Sacked council boss with PTSD after helping Grenfell victims in record £4.6m payout
A former council chief who suffered PTSD after working with families involved in the Grenfell Tower fire has been awarded a record payout after suing her bosses for disability discrimination and harassment.
The London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham has reportedly been ordered to pay £4.6m in compensation and damages to Rachael Wright-Turner by an employment tribunal in what is believed to be the highest ever award granted against a public body.
According to the Mail on Sunday, 52-year-old Wright-Turner, was dismissed from her role as director of public service reform with the council in 2018 after taking sickness leave due to post-traumatic stress disorder.
She had developed the condiition while working at Kensington and Chelsea council in support of families affected by the tragedy at Grenfell Tower in 2017, which left 72 people dead.
Wright-Turner went on to move to Hammersmith and Fulham, where she was later signed off work after a meeting with colleagues at a pub triggered her PTSD, causing her to have a panic attack that resutled in her going to hospital.
The tribunal reportedly heard that shortly after this, senior council officers at Hammersmith and Fulham falsely claimed she had been drunk.
Wright-Turner had also been diagnosed separately with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), with the council's former chief executive reportedly saying her brain "doesn't work like other people's".
'Acting like some sort of drama queen'
Wright-Turner was dismissed while on sick leave without the opportunity to discuss or challenge the decision, prompting her to take her former employers to the tribunal that resulted in the payout. She reportedly said: "I don't think they understood how closely I'd been working with the families in the aftermath of Grenfell. They treated my PTSD as if I was acting like some sort of drama queen."
In an interview with the Mail on Sunday the 52-year-old said the case had cost her "everything", leading to the collapse of her marriage and a loss of income that left her fighting repossession of her home. She said she was aware of the cost of her award to taxpayers but had no choice but to try to clear her name.
According to the newspaper, Hammersmith and Fulham - which was also reportedly found to have lied in evidence to the tribunal - said it was 'very sorry' for what she had been through but would appeal the decision as it has 'always considered' her claim to be 'vastly excessive, disputed and highly unprecedented'.
How are claims calculated in discrimination cases?
According to the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD), while there is a maximum award for unfair dismissal, this is not the case for discrimination awards, which are said to be ‘uncapped’.
This means the amount of compensation awarded for discrimination depends on various factors. Referred to as an award for ‘injury to feelings’, the amount can depend on:-
the nature and severity of the discrimination or harassment
how long the discrimination or harassment has gone on for
the degree of hurt or distress suffered
There is no fixed formula for tribunals to calculate awards for injury to feelings, the CIPD says, but there are some guidelines thanks to previous cases, as well as different bandings when it comes to compensation for injury to feelings in discrimination cases.
According to the advice, only the most extreme cases would attract an award for injury to feelings in excess of £49,300.
Read more
Met Police officers sue force over ‘trauma’ suffered at Grenfell (Evening Standard)
Survivors want to be voice for bereaved at Grenfell Testimony Week (PA Media)
Jacob Rees-Mogg 'profoundly apologises' after saying Grenfell residents who stayed in burning building 'lacked common sense' (Yahoo News UK)