Sunday, May 31, 2026

Notice After Notice — Part 5 - March 2022 - Email to Chris Minns’ Kogarah Electorate Office and University Governance

21 March 2022 — “Honesty Is the Best Policy”

By March 2022, the pattern had become relentless.

Email after email.

Request after request.

Notice after notice.


I was still trying to survive the consequences of prolonged non-compliance, withheld entitlements, and institutional silence.


On 21 March 2022, I sent two more emails. One to the Kogarah electorate office. One to the Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Ethics). Both reflected the same reality:


I was still waiting.

Still unsupported.

Still trying to secure my future while those with power delayed (or ignored) accountability.


This documented correspondence forms part of that continuing chronology.  



Email One — To the Kogarah Electorate Office


“I can only speculate”


The first email was sent to Cheryl Han at the office of my local member, who is now Premier of New South Wales.


The subject line alone captured the uncertainty I had been left to live in:


“Return of my work and entitlements: I think there’s progress but I can only speculate.”


That sentence says everything.


No transparency.

No meaningful updates.

No certainty regarding my stable employment, my income, or my legal entitlements.


At that point, I was trying to secure a home loan while still dealing with the financial fallout of withheld workers compensation entitlements. I wrote:


“In exactly a month, I have to pay the stamp duty - $21,500. Am I going to need to steal more funds from my superannuation…?”  


That was the reality created by prolonged non-payment and regulatory failure to enforce statutory compliance.


I also explained:


“I need proof of my employment to submit my documents to the mortgage broker to secure the loan. This delay is causing more harm and anxiety for me.”  


This is what often gets lost in discussions about workers compensation disputes.


The harm caused by institutional failure affects:

  • housing security,
  • financial stability,
  • superannuation,
  • family relationships,
  • mental wellbeing,
  • and a person’s ability to recover and thrive once more in their life.


Email Two — To the Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Ethics)


Later the same day, I wrote to the Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Ethics), Prof. Hayden Ramsay.


The trigger was a short leadership video about honesty, ethics, and transparent communication.


I listened to a senior executive speak publicly about integrity while privately I remained trapped in silence, delay, and unresolved harm.


So I responded directly.


“I liked your bite sized video about honesty and communication in the work environment.”  


But I also made something else clear:


“My first document in this nightmare aligns to what you said.”  


That is the contradiction at the centre of this story.


The issue was never that I failed to communicate.


I communicated repeatedly.

Documented concerns repeatedly.

Escalated respectfully.

Requested help appropriately.

Followed process after process after process.


The problem was what happened after notice was received.


Or more accurately:


What did not happen.



“Honesty Is the Best Policy”


One line from the earlier email stood out to me when revisiting these documents:


“If a worker, small business, health professional or other related entity, committed worker’s compensation fraud, they would’ve been prosecuted immediately…”  


That frustration came from witnessing what appeared to be a completely unequal system of accountability.


Workers are scrutinised intensely.


But when institutions allegedly fail to comply with statutory obligations, the response too often becomes:

  • delay,
  • deflection,
  • procedural exhaustion,
  • and silence.

At the time, I still believed that if enough evidence was provided, someone in leadership would eventually intervene appropriately.


That belief kept me writing these emails.



The Human Cost of Institutional Delay


These emails also show something else clearly:


I was not disengaged from my workplace.

I was desperately trying to preserve my connection to it.


I repeatedly asked for:

  • restoration of employment,
  • return of entitlements,
  • implementation of injury management obligations,
  • communication,
  • and safe return-to-work processes.

Instead, I was left in limbo while trying to hold together every other part of my life, including my family, my housing security and my future.



Public Accountability Means More Than Public Messaging


Universities speak often about:

  • ethics,
  • dignity,
  • mission,
  • integrity,
  • and community.


But public accountability is not measured by leadership videos or strategic language.


It is measured by conduct when a worker becomes vulnerable, especially after repeated notice.


And by March 2022, notice had already been given many times.


But the institutionalised wage theft continued…

Source: contemporaneous record of events - Document 295


Further Reading: Is Your Workplace Psychologically and Ethically Healthy?


Years before my own experience unfolded, an article titled “Is Your Workplace Psychologically and Ethically Healthy?” explored the connection between workplace ethics, psychological wellbeing, leadership behaviour, trust, communication, and organisational culture.


The article argues that ethical workplaces are not defined by mission statements, policies, or leadership slogans. They are defined by everyday actions. By whether people are treated fairly. By whether concerns can be raised safely. By whether leaders respond honestly when problems are identified. And by whether workers who are struggling are supported rather than ignored.


Reading that article now, I am struck by how closely it aligns with the themes running throughout this Notice After Notice series.


On 21 March 2022, I found myself responding to a leadership video about honesty and communication while simultaneously sending yet another email asking for help, information, and action.


The issue was never a lack of policies.

The issue was what happened after concerns were raised.


A psychologically and ethically healthy workplace requires more than statements about integrity. It requires leaders to listen when workers report harm. It requires transparency when mistakes are made. It requires accountability when systems fail. And it requires action when repeated notices are given.


By the time these emails were sent, I had already spent years documenting concerns, escalating issues, providing evidence, and seeking assistance from those with responsibility to act. Yet I remained trapped in uncertainty, still waiting for communication, support, and the implementation of obligations that should never have required years of advocacy.


That is why this series on my lived experience is called Notice After Notice.


Each email represents another moment where information was provided, concerns were documented, and opportunities existed to prevent further harm.


The tragedy is not that notice was absent.


The tragedy is how many notices were given.


Further Reading:

Yamada, D. (2010, 5 July). ‘Is Your Workplace Psychologically and Ethically Healthy?’ Minding the Workplace blog. [Online]: https://newworkplace.wordpress.com/2010/07/05/is-your-workplace-psychologically-and-ethically-healthy/ 

Saturday, May 30, 2026

Notice After Notice — Part 4: Email to Chris Minns’ Kogarah Electorate Office and University Governance - March 2022

17 March 2022 — 12:07am

“I’m Begging to Return to Work”


Another midnight email.

Another plea for intervention.

Another warning that the harm was escalating.


This time, the subject line said everything:


“I’m begging to return to work as per injury management plan HR failed to implement.”


The email was sent to the Deputy Vice-Chancellor of Ethics, Professor Hayden Ramsay, and to Cheryl Han at the Kogarah electorate office. The people receiving these emails were not uninformed. By this point, they had already received multiple notices outlining failures to implement agreed return-to-work arrangements, failures to provide support, and the devastating personal and financial consequences of prolonged inaction.

And still, the silence continued. 

I was begging to return to work.


I repeatedly asked for the implementation of an existing injury management plan. I asked for communication with my treating professionals. I asked for support, boundaries, safety, and dignity. I asked for the university to stop delaying and “stealing” more from my life through ongoing non-compliance and exclusion.  


Instead, I remained isolated.



“Why Was This Done to One of the University’s Quality Staff Members?”


One of the most painful parts of this email is that it reveals how deeply personal the harm had become.


I wrote openly about unresolved grief following my father’s suicide, about being denied the space to process trauma safely, and later attempting to take care of my health — only to have deeply private matters weaponised in workplace discussions.  


I was asking for the same lawful leave entitlements, privacy protections, and dignity afforded to every worker.


Instead, I found myself questioning how personal information had circulated internally, why it was discussed in professional settings, and how such conduct could coexist with a university publicly promoting inclusion, ethics, dignity, and wellbeing.


The contradiction became unbearable.


In the same period these events were unfolding behind closed doors, the university was publicly promoting campaigns about equity, inclusion, bias awareness, and community values. Yet internally, I was describing exclusion, isolation, mobbing, slander, and psychological harm.  



“I’m Now Getting Chest Pains”


By March 2022, the cumulative harm was clearly escalating.


The email records statements including:


“I’m now getting chest pains.”  


“I have no support.”  


“I’m not ok at all.”  


These were explicit warnings of deteriorating wellbeing communicated directly to senior leadership and external representatives.


Importantly, I was still asking for constructive resolution.


I asked for:

  • implementation of the agreed injury management plan,
  • restoration of withheld entitlements,
  • contact with colleagues to reduce isolation,
  • coordination with my treating professionals,
  • and the implementation of safe boundaries so I could continue contributing meaningfully to the university community.  


That is what makes this series of emails so confronting.


Even at breaking point, I was still trying to preserve my employment, my dignity, and my connection to the university community I had served for two decades. Because that is what will assist my recovery. 



Ethics, Governance, and the Duty to Act


This email also raises serious governance and WHS questions.


By March 2022:

  • concerns about failures in injury management processes had already been repeatedly communicated;
  • concerns regarding psychological safety and workplace harm had been escalated;
  • requests for implementation of return-to-work obligations remained unresolved;
  • and clear warnings about deteriorating health and financial harm continued to be ignored.


The email specifically references recommendations from treating professionals and rehabilitation supports not being acted upon.  


It also references prolonged exclusion and isolation from the workplace community.  


For any employer, these issues would be serious.


For a publicly funded university whose leadership portfolio include ethics, mission, and community values, the contradiction becomes even harder to reconcile.



“I’m Begging”


The final words in the email are simple:


“I’m begging.”  


That captures the reality of this period more honestly than any legal submission ever could.


This was a worker trying to survive institutional silence while begging to return to work safely.


And the notices kept coming.


And the institutionalised wage theft continued…

Source: contemporaneous record of events - Document 294.

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Notice After Notice — Part 3: Email to Chris Minns’ Kogarah Electorate Office - March 2022

10 March 2022 — Email to Cheryl Han, Kogarah Electorate Office

By March 2022, I was exhausted.


I was exhausted from the workers compensation battle itself, and also from constantly trying to hold my life together while the people and systems responsible for worker safety continued doing nothing meaningful to stop the harm.


On 10 March 2022, I emailed Cheryl Han at the Kogarah electorate office again.


At that point, I had spent nearly two years trying to get basic obligations fulfilled — lawful injury management, proper return-to-work coordination, communication with my treating professionals, financial stability, and some form of human support from my workplace.


Instead, I felt abandoned inside a system that kept generating processes while avoiding accountability.


The instability had affected every aspect of my life — financially, psychologically, socially, and professionally.


I explained that I needed proof of employment from the university and needed the process started for returning to my work.  


Not eventually.


Immediately.


While statutory obligations continued to be ignored, I was trying to save my home and preserve what I had spent almost two decades building professionally.

I described living with fear, neglect, and social isolation.  


And despite everything, I was still trying to reconnect with my workplace ethically and constructively. I was still asking for proper injury management coordination. I was still asking for communication between a return-to-work coordinator, my GP, and allied health professionals so that an appropriate plan aligned with the injury management plan could finally occur.  


I was still trying to return safely to work.


Still trying to preserve dignity.


Still trying to believe somebody would finally step in and stop what was happening.


Instead, I described being left “alone and in the dark.”  


That captures this period of my life more accurately than almost anything else, because that’s what prolonged systems failure feels like.


You keep notifying people. You keep documenting harm. You keep asking for lawful intervention. You keep believing someone will finally recognise how serious the situation has become.


And yet the notices keep accumulating while the silence continues.


I also wrote about the financial destruction that had occurred because regulators and claims management systems had allowed me to be financially crushed instead of protected.  


The withholding of support, the delays, the lack of coordination, and the failure to implement lawful injury management obligations compound over time. Financially. Psychologically. Socially.


Toward the end of the email, I referenced the university’s Vice Chancellor and the discussion around restoring institutional integrity. But I also wrote something important:


“There’s no integrity if I’m still neglected and not a part of my workplace immediately.”  


That was the contradiction I could no longer ignore.


Integrity is not branding.


Integrity is how institutions respond when one of their own workers repeatedly asks for help and continues to be left without support.


And so the institutionalised wage theft continued…

Source: contemporaneous record of events - Document 296.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Notice After Notice — Part 2: Email to Chris Minns’ Kogarah Electorate Office - March 2022

10 March 2022

Subject: “Please support my return to work asap”

On 10 March 2022, I sent another email to Chris Minns’ Kogarah electorate office while also continuing attempts to engage university governance and ethics leadership regarding my unresolved return-to-work situation, ongoing exclusion, and the failure to implement an agreed Injury Management Plan.


By this point, the situation had become critical. I sent another email. Another plea. Another attempt to stop the harm before it became irreversible.  


I was no longer simply asking for help. I was begging for lawful intervention.


I was asking elected representatives to help ensure my employer complied with its legal obligations under workers’ compensation and work health and safety law (via the regulators SIRA NSW and SafeWork NSW, who repeatedly refused to take action). 


I was asking for the Injury Management Plan — already agreed to by the insurer — to finally be implemented.


Instead, I remained trapped in a system of delay, silence, and escalating harm.


This was a worker trying to survive prolonged exclusion, financial collapse, and psychological injury while the people with power delayed action.


The subject line of the email says everything:


“Please support my return to work asap.”


Return to work.


That has always been the goal.



By March 2022, I was also trying to secure my home loan and provide proof of employment to a mortgage broker while simultaneously fighting to have my employment rights recognised.  


I wrote:


“I need the … injury management plan agreement never implemented by [specialised insurer] and employer.”  


The plan already existed.

The obligation already existed.

The laws already existed.


What did not exist was enforcement.



The most confronting part of this email is the exhaustion.


It is the language of someone being psychologically crushed by institutional indifference:


“I’m not coping with negligence anymore.”  


“I’m suffocating from cruelty and negligence.”  


“When are they thinking of finally contacting my nominated treating doctor… When I’m dead?”  


Those words reflected the reality of prolonged non-compliance, isolation, and systemic failure while I remained without proper injury management coordination, without meaningful return-to-work support, and without the statutory protections workers are supposed to rely upon.



What also stands out now is that I was still trying to protect the institution.


I wrote:


“They are not going to want these people in WHS or what they did to us, become public.”  


Even then, I believed the university’s leadership — particularly its mission and ethics leadership — would intervene once they understood the seriousness of what was occurring.


Instead, the notices continued.


Email after email.

Warning after warning.

Plea after plea.


No meaningful intervention came.



At the bottom of the email chain, I referenced the newly elected Member for Strathfield because my university campus was located there. I was desperately trying to find someone who would help ensure lawful injury management occurred.  


I even referenced the growing scrutiny surrounding workers’ compensation systems and enforcement failures.


I understood something important long before many others did:


When regulators fail to enforce the law, harm escalates.


And when institutions know a worker is deteriorating but continue delaying action, the risk becomes foreseeable.



The Legal Reality


Under NSW workers’ compensation and WHS legislation, employers and insurers are not permitted to simply abandon injury management obligations while a worker deteriorates psychologically and financially.


This includes obligations relating to:

  • coordination with nominated treating practitioners,
  • implementation of injury management planning,
  • return-to-work support,
  • psychological safety,
  • and prevention of further harm.

These duties do not disappear because a worker becomes distressed by prolonged mistreatment.


In fact, that is precisely when compliance matters most.



The Pattern


This email was part of a documented chronology of repeated notifications sent to:

  • governance,
  • ethics leadership,
  • WHS personnel,
  • insurer representatives,
  • regulators,
  • and elected officials.


The pattern is now undeniable:

  1. Serious concerns were repeatedly raised.
  2. Distress and foreseeable harm were clearly communicated.
  3. Legal obligations were repeatedly referenced.
  4. Delay and inaction continued.


Institutions are not judged only by their public values statements.


They are judged by what they do after they are put on notice.


And by March 2022, everyone relevant had been put on notice.



And the institutionalised wage theft continued…

Source: contemporaneous record of events - Document 293.