Qantas illegally suspended worker who told colleagues not to clean planes due to Covid risk, Australian court rules
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Qantas illegally suspended worker who told colleagues not to clean planes due to Covid risk, Australian court rules
Qantas Airways Ltd. illegally suspended a health and safety representative after he instructed colleagues not to clean planes arriving from Covid-19 hotspots at the start of the pandemic, an Australian court ruled in the latest blow to the airline’s battered reputation.
The ground worker at Sydney airport targeted by Qantas, Theo Seremetidis, told staff on February 2, 2020, that for safety reasons they did not have to clean two aircraft arriving from China that morning. Qantas broke the law when it suspended Seremetidis the same day, according to Thursday’s judgment.
The case follows a September ruling by Australia’s top court that Qantas illegally sacked almost 1,700 ground workers during the pandemic. The country’s antitrust watchdog is also suing the airline for allegedly continuing to sell tickets on thousands of flights it had already decided to cancel.
According to Thursday’s judgment, Seremetidis attempted to carry out his duties as a health and safety representative “conscientiously and carefully.” Sentences and costs are yet to be determined.
Australia’s Qantas needs to own its problems for its reputation to soar again
Australia’s Qantas needs to own its problems for its reputation to soar again
Qantas said it will review the judgment. “Our medical and safety teams worked tirelessly to provide daily updates to employees and to put effective controls and procedures in place to help protect our people and customers,” the airline said in a statement.
In early 2020, the workplace safety watchdog that brought the case against Qantas inspected the airline’s Covid cleaning practices. The watchdog’s subsequent report found that personal protective equipment wasn’t mandated for most tasks.
A workplace safety inspector “observed workers wiping over multiple tray tables with the same wet cloth with no disinfectant and cleaning unknown liquids on floors and surfaces,” according to the March 2020 report.
Cleaners were “required to handle wet and used tissues, used face masks, soiled nappies and the workers advised they occasionally have to clean vomit and blood off surfaces.”
Qantas shares fell 0.9 per cent in Sydney trading on Thursday. The stock is down 11 per cent this year.
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