No pay and a risk of being eaten by a shark - just two HR no-nos you might want to avoid.
Fyre Festival was marketed as THE event of summer 2017. Festival goers were excepting the event to be held on the white sandy beaches of a private island, party with some of the most well-known models and listen to the biggest bands and DJ’s on the planet. However, it filled the headlines of summer 2017, for all the wrong reasons.
Fast forward to 2019 and two documentaries have looked at how the 400+ attendees were forced to fight for half-built hurricane tents and eat cold cheese sandwiches. The event’s founder, Billy McFarland has had multiple significant legal claims and is facing six years of imprisonment.
Although this situation concerns a company in an extreme example, the lessons that can be learnt in regards to HR and employee wellbeing can apply to any organisation.
One of the major issues that was clear from the start, was that most of the company’s employees did not have the time or the resources to facilitate what had been promised to attendees. Stories of staff being unable to pay booked music guests or not being able to book a caterer in time for the festival have since filled the headlines.
Many of the employees were having to work substantial hours in order to keep up with the workload, causing significant levels of stress and pressure, whilst others had to go above and beyond what was expected of them, with little or no warning and support from a manager.
As it became clear that the event was not going to proceed and pressure began to mount, Billy McFarland is said to have ridden his jet-ski out to sea, to escape having to answer questions or offer insight into the state of the festival.
The lack of security and senior management for the event placed employees at additional risk of harm, with many of them not having enough beds to sleep on, being unable to get back to their accommodation following the cancellation of the event and being left to face angry crowds with no further support.
Whilst initially hosting the event on Exuma, an area of islands in the Bahamas, employees were also told that they could not enter the sea because of significant risks from sharks in the water and many complained due to being exposed to the large population of sand flies.
Employers have a legal duty to protect the health and safety of their employees and should carry out risk assessments to check the safety of locations before sending employees there.
In situations where employees have been sent to a location, clear communication should be maintained with them to ensure they are provided help and assistance when required.
After the backlash and the failure of the festival, in which co-host & rapper Ja Rule described as “it wasn’t fraud, just false advertising”, the significant costs incurred by the company meant that employees were later told that payroll could not facilitate owed salary and payments at that time.
Employees were given no option to dispute this and invited to resign if they wished to or to continue working for free.
Employers in the UK should remember that failure to provide at least the minimum wage for hours worked can result in a public naming and shaming, alongside fines of up to £20,000.
Deliberately withholding wages, and telling an employee they can leave if they don’t like it, could also entitle the employee to claim an anticipatory breach of contract that would allow them to resign and claim constructive dismissal.
Alan Price is Peninsula operations director and an HR Expert.
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