Calgary Herald

CP cites safety issues, online content, for firing worker

- LAUREN KRUGEL The Canadian Press

Canadian Pacific Railway says a conductor involved in a 2014 derailment was fired for a second time because she disparaged the company and was photograph­ed in unsafe situations.

Stephanie Katelnikof­f was sent an evidence package before her dismissal in November. The package — which was provided to The Canadian Press — had screen grabs of her Facebook and Instagram profiles that included several revealing modelling photos.

While many photos in the package showed Katelnikof­f nude or in lingerie, CP Rail said in a statement Wednesday that her terminatio­n only concerned ones that were related in some way to railway safety and the company.

Some of the shots show her in cut-off jean shorts and a midriff bearing top posing on railway tracks.

“Railway safety is a top priority at CP,” the railway said. “Ms. Katelnikof­f’s terminatio­n related to her decision to post photos of herself in unsafe situations on railway property and equipment, committing railway safety violations, along with disparagin­g remarks regarding the company.”

The investigat­ion package had online comments that included a 2016 Facebook post under the name Steph Kat that calls the railway’s code of ethics a “short fictional comedy.”

Another profile under the name Stevie Rae says: “Resume: Google Banff train crash,” followed by a laughing emoji.

The package also included a warning letter from August 2016 regarding a YouTube video by Katelnikof­f that she says was meant to be an open letter to then-CEO Hunter Harrison.

“Stephanie, your conduct in posting the YouTube video not only displayed gross insubordin­ation and insolence, but also constitute­d a serious breach of CP’s Code of Business Ethics,” the warning letter read.

CP Rail says it doesn’t normally comment on individual cases, but wanted to clarify the reasons for Katelnikof­f’s firing because she had spoken out publicly.

Katelnikof­f has said she was shocked at how painstakin­gly the company had combed through her social media profiles and didn’t understand what her risque photos had to do with her ability to do her job.

The railway said Katelnikof­f has brought a grievance to her union and will receive a hearing through that process.

Katelnikof­f said Wednesday that she doesn’t buy the railway’s explanatio­n.

“I call shenanigan­s,” she said in an email. “I don’t know why the investigat­ing officer would’ve commented on the rest of my photos, why they would’ve even been included in the evidence package, and why they made a general statement regarding my ‘inappropri­ate social media content’ in the dismissal letter.”

On Boxing Day in 2014, a train Katelnikof­f was conducting derailed, sending 15 cars off the tracks in Banff. A product used to make concrete called fly ash, as well as soybeans, spilled into a creek. The Transporta­tion Safety Board determined that a broken piece of track caused the crash.

In February of 2016, arbitrator Maureen Flynn found in Katelnikof­f’s favour, saying the company’s grounds for terminatio­n were “discrimina­tory” and in “bad faith.”

 ?? AL CHAREST ?? Former train conductor Stephanie Katelnikof­f was fired twice by CP.
AL CHAREST Former train conductor Stephanie Katelnikof­f was fired twice by CP.

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