This human-interest story shows us how careful one needs to be on the gender agenda. Best bet, not to use pronouns at all, repeat names, or say "person." Or say nothing at all!
"A 63-year-old Perth man has been sacked from his high-paying job after he called a non-binary colleague "he" instead of "they".
The case went to the Fair Work Commission after the fired worker claimed wrongful dismissal, but the matter was kept under wraps because the conciliation conference was confidential.
The identities of the two people at the centre of the pronoun controversy and the name of their employer is not publicly available information, but details leaked out after lawyers started talking about the implications of the case.
The West Australian understands the legal fight erupted after an exchange at a leadership training course in February, when the man said "he" while introducing the younger co-worker to the room.
Another staff member corrected him and the man apologised to the worker — a biological male who identified neither a man nor a woman.
The non gender-specific employee had earlier told the man that they wanted to be referred to as "they" and the pronoun was written on their name badge.
Relations between the pair remained overtly cordial for the duration of the training day. They sat next to each other and were partners in various role-playing scenarios.
The older worker was later informed by his manager that a formal complaint had been lodged, and a written apology was required.
He refused, claiming nobody could be compelled to call a colleague "they".
He later told a Fair Work hearing that if one person had the arbitrary right to use a particular pronoun then another person had the right not to.
The decision to not apologise exacerbated an already harsh backlash from co-workers, many of whom were in their 20s and had sided with their non-binary colleague.
The company launched an investigation in March and the older worker was shown the door.
He claimed his dismissal was unlawful and sought legal advice, intending to take the matter to the Federal Court.
The matter was shuffled to Fair Work, where he was told he risked a violent social backlash if he pursued the matter in open court. It was with that in mind he reached a confidential settlement with his former employer.
The case is unusual because it is not tinged with religious overtones. The sacked worker's refusal to say sorry in writing was not motivated by faith, rather from a belief he was being bullied into accepting a position on gender politics.
Lavan Legal partner Bruno Di Girolami, who specialises in workplace law, said the case was "new legal territory".
"This situation would broadly fall within equal opportunity legislation," Mr Di Girolami said."