Friday, June 5, 2026

Notice After Notice — Part 10 - First Doubts About Chris Minns - April 2022

6 April 2022

“Another Week of Fear and Torture”

By April 2022, I was no longer simply asking for help.


I was documenting survival.


Every email I sent carried the same underlying reality: I was trapped inside a system that had already failed me repeatedly, while the people with the authority to intervene continued to delay, defer, or disappear behind process.


And still, I kept writing.


Still, I kept explaining.

Still, I kept trying to make someone understand how serious it had become.


On 6 April 2022, Cheryl Han, from the Kogarah electorate office, contacted me to say that a scheduled phone meeting with the university had been cancelled and would likely take place the following week instead.  


Email from Cheryl Han, Office of Chris Minns MP, 6 April 2022

The meeting between the Kogarah electorate office and the University was postponed, extending yet another week of uncertainty while I remained without resolution, income security, or implementation of the agreed Injury Management Plan.



Another delay.


Another week.


Another extension of uncertainty while my life, health, employment, and financial security remained suspended.

My response that day came from a place of exhaustion, fear, and desperation after nearly two years of fighting simply to have basic statutory obligations acknowledged.


I wrote:

“It’s another week of fear and torture but I hope the uni are finally learning how serious and unlawful this is.”  


It was the reality of living through prolonged institutional harm while trying to survive a workers compensation system that, in practice, seemed incapable of protecting the worker it was designed for.


I was describing what had happened to me: intimidation, retaliation, psychological harm, and the destruction of safety protections that should have existed from the beginning.


I referenced the conduct of the University’s National Manager of Employment Relations and Safety, Rena Christmann, and the impact her actions had had on both me and my family.  


And underneath all of it is a deeper harm that became impossible for me to ignore.


This is not just any employer.


This is a Catholic university, an institution that publicly speaks about dignity, ethics, mission, and human values.


So I wrote about that too, because what I had experienced stood in complete contradiction to the values the institution claimed to uphold.


I wrote:


“Listening promotes dignity. No one listened and protected me and my entitlements...”  


One of the most damaging parts of prolonged workplace harm is not only the original conduct itself — it is the repeated experience of not being heard afterwards.


Not being protected.


Not being believed.

Not being treated as fully human while trying to explain your own suffering.


At the same time, I was also trying to keep another insurer informed — not because it was their responsibility to carry what the statutory workers compensation system was legally required to provide, but because I was running out of options.


On 12 April 2022, TAL contacted me asking whether there had been any update following the meeting involving my local MP and the university.  


By then, even my income protection insurer was aware that my elected representative, Chris Minns, had become involved in what should have been a straightforward statutory workplace injury matter.


That should never have been necessary.


TAL was not responsible for enforcing workers compensation law in New South Wales.


TAL was not the regulator.


TAL was not responsible for ensuring that an employer complied with an Injury Management Plan.


And TAL was not responsible for enforcing return-to-work obligations under the statutory scheme.


That responsibility belonged to SIRA NSW and the broader regulatory system that was meant to protect injured workers.


But instead of enforcement, what I experienced was repeated shutdowns, dismissals, delays, and procedural deflection while my situation deteriorated financially and psychologically.

The regulator that was supposed to ensure compliance instead became another source of distress.

That is why I had gone to my elected representative. Because the statutory system itself had failed to function.


In my reply to TAL, I explained that the meeting had again been postponed and that the ongoing delays had become unbearable.  


I wrote:


“The last thing I’ve had a chance to do is look after my health and well-being in all of this. For me, it was another week of prolonged torture.”  


That captures the reality of what prolonged regulatory failure can do to a human being.


When a worker is left without enforcement of basic statutory protections, without income security, without safe return-to-work implementation, without effective intervention from regulators, the harm compounds.


The psychological injury does not remain static.


It escalates.


The financial pressure escalates.


The fear escalates.


And the isolation escalates.


I also wrote about the Injury Management Plan that had already been agreed to, and the fact that the recommendations supporting a safe return to work had never been properly implemented despite medical support and consultation processes already existing.  


I’m still trying to return safely to my HEW8 library role at the Strathfield campus.


That is important.


Because despite everything that had happened, despite the trauma, despite the fear, despite the escalating distress, I’m still trying to recover and return to work.


I’m not trying to destroy the institution.


I’m trying to survive it.


And yet the system continued to behave as though enforcing basic obligations was optional.


One line in that email captures just how psychologically overwhelmed I had become:


“I need to find outlets to remain sane. But I’m frightened.”  


Looking back now, I can see how much pressure I was under by then.


Not only financially.


Not only professionally.


But psychologically.


I was living inside prolonged uncertainty, prolonged non-compliance, prolonged isolation, and repeated institutional silence while trying to fight systems far larger and more powerful than myself.


And still, even in that state, I thanked the electorate office for defending my employee rights.  


Because at that point, I still wanted to believe someone might intervene.


I still wanted to believe somebody in authority might finally listen before the damage became irreversible.


But by now, I had my doubts.


This email was yet another notice.


Another warning.


Another documented moment where people in positions of political, institutional, and regulatory responsibility were being told clearly that serious harm was occurring.


And the notices just kept coming.


But the institutionalised wage theft continued…


NB: I never got an update after my elected representative’s meeting with the VC. I got silence. I found out when that meeting took place with everyone else - on Chris Minns’ social media account. 


Source: contemporaneous record of events - Documents 301 and 304

Thursday, June 4, 2026

Notice After Notice — Part 9 - Chris Minns again - April 2022

1 April 2022

“They Broke Me, They Fix Me”


By 1 April 2022, I was no longer writing polite follow-ups.


I was writing from fear.


It was real fear about losing my home, my employment, my safety, my dignity, and whatever remained of my trust in institutions that were supposed to protect people.


This email was sent to my elected representative, then Opposition Leader Chris Minns, and his Kogarah electorate officer Cheryl Han. Again. Yet another one. 


By this point, I had already sent notice after notice. I had already explained that this involved workplace safety, workers compensation obligations, procedural fairness, psychological injury, and systemic failures in governance and regulatory oversight.


But what haunted me most was the feeling that nobody with authority was willing to intervene before irreversible harm occurred.


That is what this email captured.


I wrote that I was frightened nobody with authority was going to stand up for my employee and human rights.


And by then, the damage was no longer confined to me.


I described what had happened to my family, the distress, the intimidation directed toward people connected to me, and the way the situation had spread far beyond a workplace issue.


What stands out to me now is desperation mixed with clarity.


Because despite everything, I was trying to negotiate a pathway back to safety, dignity, and lawful compliance. IT WAS MY STATUTORY RIGHT! IT WAS MY HUMAN AND EMPLOYEE RIGHT. 


I set out what I said were non-negotiable requirements.


I demanded that Rena Christmann not be involved in any meeting concerning my return to work. I described conduct that had caused profound harm and stated clearly that I had experienced the opposite of procedural fairness.


I asked for continuity, restoration of my accrued entitlements stolen, and recognition of the psychological injuries I said had arisen within the workplace and workers compensation system.


I was trying to save my home at the same time.


That pressure appears throughout the email.


I explained that I urgently needed proof of employment because settlement on my home was approaching, and I wrote plainly that I would not survive losing it. That required both employer and insurer discharging their WHS and workers compensation statutory obligations. 


That was the truth!


People who have never lived through prolonged institutional abuse often underestimate what cumulative harm does to a person. The exhaustion becomes physical. The uncertainty invades every practical part of life. Financial survival becomes tied to whether institutions obey laws they were already required to obey.


I was still asking for cooperation. That is what Catholic Social Justice principles are about, including and especially, a commitment to the dignity of the human person. That’s what the policies and staff code of conduct are about, that’s what WHS and workers compensation laws and regulations exist for too!


I referred to the Injury Management Plan that had been issued earlier in the workers compensation process and said it needed to be implemented.


I wrote that I would not accept alternative duties outside my substantive HEW8 library role at the Strathfield campus because, by that stage, I felt as though every boundary, entitlement, and safeguard had already been stripped away.


There is another part of this email that still stays with me years later.


I asked for my staff profile, files, email access, and work history to be restored.


Because when prolonged workplace exclusion happens, it is not just income that disappears.


It is identity.


It is history.


It is belonging.


You begin to feel erased from the very institution you spent years serving.


And then came the sentence that captured exactly how the entire process had begun to feel:


“It feels like a ‘process’ of human elimination.”


That was somebody who had now spent nearly two years trying to survive systems that kept redirecting responsibility elsewhere.


Workplace processes.


HR processes.


Workers compensation processes.


Regulatory processes.


Complaint processes.


Legal processes.


Yet somehow, despite all those “processes,” the harm continued.


What was missing in all these “processes” were SAFEGUARDS!


I also asked why earlier evidence and pleas for help sent to senior university leadership had apparently resulted in no meaningful intervention.


At the end of the email, exhaustion overtook everything else.


I wrote that I was broken, traumatised, exhausted, and frightened of further loss.


And then I wrote the sentence that, even now, explains the entire workers compensation “scam”:


“They broke me, they fix me.”


That was the reality of where I was emotionally and psychologically by April 2022.


Seeking survival.


Seeking safety.


Seeking lawful intervention before everything collapsed completely.


And still, the notices continued.


And still the institutionalised wage theft continued too. 


Source: contemporaneous record of events - Document 300

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Notice After Notice — Part 8 - Chris Minns does not care - March 2022

29 March 2022 

Urgent Plea to the Kogarah Electorate Office for a Meeting with Chris Minns

By 29 March 2022, I was no longer simply asking for assistance.


I was pleading for intervention.


Not just because of what my employer and insurer had done, but because the very regulators responsible for enforcing workplace safety and workers compensation compliance in New South Wales — SafeWork NSW and SIRA NSW — were refusing to act.


This email was sent directly to the Kogarah electorate office of Chris Minns, who at the time was the Leader of the Opposition and my elected representative.


And again, there was notice.


Clear notice.


Repeated notice.


Urgent notice.


I explained that I was exhausted, traumatised, unable to sleep, and terrified for my life. Yet even in that condition, I was still caring for others — supporting family, helping friends, and trying to thank neighbours who had shown kindness during one of the darkest periods of my life.  


By this point, I understood something that many psychologically injured workers eventually discover:


When psychosocial harm is involved, the system often stops functioning as protection and instead becomes part of the harm itself.


The issue was never an employment dispute. Is was a WHS issue that I raised at my work. 


Now I was explicitly raising concerns about regulatory failure — that SafeWork NSW and SIRA NSW were not enforcing compliance, not properly investigating, and not intervening despite repeated warnings and escalating evidence.


I was asking my elected representative to help because regulators with statutory responsibilities were failing to act while the harm continued escalating.


The final section of the email is difficult to reread now because it shows how serious the situation had already become:


“Please let Cheryl know I need that meeting with Chris now to save my life.”  


And then:


“I need inclusion to happen asap before I lose everything, including my life. I’m serious.”  


They were warnings sent to a parliamentary electorate office.


Warnings sent while describing ongoing regulatory inaction.


Warnings sent while repeatedly asking for intervention before irreversible harm occurred.


It was serious psychological and financial abuse! It was torture! It was coercive control! It’s the equivalent of domestic violence in the workplace! 


This is why the “Notice After Notice” series matters.


Because these emails show a chronology of repeated escalation, repeated requests for help, repeated disclosures of risk, and repeated opportunities for intervention.


And despite all of that, the silence (and indifference) continued…


And so did the institutionalised wage theft…


Source: contemporaneous record of events - Document 299

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Notice After Notice — Part 7: Obstruction is against the law! - March 2022

28 March 2022

 

“I’m frightened”: The email to Professor Hayden Ramsay, Cheryl Han and Chris Minns


By 28 March 2022, I had stopped believing anyone was going to voluntarily do the right thing.


But I still kept asking.


I kept pleading.


I kept documenting.


This email was sent to:

  • Professor Hayden Ramsay, Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Ethics) at the University;
  • Chris Minns, Member for Kogarah and later Premier of New South Wales; and
  • Cheryl Han from the Kogarah electorate office.


I was reporting that I had effectively been cut off from proper reporting pathways inside my own workplace.


I wrote that a WHS executive staff member had blocked my access to Service Central and other communication channels, preventing me from reporting what I described as ongoing misconduct by HR executives, the return-to-work coordinator, and WHS management.  


Regarding obstruction, see also http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2025/04/blocking-mobbing-and-truth-2020.html and http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2025/04/employment-lawyer-3-part-5-unacceptable.html


I explained that I could not even get through to Professor Hayden Ramsay’s office directly.


I described having to hide my phone number simply to leave a voicemail with his executive officer after repeated failures to get through normally.  


That is what this had become.


Not workplace support.


Not injury management.


Not safety.


A worker trying to find any remaining pathway to be heard.


Weeks earlier, on 24 February 2022, I had already sent a message to ACU’s “Respect. Now. Always.” crisis number because I no longer knew where else to report what was happening. See http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2026/05/respect-now-always-except-when-i-needed.html 


That service appeared primarily intended for sexual assault and harassment matters involving students. 


But I wrote:


“Where else was I able to formally report this reckless and wilful misconduct…?”  


I was describing ongoing psychological harm, financial harm, isolation, and fear.


At the same time, I was still asking for the basics required under workplace and workers compensation law:

  • implementation of my injury management plan;
  • contact with my GP;
  • proper return-to-work coordination;
  • restoration of entitlements; and
  • returning to my job at the Strathfield campus library.  


I wrote that my GP was still waiting to be contacted to begin developing a return-to-work plan aligned with the agreed injury management plan.  


That alone should never have been happening this far into a workers compensation process.



Why I Was Contacting My Elected Representative


From October 2021, the reason I was reaching out to my elected representative was because I had already escalated the matter to the authorities that were supposed to protect workers.


I had reported the workplace health and safety issues.


I had reported the ongoing harm.


I had escalated the matter to SafeWork NSW, the regulator responsible for enforcing workplace health and safety laws.


I had also escalated the conduct of the insurer to SIRA NSW, the regulator responsible for overseeing the workers compensation scheme.


Yet the situation continued.


The injury management plan remained unimplemented.


My treating doctor was still waiting to be contacted.


The return-to-work process that was supposed to support recovery had not commenced.


My entitlements remained withheld.


The financial harm continued to escalate.


The psychological harm continued to escalate.


And the very systems that were supposed to provide protection appeared unwilling to intervene.


That is why I sought help from my local Member of Parliament, Chris Minns, because there had been a serious failure of regulatory oversight.


I was asking for help because the regulators themselves had become part of the problem.


After years of trying to resolve the situation through the proper channels, I was left doing something no injured worker should have to do:


Begging an elected representative to help ensure that workplace safety laws and workers compensation obligations were actually enforced by the regulators SafeWork NSW and SIRA NSW. 


Attached to that same email was a SafeWork NSW poster explaining what should happen when a worker is injured.


The contrast is impossible to ignore.


 

According to the poster:

  1. Tell your employer.
  2. See your doctor.
  3. Recover at work.

I had already done those things.


What I was still waiting for was the system to do its part.


I also warned Professor Ramsay that my family may be resubmitting their formal complaint after what I described as harassment, privacy breaches, and distortion of facts involving HR executives.  


I specifically asked that it not be pushed back through the same internal processes again.


Because by then, trust in those processes had collapsed. See http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2025/07/intimidating-family-as-community.html


And near the end of the email, I wrote something that still stays with me:


“I’m frightened, so please take these complaints seriously, before it’s too late.”  


I attached medical documentation.


I attached signed consent forms authorising contact with my treating professionals.


I attached evidence showing ongoing trauma linked to workplace victimisation.  


I also wrote:


“I’ve exhausted every avenue for help to assert my employee and human rights.”  


And still, nothing meaningful changed.


This was not a failure of notice.


It was notice after notice after notice.


Sent to university leadership.


Sent to elected representatives.


Sent while I was explicitly stating I was frightened and traumatised.


And still, the silence continued.

And so did the institutionalised wage theft…


Source: contemporaneous record of events - Document 298. 


A reminder of what got me here: 

http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2025/05/i-advise-you-make-workers-compensation.html