Where employees disrupt the workplace the operations of the business can be seriously affected.

Employees who behave in a disruptive manner might do so for a variety of reasons including:

  • Abuse of alcohol or other substance
  • Incompetence – that is, while the employee is not intentionally disruptive, his/her inability to perform properly disrupts the flow of work in the workplace
  • Resentment – Employees may resent receiving a low or zero pay increase,
  • Unwillingness to work – there are many employees who would prefer to sponge off their families instead of working. These employees tend to behave disruptively either because they do not care if they get fired or because they are trying to get fired. Then they can tell their families that it was not their fault and go and make some money at the CCMA by complaining about their ‘unfair dismissal’ having received a warning or other disciplinary action, ill-treatment, being overlooked for promotion, the manager’s fancy car or life in general.
  • Industrial action – employees trying to pressurise the employer may, instead of going on a fully fledged strike, embark on disruptive behaviour.
  • Dislike of a colleague or a boss

Disruptive behaviour at the workplace can be seriously damaging to the effectiveness of business operations and can even result in losses for the employer.

For example, disruptive behaviour can cause:

  • Bosses to lose their tempers
  • The speed of production to slow down
  • Legal disputes arising from unprocedural discipline and dismissal
  • Service to clients to suffer
  • Loss of orders or of clients
  • Injury to employees or other people
  • The quality of products to deteriorate
  • Damage to property
  • Clashes between employees and managers or amongst employees

It is, therefore, most important that the employer acts swiftly and firmly yet within the law in order to minimise the damage and send a strong message that such behaviour will not be tolerated. Especially where an employee’s disruptive behaviour is habitual the employer needs to follow the correct disciplinary procedure to prove that the employee is guilty. Otherwise, there is a danger of the disruptive employee being reinstated by the CCMA, Labour Court or bargaining council.

In the case of Mofokeng vs Afrikaans Import and Export cc (2001, 11 BALR 1184) the employee was dismissed for disrupting the workplace after he had been caught under the influence of alcohol and had refused to obey the instructions of a superior. However, the employer reinstated the employee as it wanted to give him one more chance and commuted the dismissal to a final warning. Later the employee was again dismissed, this time for driving a forklift under the influence of alcohol, damaging the employer’s property with the forklift, smashing the windows of the company quarters in which he lived and loudly threatening management while the owner was on an international telephone call. Instead of calling a disciplinary hearing the employer fired the employee on the spot. The CCMA stated that the existence of the final warning did not exempt the employer from holding a disciplinary hearing.

Employees are advised, if they are aggrieved by anything at work, not to disrupt the workplace lest they end up out on the street. Instead, aggrieved employees should lodge formal grievances and/or CCMA disputes.

Employers are advised when faced with ‘disruptive employees to:

  • Avoid losing their tempers

Use their most expert labour law specialist to help:

  • carefully and thoroughly investigate the cause of the problematic behaviour arrive
  • objectively and unemotionally at the route cause of the problem
  • decide upon a legally compliant, practical and effective course of action appropriate to the
  • particular type of disruption and to its specific cause. Such action may vary from a warning
  • to a disciplinary hearing or from counselling to training or treatment.