She never had a problem before
The court then entered its findings of fact and conclusions of law.
It noted that up until the time of her injury, Hankins had received only positive feedback and had never been warned about unsafe behavior.
It further noted that the Postal Service policy called for the service to evaluate probationary employees like Hankins at 30, 60 and 80-day intervals, and that the service did not perform any of those evaluations with respect to Hankins.
This is your safety training?
Hankins said she was never told she could be disciplined for not using a boat hook and that she was never given an opportunity to correct any alleged deficiency in her work performance. She also said she was never trained on how to use a boat hook or even where a boat hook could be found. Nor was there anything in training materials about the use of boat hooks. Further, there was nothing about boat hooks on any checklist of items that an employee should report as missing from a workplace vehicle that they were using.
She also said a boat hook would not prevented her from getting hurt because it would not have enabled her to reach the mail she needed to retrieve.
The court also noted that Hankins said “she experienced deep shame and loss of self-esteem” after her employment was terminated.
You can't do that
The court found that the record supported an inference that the Postal Service violated the law by terminating Hankins because she reported her workplace injury.
She was let go within three weeks of the injury and just 11 days before her probationary period was set to end, the court noted.
The court also decided that the Postal Service’s purported reason for the termination – not using a boat hook – was really just a pretext for discrimination.
Hankins was never trained on how and when to use a boat hook, and boat hook protocols were not included in training materials. Also, a postmaster admitted that not using a boat hook was not a serious offense.
It did not help the Postal Service’s case that it violated its own policies when it did not conduct periodic evaluations of Hankins’ job performance.
The court decided that the Postal Service should pay Hankins $86,107.50 in back pay; $5,200 in job search costs; and $50,000 in damages for emotional distress.
Information provided by: HR Morning
|