr Davidson was not entitled, on the basis that any work which
may have
been performed was for commissioning purposes and not done in response to the
Priority 1 breakdown job against which it
was charged.
Job 26678
Cooranbong 14 July
Job Details
§ Priority 1 breakdown.
Wet Well High Alarm. Both Pumps Failed. PDS500 replaced.
§ Allocated to
Jamie Watts at 3.33pm. Attended on site by Jamie Watts (from approximately
3.45pm) and Joe Wise (from approximately
4.30pm).
§ Time booked by Mr
Davidson 3.30pm to 6pm
Why did the claim initially appear
suspicious?
The AOMS Job Details sheet shows three people associated with
this job on site which appeared unusual. Mr Davidson's claimed time
began before
the job was logged and extended beyond both of the other two people on the
job.
Mr Davidson's Initial Responses
§ First Written (22
August)
o I recall Dispatch mentioning the job when calling off a previous
job
o I had other work at Morisset radio base so went to assist if
required
o I was not aware two other staff were in attendance at the time of
my departure
o I was not required as the problem was corrected
o I went to
Morisset HLT and checked the base antennae, fitted base labels and
left
§ Interview (22 August)
o "I recall them telling me that
there was a problem down at Cooranbong and I had a couple of things I wanted to
do at Morisset radio
base anyway so I thought I'd go down and have a look in
case they needed a hand"
o "I never ended up getting there because I think I
heard on the two way or phone or something that the job was finished"
o Mr
Davidson agreed that there was no breakdown job for the Morisset work and stated
"well its just a follow up thing... I might
have been there ages ago to do
something and I might say I'll come back and look at that"
o "I initiated to
go down there to do the work then I did some other work at Morisset base... so
put time down to cover that time"
Relevant Evidence
Obtained
§ Mr Davidson's mobile phone records for 14 July indicate
that he spent the afternoon in the area of Mayfield, which is not consistent
with his AOMS time entries showing him at Cameron Park that afternoon. Note :
this discrepancy has never been put to Mr Davidson
for response.)
§
There were no calls made to Dispatch from Mr Davidson's mobile phone that day.
§ The last call initiated was at 2.34pm ie one hour prior to the alarm
for job 26678.
Mr Davidson's Subsequent Written Response
§
"The Morisset HLT base is an integral part of the Cooranbong system... Although
I did not attend the site for which the job
had been logged, it is not unusual
for site failures to be due to base
problems..."
Analysis
§ With regard to Mr Davidson's
awareness of the existence of the breakdown at Cooranbong
o He did not have
mobile phone contact with Dispatch at any time after the alarm was raised for
the job at 3.30pm
o It is possible that he may have heard about 26678 when
calling off another job via the two way radio, however, if so this could
only
have been at some stage after 3.30pm
§ There was no request from either
Dispatch or the other people on the job for Mr Davidson to be involved in job
26678.
§ Mr Davidson's rationale for his involvement changed over the
course of his responses.
o Initially he had other work in the area and
thought he would drop in to help.
o In his written response of 4 September he
claims that the visit to Morisset was directly related to the breakdown
job.
§ With regard to the nature of the work which he claimed to have
performed at Morisset
o Mr Davidson initially described it as "other work".
As such it was not breakdown related and therefore would have been required
to
have been pre-authorised for overtime.
o Mr Davidson subsequently changed his
response to indicate that the work was related to the breakdown job in that the
Morisset radio
base may have been causing the Cooranbong failure. This claim is
not plausible when considered within the context of the nature of
the breakdown
at Cooranbong. Both pumps had failed due to a Programmable Logic Control (PLC)
problem which is not consistent with
a possible communication failure at
Morisset base. If a communications problem had occurred, it is also likely that
failures would
have been more widespread across other assets in that radio base
area.
o This inconsistency casts further doubt on whether Mr Davidson was
actually aware of the circumstances of the Cooranbong breakdown
which presumably
he would have been in the event of discussing it with the Dispatch operator when
calling off his earlier job as
he has claimed.
§ It is not possible to
confirm whether or not Mr Davidson actually travelled to Morisset and performed
the work he has described.
However, even if he did do so, on the balance of
probabilities the work was not directly related to the Cooranbong breakdown and
was not the subject of any other breakdown job. As such it was not appropriately
authorised.
§ On the basis of allowing for travel time to and from
Morisset Mr Davidson would have arrived at Morisset at approximately 4pm
and
left at approximately 5pm to return to Medowie. This timing is not consistent
with Mr Davidson's claim that he heard on the way
to Cooranbong that "the job
was finished" as the job remained in progress until well after 4.30pm.
§
In terms of general credibility of his responses -
o He did not attend on
site and had no contact with either of the two employees who did attend on
site.
o He has not claimed to have informed Dispatch of his involvement and
there is no evidence to indicate that he did advise them.
o The information
which he has provided regarding the timing of his awareness of the start and
finish of the job are not consistent
with the actual timing of the job.
o His
rationale for becoming involved and the description of that involvement changed
over the course of his responses.
Finding
That Mr Davidson's
claim for 2.5 hours overtime on job 26678 is in breach of the relevant policy
which states that prior approval
is required for non-contract, miscellaneous or
scheduled maintenance works (Operations Manager memo of 8 March 2002, addressed
to
Mr Davidson). No pre-authorisation was sought for the work claimed to have
been performed.
The claim constitutes a deliberate action to obtain a
payment to which Mr Davidson was not entitled, on the basis that any work which
may have been performed was for non-breakdown purposes and not done in response
to the Priority 1 breakdown job against which it
was charged.
Job
26684 Gan Gan 15 July
Job Details
§ Priority 1
breakdown. Link 9 Telemetry fault.
§ Allocated to Jeff Davidson at
8.03am.
§ Time booked by Mr Davidson 12noon to 2pm and 8pm to
11.59pm
Why did the claim initially appear suspicious?
Given
that it was a Priority 1 job which had been worked on and presumably cleared
earlier in the day it was unclear on what basis
there was a need for a
subsequent callout at 8pm at night.
Mr Davidson's Initial
Responses
§ First Written (22 August)
o All sites returned to
normal during the day.
o My diary records show Dispatch called approx
20.00hr
o I drove to the area monitoring the base with my radio test
equipment
o I instructed Dispatch not to log further jobs until the next
day.
o Returned home at approx 22.30hr
§ Interview (22
August)
o "my records say that I got a phone call around 8 to say that there
were other failures"
o "...couldn't see anything too obvious so told them not
to log anymore jobs"
o Mr Davidson explained that he had not travelled to Gan
Gan base but did have to drive out of his area to Paul's Corner to monitor
the
radio links because "my area's not very good for that"
Relevant
Evidence Obtained
§ Mr Davidson's mobile phone records for 15 July
show no calls made to Dispatch on that evening
§ After Hours Dispatch /
Control Centre call logs have been reviewed for all calls made to and from Mr
Davidson's mobile phone
and his home telephone number. There are no calls to
or from either of those numbers on the evening of 15 July.
Mr
Davidson's Subsequent Written Response
§ Mr Davidson indicates that
he was responding to a fault from earlier in the day which had
reoccurred
§ "Contact with Dispatch may have been by two-way radio"
§ "My follow up response may have been as a result of radio link
monitoring when returning home from Newcastle"
Analysis
§
There is no evidence to indicate that a fault did re-occur on the evening of the
15th. SCADA alarm logs for Link 9 have been
reviewed. They show the alarms
earlier in the day between 6.27am and 7.43am and no subsequent alarm activity at
all on that day.
§ Although it is possible that contact with Dispatch
may have occurred via two way this is not consistent with Mr Davidson's
initial
description of events, nor with the usual practice of contacting Mr Davidson via
telephone.
§ It is not possible to confirm whether or not Mr Davidson
actually performed the work as described. However, in the absence
of a fault
re-occurrence and any confirmable contact from Dispatch the work claimed to have
been undertaken would have been of an
investigatory nature not a breakdown job
and therefore was not covered by the authorisation of the original Priority 1
job. If the
work was performed it was not properly
pre-authorised.
Finding
That Mr Davidson's claim for 4 hours
overtime on job 26684 is in breach of the relevant policy which states that
prior approval is
required for non-contract, miscellaneous or scheduled
maintenance works (Operations Manager memo of 8 March 2002, addressed to Mr
Davidson).
The claim constitutes a deliberate action to obtain a payment
to which Mr Davidson was not entitled, on the basis that any work which
may have
been performed was carried out in the absence of a specific fault situation or a
legitimate request to carry out the work
and as such was not done in response to
the Priority 1 breakdown job against which it was charged.
Jobs 26959,
26960 and 26963 31 July
Job Details
Priority 1
breakdowns.
§ 26959 allocated to Mr Davidson at 3.12pm
§ 26960
allocated to Mr Davidson at 3.13pm
§ 26963 allocated to Mr Davidson at
time unknown but believed to be approximately 4.20pm
§ Time booked by Mr
Davidson 4.30pm to 7.30pm
NB These three claims were disallowed by Mr
David Witherdin, Operations Engineer, when reviewing and authorising the
overtime claim
for the relevant period. Mr Davidson has not received payment for
these claims.
Why did the claim initially appear
suspicious?
AOMS records indicated that Mr Davidson had provided call
support for these jobs and that they had been allocated to him and addressed
at
times not consistent with his overtime claims. Mr Witherdin subsequently
discussed the claims with Mr Davidson and advised him
that they would not be
approved.
Comments Made at Interview 22 August by Mr
Davidson
Mr Davidson was not specifically questioned in relation to these
three jobs on 22 August, however, he did mention them when responding
to
questions about another job for which overtime had been claimed on the same day.
That job (26956) has an overtime claim for call
support from 3.30pm to 4.30pm.
Mr Davidson was in the workshop at Tomago at that time.
§ "I had other
jobs in that time which I booked some time consecutively. And that's what David
pulled me up for that."
§ "I was looking at the SCADA ... in the
meantime I was getting another four jobs or three jobs and I had to have one
allocated
... that was the job for Redhead there was a job for Swansea and there
was a Macquarie Hills job that I had to get created. So I
logged four jobs in
that period of time."
Mr Davidson's Written Response 4
September
Mr Davidson did not provide any further information regarding
the detail of these jobs in his written response. His response focussed
on his
understanding of the authorisation process.
Analysis
§ Mr
Davidson has made it clear that he believes that he did not receive notification
on jobs 26959 or 26960 prior to 3.30pm,
as AOMS indicates. However, his
responses at interview on 22 August indicate that even if the calls had been
received and handled
after 3.30pm rather than before 3.30pm, they were still
received and handled within the period prior to 4.30pm, which was already
covered by the overtime payment for job 26956.
Finding
That the
overtime claims for jobs 26959, 26960 and 26963 constitute a breach of the
overtime payment policy for Call Support (under
which calls within the initial 1
hour period are covered by the initial 1 hour payment), in that they claim
multiple additional 1
hour payments for work performed during periods covered by
either normal time or by an initial overtime payment for an earlier call
support
job.
Job 27100 Silver Ridge 10 August
Job
Details
§ Priority 1 breakdown. Telemetry Fault.
§ Allocated
to Terry Hughes at approximately 12.45pm. Call support provided by Mr Hughes for
approximately 3 hours. Fault self
corrected at 3.45pm
§ Time booked by
Mr Davidson 2pm to 5pm - 3 hours worked for 4 hours overtime
payment
Why did the claim initially appear suspicious?
In
reviewing Mr Hughes' overtime claim for the relevant period Mr Witherdin noticed
that it included time for job 27100 which had
also been separately claimed by
Jeff Davidson. Mr Witherdin subsequently remarked to Mr Hughes that the job must
have been complicated
given that two supervisors, himself and Mr Davidson, were
involved. Mr Hughes responded that Mr Davidson had not been involved in
the
job.
Mr Davidson's Initial Responses
§ First Written (22
August)
o I noticed Charlestown link 17 was experiencing noise problems on
Sunday. I attended Newcastle #10 to inspect the antennae which
appeared normal..
I was going to Charlestown base site when the interference ceased.
o I was
not contacted by Dispatch although I noticed 27100 had been raised later that
day when logged onto SCADA. I used this number
to cover time worked.
o My
diary indicates .... further SCADA that night approximately 18.00 to
19.30hr"
• Interview (22 August)
o "I wasn't aware that there was
any job logged"
o "Normally I wouldn't have booked any time to a job like
that but later on that night I seen that there was a job already created
so I
booked some time on that to cover the time that I was out"
o "...if my
vehicle's at home I can monitor that sort of stuff .... I did hear noise on that
in the morning and I heard it again in
the afternoon"
o Mr Davidson confirmed
that he was not contacted by Dispatch in relation to this
job.
Relevant Evidence Obtained
§ Verbal response from
Terry Hughes that Mr Davidson did not work on the job. Written Statement from
Terry Hughes confirming
his actions on job 27100 and that to his knowledge there
were no other people involved.
§ Verbal advice from Louise Benson
(Dispatch Operator) to David Witherdin that she had no contact with Mr Davidson
in relation
to this job and that to her knowledge he was not involved.
§
SCADA logs were reviewed and show Mr Davidson logged in from 5.46pm to 5.54pm, a
total of 8 minutes.
§ AOMS logs indicate that Mr Davidson allocated
himself to the job at approximately 5.06pm.
§ The AOMS Job Details are
unusual for this job in that they do not show the allocation of Terry Hughes to
the job as is the
standard practice. It appears that the Dispatch Operator may
have overlooked this task when dealing with Mr Hughes on the job.
Mr
Davidson's Subsequent Written Response
§ ... personnel often follow
up re-occurring faults....
§ ... I did not consider investigating this
failure to be an improper action..."
§ I had no intention of claiming
payment at the time of my decision to investigate.
§ I have checked
other re-occurring system failures in the past without claiming
payments
Analysis
§ There was no request from either
Dispatch or the other people on the job for Mr Davidson to be
involved.
§ It is not possible to confirm whether Mr Davidson undertook
the monitoring work or visit to Newcastle which he described.
§ Mr
Davidson claims to have worked on SCADA in the period 6pm to 7.30pm. SCADA
records do not support this claim. They show
him logged in for an 8 minute
period from 5.46 to 5.54pm. AOMS logs show Mr Davidson logged in for a period of
approximately 3 minutes
shortly after 5pm.
§ Mr Davidson states that on
his own volitation he undertook some general investigation work and clearly
indicates that this
occurred in the absence of any knowledge of a specific fault
at Silver Ridge.
o As such, this work was of a general maintenance nature and
not directly resulting from the fault at Silver Ridge.
§ Mr Davidson has
stated that he heard noise on the radio link that Sunday morning. On the basis
of his advice in relation to
job 26684 Gan Gan, that would have necessitated him
driving out of his area to conduct testing. He did not mention this at any
stage,
but rather stated that "at home" he can "monitor that sort of
stuff"'
Finding
That Mr Davidson's claim for 4 hours
overtime on job 27100 is in breach of the relevant policy which states that
prior approval is
required for non--contract, miscellaneous or scheduled
maintenance works (Operations Manager memo of 8 March 2002, addressed to Mr
Davidson). No pre--authorisation was sought for the work claimed to have been
performed.
The claim constitutes a deliberate action to obtain a payment
to which Mr Davidson was not entitled, on the basis that any work which
may have
been performed was for non-breakdown purposes. It was carried out in the absence
of a specific fault situation or a legitimate
request to carry out the work and
as such was not done in response to the Priority 1 breakdown job against which
it was charged.
43 In the course of his evidence in chief Mr Davidson
relied upon explanations previously given to the respondent in writing by the
Union on his behalf. Mr Davidson denied that he had knowingly or deliberately
claimed overtime payments to which he was not entitled.
44 In respect to
Job No 26617 - Dora Creek, Mr Davidson maintained that he undertook work from
home on that job from 5pm to 7pm. Under
close cross examination Mr Davidson put
that this was commissioning work and that he charged the time to the priority 1
breakdown
job allocated to Mr Wise. Mr Davidson maintained that he did not speak
to Mr Wise or access the message, putting that he saw Joe
Wise come up on his
call register and knew what the call would be about.
45 In respect to
Job No 26678 - Cooranbong, Mr Davidson deposed that he heard about the job in
general conversation with Dispatch,
conceding that it had not been allocated to
him. At p64 of transcript Mr Warren questions Mr Davidson is respect to
this job:
Q ... ... and they didn't say we need your assistance down at Cooranbong did they?
A: They said there's a problem down at Cooranbong, there's an electrician going down there.
Q: Right, already allocated Mr Watts.
A: Mr Watts didn't attend.
Q: I see.
A: I believe Mr Wise ---
Q: You didn't attend either did you?
A: I did - I didn't attend that particular site no.
Q: No, no.
A: But I intended to.
Q: But you didn't attend the site did you?
A: No but my intention was to go there.
Q: I see. You didn't attend, it wasn't allocated to you, and yet you booked from 3.30 to 6.00pm overtime for it didn't you?
A: That's correct.
And further at pp 66 and 67:
Q: I see. But you agree you didn't even go to the site.
A: I went - I was intending to go to the site, but when I heard the alarm had self corrected I went to the mobile radio base at Morisset High Level Tank.
Q: I see.
A: Which is part of that system.
Q: I see.
A: That was the explanation I offered to the Hunter Water regarding my involvement.
Q: And even though you didn't go to the site, even though it wasn't allocated to you, you booked over time for it?
A: That's correct, cause my intention was to go to the site.
Q: I see so if you intend to work overtime you book overtime?
A: My intention was to go to that site.
Q: I suggest to you you have no right to claim overtime for work you just intended to do.
A: Well I submitted that claim to my supervisor for approval, based on what I'm telling you.
Q: And when you gave it to your supervisor did you say I didn't work this time but gee I intended to.
A: No I just submitted a claim like I normally would.
Q: Yes you just submitted your claim. And you were paid it weren't you?
A: I believe I was yes.
CONSIDERATION
46 The
evidence reveals a thorough and detailed approach to investigation of the matter
by the respondent with due notice to the applicant
and every opportunity
afforded to him for representation and access to relevant information from SCADA
logs, AOMS logs, telephone
records, and such other material as he may have
required. There is no absence of procedural fairness to be found within this
matter.
47 There is no evidence to support any requirement to attend the
Morriset Base Station.
48 There is nothing in the evidence or cross
examination of Mr Davidson which diminishes or detracts from the validity of Ms
Postlethwaite's
analysis and conclusions.
49 The evidence, in particular
the cross examination of Mr Davidson, establishes that he was properly informed
of the overtime policy
and procedures for its application and failed to do so.
50 Strenuous submission by Ms Milson, supported by established
principles found in Four Sons Pty Limited v Sakchai Limsiripothong [2000]
NSWIRComm 38 and Lorenzato and Sydney Water Corporation [2002] NSWIRComm
277 (referred to by Ms Milson) are of assistance; however, in
consideration of the facts of this case the gravamen of the instant matter is
the factual content
and the conduct of the applicant. Ms Milson quite
properly did not raise the issue of warning to the applicant. The applicable
principle is found in the a decision of the Full
Bench of the Commission in
Electricity Commission of New South Wales t/a Pacific Power v Nieass and
Others (1995) 81 IR 46 in the following terms:
In industrial circumstances as in other avenues of life an employee or an employer must be taken to be aware of the natural and probably consequences of their actions. However, we reject as industrially inappropriate any notion that adult, responsible and senior employees are entitled to a warning that they might be dismissed if they continue to misconduct themselves within employment, dishonestly. No employee of ordinary understanding and certainly not employees of mature age, substantial classification and seniority, need to be told that if they deal dishonestly with their employer they may be dismissed, any more than they need to be told that they should be careful in crossing the street.
51 Ms Milson contends that
a case of "wilful misconduct" has not been established.
52 On analysis
of the evidence, the only available conclusion is that the allegations put by
the HWC are made out. The applicant acted
in a deliberate, wilful and consistent
manner, resulting in benefit not properly due. Mitigating circumstances do not,
in my view,
outweigh the substance of misconduct.
53 I find the
termination of the applicant's employment is not harsh, unreasonable or unjust
and accordingly decline to intervene.
54 Matter No RIC 5277 of 2003 is
so concluded.
oo0oo
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