Lon nan Gruagach
Active member
Who has been bullied? No one in the crew was offended. The mugs were in a cupboard and then taken off station. There may be women in the crew but does not mean that they were bullied or offended. They might have thought that it was a laugh. I have some highly respectable women friends with serious jobs who have a absolutely filthy sence of humour on occasions.
What law has been broken? None unless there was bullying or offence.
What are normal standards of behaviour? People in difficult and dangerous jobs often use rough humour as a coping mechanism. Police, fire, military and nurses develop a close bond and a shared sense of humour which sometimes is a bit risqué when judged next to the standards of your local library or parish council. Look at many nurses (not old and male generally) hen parties to get a view of what is normal.
No doubt the mugs were more explicit than just a topless shot and should not have been in the station. No doubt the crew did not react well to being lectured by a Diversity and Inclusion Manager. But the escalation of the issue should have been avoided by grown up management.
My gut feel initial reaction was heavy handed, PC driven management and nothing that has emerged since has changed that. If I was a volunteer who was having a laugh with my mates with whom I had risked my life and encountered traumatic situations I would also react badly to managers who were incapable of gaining my respect by taking a mature approach.
Maybe management should have to accompany the crew on a call out, in the middle of the night, in a serious storm as part of their induction. That would melt away the snowflakes pretty quickly.
I understand that rough environments lead to rough humour, and has done for ever(?). But that does not mean it is ok. How often have historical behaviours been exposed as inappropriate?
If the volunteer's account as published above is correct to the letter then the RNLI wouldn't have a leg to stand on, even the manager in question wold be on rough ground within the charity. I feel quite confident that there is still much more that hasn't been published.
I think a big problem for the RNLI is that the backroom tasks are significantly less glamorous or rewarding as the public facing volunteers. It would be great if the calibre of management required could be provided by volunteers, but that type of skill is rarely free.
It's also important to realise that the modern (snowflake as some here insult) jobs are a requirement of all workplaces.