九一星空无限

ZB ZB
Opinion
Live now
Start time
Playing for
End time
Listen live
Up next
ZB

University of Auckland grew uncomfortable with Siouxsie Wiles' celebrity status, court hears

Author
Isaac Davison,
Publish Date
Wed, 8 Nov 2023, 4:45pm

University of Auckland grew uncomfortable with Siouxsie Wiles' celebrity status, court hears

Author
Isaac Davison,
Publish Date
Wed, 8 Nov 2023, 4:45pm

Some University of Auckland managers were uncomfortable with Dr Siouxsie Wiles鈥 鈥渃elebrity鈥 status during the pandemic and gave her the nickname 鈥淏rand Siouxsie鈥, a court has heard.

After becoming one of the most prominent voices during the Covid-19 pandemic, some of Wiles鈥 bosses challenged her on regular media commentary and her place in the spotlight.

Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences dean John Fraser emailed Wiles in late 2021, when Auckland was in a Level 3 lockdown, the Employment Court heard in Auckland today.

鈥淲e wish to assure you that we appreciate that you have been undertaking outside activities with good intentions and much of your activity has been of benefit for the public understanding the Covid-19 pandemic,鈥 Fraser wrote.

Wiles, a microbiologist and science communicator, was interviewed up to 30 times a day during the pandemic. While that work was often praised by university leaders, it later gave rise to questions about whether her commentary and media appearances were all within her remit.

Fraser鈥檚 letter went on to question whether the university had been informed about all of her 鈥渙utside activities鈥 and if they were all in line with university policies. In particular, she may not have received permission for some of the work.

Wiles told the court her contract explicitly allowed her to spend up to a fifth of her time on non-research or teaching work, including science communication. She had not been asked about needing permission until this point.

In a separate email, Fraser raised concerns about her 鈥渃elebrity鈥 status.

鈥淭he term 鈥楤rand Siouxsie鈥 is now a common term in comms and marketing,鈥 he wrote.

He also questioned her proposal to get vaccinated with Director-General of Health Ashley Bloomfield at the top of the Sky Tower in Auckland, saying she would be breaking lockdown rules.

Wiles said the letter was 鈥渧ery upsetting鈥. She was making regular media appearances because the country was in the middle of a vaccination drive.

鈥淲e were desperate to get people vaccinated,鈥 Wiles said. 鈥淲e were in difficult circumstances in Auckland, we knew that getting people vaccinated was the way to get us out of lockdown.鈥

Wiles felt that her treatment by managers was retaliation for taking legal action against her employer, the court heard.

She had filed a personal grievance earlier in the year and later filed a complaint with the Employment Relations Authority, arguing that the university was not protecting her from abuse and harassment related to her Covid-19 commentary.

Two other colleagues, physicist Shaun Hendy and researcher Kate Hannah, were also challenged on their media commentary after similarly filing legal action, Wiles said. She was suspicious of the timing of these actions and said she was not aware of anyone else who had faced such scrutiny.

The university also began monitoring Wiles鈥 social media at the time, and an HR manager flagged several old tweets as possibly bringing the university into disrepute.

The university鈥檚 lawyer, Philip Skelton KC, said that her claims that these measures were retaliatory and that she was being 鈥渟ingled out鈥 were 鈥渄isingenous鈥.

Monitoring her social media was a 鈥渞easonable鈥 measure to ensure she was following her employer鈥檚 code of conduct, heSkelton said to Wiles, and other measures taken by the university were simply to ensure her protection while a security review was carried out, he said.

Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you