"When I was inquiring about the head of another school, and who that person was, and you know, just out of curiosity really, and the answer I got from one person was 'oh that person's all right, she's very easy to shout down'.
"Meaning that if you have a disagreement with that person, if you raise your voice they back off."
The culture had also affected wider decision-making, said the staff member, because senior leadership were used to ignoring problems.
That had become evident when the university announced it would restructure the academic year into shorter course blocks because of Covid.
This was despite early warnings the changes would not work.
"You can't do block courses when you have a whole load of people. How can I put it? A whole load of people already signed up to do a course.
"Then you're going to change their weekly courses to block, there will be too many timetable clashes for this to be marginally practical."
Despite these early concerns being raised by staff, the university went ahead before backtracking amid a student outcry, said the staff member.
Bullying had been highlighted in a number of past surveys, but AUT had ignored them "so it isn't coming out now, it's been happening for quite a long time", they said.
"You don't get a working culture this impregnated with a bullying managerial style overnight. It takes a few years to develop."
The staff member said the only way AUT would ever change its culture would be to ensure some level of accountability.
"And the people that are at the top, that have been ignoring this for so long probably need to be stood down or replaced..."
"I would say that includes the vice-chancellor, I would say that includes a number of people in human resources that have ignored complaints, and I would also think that many of the deans would need to be looked at."
In a statement released with the report, vice-chancellor Derek McCormack said he and the university's council accepted the findings.
"In response to these findings, on behalf of the university and personally, I want to apologise to all those past and present who have been subjected to bullying or other forms of harassment.
"As a university, we should have done better and my commitment as vice-chancellor is that we will do better starting today."