High school office assistant by day, porn video star by night – should there be ramifications?

Image: theglobeandmail.com

Image: theglobeandmail.com

A Quebec school board has suspended a high school office assistant with pay after discovering she also happened to be a porn video star on the side. How did the school board find out about her extra-curricular activity? A student found out her secret and posted it on Facebook, and almost instantly, she was a high school celebrity.

She is waiting to hear what will happen next, and afraid of losing her job.

What should happen to her?

Should she be terminated because of her off-duty activities? Is it appropriate for the assistant and member of the school commission to be penalized by the school board for something she did in her private life? Could she be disciplined simply because the school board is of the view that it is morally wrong do engage in this kind of business?

The last time I checked, there were 396 comments about the article reporting on this situation. Some view the employee’s out of school activities as her own business and concerning her private life, but others see that a dirty video distributed on the Internet is not private at all and could influence the employee’s ability and credibility when performing her job.

Past cases have confirmed that employee’s off-duty conduct can harm a company’s reputation and justify discipline up to and including termination with cause. The law does recognize that an employee has a privacy interest in his or her off-duty conduct, but this must be weighed against the employer’s reputational interest.

For example, we have seen that courts have recently upheld terminations where the employee engaged in off-duty blogging or posting on Facebook that was harmful to the employer’s reputation. That is, employees who use technology to publicly criticize their employer and co-workers could be on the hook for receiving some discipline.

Does participating in pornographic videos that are distributed on the Internet fall in the same category? Does it decrease the office assistant’s credibility such that she can no longer be taken seriously in a school board environment?

What do you think?

Christina Catenacci
First Reference Human Resources and Compliance Editor

Conduct and behaviour in the workplace
disicpline
employer's reputation
employment law
facebook
Internet
off-duty activities
off-duty blogging
off-duty conduct
porn video star
pornography
Quebec
social media in the workplace
suspension with pay
termination
termination with cause
using technology to damage reputation
Share

Related Posts

Imagen 1

Addressing domestic violence in the workplace – some insights

The Ontario Occupational Health and Safety Act violence and harassment prevention provisions (Bill 168) require an employer to take all reasonable precautions in the circumstances for the protection of all employees if a domestic violence situation is likely to expose a worker to physical injury in the workplace and the employer becomes aware or ought reasonably to be aware of the situation.

But what does that imply? The law states the requirement but provides little guidance on what employers need to do to prevent domestic violence from spilling into the workplace. In addition, many employers are not comfortable addressing a situation of such a personal nature. It is not an easy task to complete and might never be.

Marie-Yosie Saint-Cyr, LL.B. Managing Editor

Read more
Imagen 1

Sleeping on the Job? What do you have to do to get fired in Canada, anyway?

Employees can be dismissed for cause, and therefore without notice or severance, when their misconduct or performance is so egregious that the employment relationship has been irreparably harmed. In assessing this issue, employers must adopt a contextual approach, which considers not only the misconduct in question, but the entirety of the employment relationship.

Rudner Law, Employment / HR Law & Mediation

Read more
Imagen 1

Employees with disabilities – accommodation strategies (Part I)

Accommodating employees with disabilities to the point of undue hardship under human rights legislation can be a complicated task. It’s important to make sure the accommodation process goes smoothly and the employee can focus on working as efficiently as possible, but employers may not be sure about what kinds of questions to ask disabled employees in order to meet their needs.

Christina Catenacci, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD

Read more