Autistic man called 'weirdo' at work is awarded £17,000 - The tribunal said the comments 'had the effect of violating the claimant’s dignity'

Link: https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/autistic-man-called-weirdo-work-31830729
Credit: Neil Shaw Assistant Editor, Wales Online, 06:42, 11 Jun 2025, Updated 06:45, 11 Jun 2025
Archive: https://archive.ph/wip/xijYD

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He had sued the registered charity after being suspended

A children’s centre worker who was called a “weirdo” by a colleague has been paid more than £17,000 after a tribunal judge found the comment violated his dignity. Nicholas James, who is autistic, complained in 2023 to bosses at The Venture in Wrexham that he could not work properly because of music being played at the premises which he said affected his ability to concentrate, the employment tribunal in Cardiff heard.

Chief officer Malcolm King joked to him in November of that year: “Why can’t you be ordinary and perfect like the rest of us? But no, jokes aside, having always been something of a weirdo myself, I have some sympathy.” Judge Stephen Jenkins said: “They were comments from the respondent’s chief officer, the most senior person within the executive structure of the organisation, and were comments which Mr King himself has, on reflection, agreed were inappropriate.

“In the circumstances, we were satisfied that the comments did involve unwanted conduct which had the effect of violating the claimant’s dignity.” The Venture was ordered to pay Mr James £17,154.86 in compensation, including £15,000 for injury to feelings, after the judge partly upheld his complaints of disability discrimination and failure to make reasonable adjustments.

He had sued the registered charity after being suspended, claiming that he was “continually disregarded because of his condition”. On February 9 2024, Mr King questioned Mr James’s ability to work in “open access sessions” and compared that to someone not being able to operate after a “good booze up”, the tribunal heard.

The judge said: “The discussion involved around Mr King’s own concerns that the claimant’s work and care for children would be impacted by his mental health situation, and we felt that that concern was trivialised by Mr King’s comparison of that with someone attending work suffering with a hangover.”

The Venture provides a range of community-based services, primarily for the benefit of children and young people.
 
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Yeeesh. I’m owed millions.
Yeah this shit wouldn't fly in the US. If you can't handle the sound, you're not getting a payday - you're told to get the fuck out. Headphones are a liability in most places, so it's not considered a reasonable accommodation, even if you're certain it won't cause problems.
 
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Yeah, the staff were out of line on this one. I still question why Mr. James would want to work in a place like that, but the organization isn't beating my hypothesis about employers treating autistic people as funny little mascots and not people who legitimately need accommodations.

Unfortunately, I think most people, both disabled and not, don't catch on to the weird way autistic people are treated in places that were supposedly set up for them, or people similar to them. They claim to know they are "special" needs, but they also expect them to act like normal people. It's frustrating, and something I have personal experience with, so I do sympathize.
 
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Two quintessential looking bongs.

The fuck is with his hair. Fuckin' weirdo.
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Kinda demeaning comment, he could be autistic.
 
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Go work in a library
Last time I had to go to the library, it was anything but quiet. Fucking noglets running around yelling back and forth the whole time. Libraries don't want to lose relevance, so none of them actually enforce noise limits, and they end up being more of a "community center" (i.e. "free nigger daycare"), to the detriment of anyone who wants to go there to study.
 
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