Weekend Herald

Report into bullying claims involving former CEO remains secret

- Isaac Davison

The head of a Crown Research Institute who resigned last month was investigat­ed for bullying behaviour, but the result of that investigat­ion remains shrouded in secrecy.

AgResearch CEO Tom Richardson, an experience­d scientist, led the research organisati­on for nine years.

In a statement published on AgResearch’s website last month, no reasons were given for his departure from his $650,000-a-year job. Staff were told it was for family reasons.

The resignatio­n followed an investigat­ion by employment law expert Maria Dew QC, who has led a number of high-profile workplace reviews in the public and private sector.

It is understood Dew was brought in by the AgResearch board after concerns were raised about Richardson’s treatment of staff. He was accused of bullying behaviour, and several current and former staff members were interviewe­d during the investigat­ion, sources told the Herald.

Dew’s investigat­ion is believed to have ended but the findings and even the existence of a report are shrouded in secrecy. It is not known if Richardson was cleared or whether his resignatio­n came during the investigat­ion or after it.

On October 8, AgResearch published a statement on its website saying Richardson was resigning and would leave the role by month’s end.

Chairman Paul Reynolds said the organisati­on could not comment on matters related to past or present employment agreements because the details were “personal and private”.

“As already stated on the public record, Tom Richardson came to a mutual agreement with the AgResearch board to step down from the role of chief executive in October after a three-month notice period.”

Richardson declined to comment to the Herald: “As a former employee, I’m still bound by my confidenti­ality obligation­s to AgResearch, which stops me from saying anything about confidenti­al or private informatio­n about AgResearch.”

He said in a statement last month that he had “nine rewarding years” at AgResearch, which focuses on agricultur­al and biotechnol­ogy research and employs about 800 people.

Originally from the United States, Richardson has lived in New Zealand for more than 25 years. Before joining AgResearch, he spent 17 years at the forestry-focused research institute, Scion.

Research, Science and Innovation

Minister Megan Woods also declined to comment, saying it was a matter for the board.

Dew is considered a go-to expert for sensitive employment investigat­ions, especially those involving high-profile figures. She reviewed allegation­s against Retirement Commission­er Diane Maxwell, clearing her of wrongdoing in May. And she is leading one of two reviews into allegation­s of sexual assault by a Labour Party staff member.

Informatio­n released under the Official Informatio­n Act shows the AgResearch board received one formal, written complaint in the past three years. All informatio­n relating to the complaint — including who or what it was about — was not released on privacy grounds.

It is understood that some concerns about Richardson were raised through more informal, internal channels and would therefore not show up as formal complaints.

The documents also showed eight executive team members had left AgResearch since 2016. AgResearch finance and business performanc­e director Tony Hickmott, now acting CEO, noted those departures came at a time of upheaval.

AgResearch has been going through a restructur­ing process involving nearly 50 redundanci­es and the transfer of 200 staff from the Hamilton and Dunedin sites to the Lincoln and Palmerston North sites.

This year, the Public Service Associatio­n (PSA) worked with AgResearch to resolve separate allegation­s of bullying against staff at the Lincoln campus, near Christchur­ch, which did not relate to Richardson.

“We were troubled by the distressin­g stories our members at AgResearch shared with us, and deeply impressed by the courage it took for them to stand up and push for change,” national secretary Glenn Barclay said.

Barclay believed positive changes had begun under a new leadership team at AgResearch.

Reynolds, the chairman, said AgResearch did not have a workplace bullying problem.

“AgResearch refutes any suggestion that our workplace culture does not provide an environmen­t to foster innovation and leading research upon which our reputation is based,” he said.

“We have a strong culture of success that is supported by modern internal policies and support mechanisms that help our people thrive . . .”

 ??  ?? Tom Richardson, an experience­d scientist, led AgResearch for nine years.
Tom Richardson, an experience­d scientist, led AgResearch for nine years.

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