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 Appeared in CNN.
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -- U r fired.
A Sydney traffic controller sued his former employer for unfair dismissal
Tuesday, claiming the he was sacked via mobile phone text message from a
company director.
"Its (sic) official, you no longer work for JNI Traffic Control and u
(sic) have forfided (sic) any arrangements made," read the message sent to
John Eid in February, his lawyer Tom Earls told the industrial court.
"There was no justification," Earls told the New South Wales Industrial
Relations Commission. "The lack of procedural fairness culminated in the
undignified process of being terminated via an SMS (short message service)
message."
JNI Traffic Control claimed Eid had in fact resigned, instead of the other
way around.
He'd "stated he would not work for JNI ever again and swore in colorful
language, at length," said the company's lawyer Kathryn Dent. "The SMS
message that was sent the next day was an acceptance of a resignation."
More polite ways?
Commissioner Elizabeth Bishop warned about the dangers of using modern
technology in the workplace, saying the text message should not have been
sent regardless of whether Eid had resigned or was fired.
E-mails, text messages and answering machines were inappropriate for
important official business communication, she said.
"What happened to the old-fashioned letter or talking to someone in
person?" Bishop asked.
She then ordered JNI Traffic Control and Eid to attempt to reconcile in a
private session.

May 20, 2003.
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