A company advocating against workplace bullying has been ordered to pay $30,000 for breaching its obligations while also sending emails with a "bullying tone".
Employment Relations Authority chief James Crichton, in a decision dated May 1, found CultureSafe NZ and two of its employees, director Allan Halse and senior employment consultant Tracey Simpson, breached obligations relating to a client and a health organisation when writing to MPs.
Crichton made an urgent interim order in March to prevent further breaches, which ordered that no further breaches be made and prohibiting CultureSafe from publishing the health organisation's name.
In his second and latest determination, Crichton said although CultureSafe had not made any further breaches, correspondence from CultureSafe to the health organisation had a "hectoring, bullying tone".
Crichton's decision also pointed to a letter from CultureSafe to Workplace Relations and Safety Minister Iain Lees-Galloway calling for Crichton to be dismissed for "corrupt behaviour".