top of page

Woman fired when she was on maternity leave wins £20,000

  • mrsalex05061
  • May 30, 2022
  • 3 min read

Updated: Jun 15, 2022

She won maternity and pregnancy discrimination, disability discrimination, and victimisation claims.



A waiter with PTSD won almost £20,000 after she was harshly sacked while she was on maternity leave. Kirsty Blyth said she visited the restaurant she worked at while on maternity leave and was 'flung out the shop with my nine-week-old in my arms'.


To seek justice, the 26-year-old new mother launched legal action against the eatery - and was quickly offered her job back. But Ms Blyth was discriminated against again as her boss refused to let the front-of-house waiter return to work when her maternity leave finished.


Ms Blyth, who struggles with PTSD, said her mental health plummeted as she was left jobless and struggled to pay bills and support her baby daughter. Now, 'scarred' Ms Blyth has been awarded £18,307 after successfully suing Black Rooster Peri Peri Restaurant in Coatbridge, North Lanarkshire.


She won maternity and pregnancy discrimination, disability discrimination, and victimisation claims at the employment tribunal in Glasgow. It was heard Ms Blyth started working at the chicken restaurant in April 2019 and worked hours around her mental health counselling sessions and childcare.


However, there were 'moans and groans' about her having to attend counselling. In November 2020, Ms Blyth visited the restaurant with her baby as her colleagues loved seeing the infant.


However, she was given a letter from the director of BR Fast Foods, Matthew Campbell, who had recently taken over the business, telling her that they would not be paying her maternity pay due to the 'impact of Covid' and was told she was sacked. Ms Blyth said: "I was distraught and was flung out the shop with my nine-week-old in my arms."


She said it was "embarrassing as done in front of staff members and customers". Ms Blyth launched an employment tribunal case against BR Fast Foods but cancelled it when Mr Campbell told her she had her job back.


However, she was never allowed to return to work following the end of her maternity leave in July 2021 and has not worked there since. She told the tribunal: "I was in limbo and left without money or a job, my mental health has gotten worse, I cannot support my daughter, and cannot pay my bills.


"I am honestly exhausted and appalled with my treatment. I had cried because I never once took a holiday when I worked for them; I always made myself available, always swapped to suit someone else, and this is how I am treated after having my child. I do not want another pregnant woman or mum in my position.


"I haven’t been able to enjoy my maternity leave due to stress, especially as I was ‘sacked’ before Christmas, which was my daughter's first and was tainted.”


It also had a significant impact on her relationship with her partner. Ms Blyth added: "We have nearly separated over this, and I've become furious and stressed all the time.


"I feel like a complete failure to my daughter and partner and worthless about myself."


In concluding the case, Employment Judge Ian McPherson said: "I found Miss Blyth's testimony... compelling and convincing. I have no doubt, having heard her evidence, that she felt, and still feels, hurt about the restaurant's treatment of her.


"I was impressed by her tenacity and persistence in pursuing her claim, despite all the surrounding circumstances, entering a legal forum unknown to her, the restaurant not participating, as well as the pressures of normal domestic and family life, including her own PTSD."

 
 
 

Comments


Post: Blog2_Post
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn

©2022 by Public Sector Corruption News. Proudly created with Wix.com

bottom of page