A newly published Fair Work Commission decision has delivered a significant reminder to early childhood education and care (ECEC) employers about the importance of procedural fairness, sound investigations and culturally sensitive leadership.
Commissioner Redford found the dismissal of the Melbourne employee was harsh, unjust and unreasonable, ordering compensation of more than $41,000 plus superannuation.
The Commissioner described the termination as “extremely harsh”, citing flawed decision-making, misinformation, and treatment that was humiliating in light of the educator’s background and circumstances.
Workplace disagreement escalates into dismissal
The case arose after a staffroom dispute between two colleagues. Commissioner Redford found the exchange was a two-way conversation rather than an act of aggression, with both employees expressing views that caused offence.
The Commission was particularly critical of how the matter was handled internally.
During a subsequent meeting, the employee gave uncontested evidence that management told him he had failed to uphold the centre’s value of inclusivity, and that:
Commissioner Redford described that directive as “extraordinarily insensitive, humiliating and harsh”.
The Commission found the dismissal decision was made by the Approved Provider without directly speaking to:
the employeethe colleague involvedany witnesses to the exchange
Instead, the decision-maker relied on internal reports that failed to provide the correct information.
The Commissioner concluded the decision was therefore not sound or well-founded.
No valid reason and no procedural fairness
The Fair Work Commission found multiple failings, including:
no valid reason for dismissalfailure to notify the employee of the reason before terminationno meaningful opportunity to respondunreasonable refusal of a support person requestsummary dismissal without notice
Taken together, those factors led the Commission to find the termination was unfair.
Impact on educator recognised
The decision acknowledged the personal and professional consequences for the employee including loss of employment, likely reputational harm, and difficulty securing further work in the sector.
The Commission also noted that as a male educator in a female-dominated profession, reputational impacts may be particularly acute.
Compensation ordered
Reinstatement was deemed inappropriate. Instead, the Commission ordered:
$41,061.28 compensation$4,927.35 superannuation
What ECEC providers should take from this case
For approved providers, operators and centre leaders, the ruling reinforces several key lessons:
1. Investigations must be genuine and evidence-based
Decision-makers should speak directly with relevant parties and test competing accounts.
2. Procedural fairness is essential
Even in emotionally charged disputes, employees must be notified of concerns and given an opportunity to respond.
3. Leadership language matters
Values-based messaging should be careful, respectful and culturally aware.
4. Summary dismissal is a high threshold
Not every workplace conflict justifies immediate termination.
5. Governance extends beyond compliance
Strong leadership in ECEC includes fair employment practices, judgement and professionalism.
Why the decision matters
At a time when workforce attraction and retention remain critical sector issues, the ruling is a timely reminder that how services manage internal conflict can have lasting impacts on staff wellbeing, culture and reputation.
For ECEC employers, the message is clear: swift action is sometimes necessary, but fairness, evidence and sound process must come first.
Read the full Fair Work decision here.