
Disabled man spied upon by bosses wins £300k payout
Disabled man spied upon by bosses wins £300k payout1 hour ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleJonny HumphriesNorth WestJonny Humphries/BBCAlan Jones, 59, said losing his job had been "like a death in the family"A...
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Key developments are emerging from the global stage. Disabled man spied upon by bosses wins £300k payout1 hour ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleJonny HumphriesNorth WestJonny Humphries/BBCAlan Jones, 59, said losing his job had been "like a death in the family"A disabled man who was wrongly sacked after being spied upon by his bosses said he felt "justice had been done" after his former employer agreed to pay him £329,000 in damages and lost earnings. Alan Jones, now 59, had been forced to go sick from his team leader role at St Helens glass-making giant Pilkington UK Ltd after developing a chronic and painful condition linked to the side-effects of earlier cancer treatment. In October 2019 he was told the company suspected he had been working while on sick leave and had paid a surveillance firm to watch him.
A spokesperson for Pilkington UK Ltd said it had conducted an "in-depth review" to ensure the "same mistakes are not repeated". "We recognise that we fell short with Mr Jones and we wish him the best for the future," it added. Jones, who became the fifth generation of men in his family to go into the glass-making industry, said he had felt a sense of "betrayal" from the company he had served since 1983 when he joined them as an apprentice after leaving school.
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"I'd been loyal to the company," he told the . "Using their words, I had an unblemished record. "I was somebody who showed commitment and loyalty and all that was thrown out the window, and yeah, that was disappointing.
"Jonny Humphries/BBCAlan Jones said he had been sacked on a "suspicion" after being trailed by a surveillance firmWhen he was in his early 50s, Jones said he had noticed unusual levels of fatigue while carrying out simple tasks. He also developed debilitating pain and weakness in his shoulder, which made it increasingly difficult for him to do manual work. The diagnosis was radiation-induced neuropathy, an incurable condition caused by the radiotherapy Jones had received for Hodgkin's lymphoma when he was aged just 21.
He was told by doctors he would never be capable of manual work again. "You don't expect something like that to come along and then it just changed all my outlook on life, you know? Those money worries, what am I gonna do?
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How are we gonna survive? " Despite being on sick leave and finding his mental health suffering, Jones expected to be able to get his pain under control and eventually be able to return and work in a role involving light duties. ReutersA tribunal found Pilkington UK Ltd had wrongly sacked Jones based on his disabilityIn the meantime, Jones spent time at a friend's farm in Cronton, Cheshire, to improve his mental health and combat an increasing sense of isolation.
"It was just being there, if you know what I mean, being outside and in nature. There was nothing physical," Jones explained. "He had his own greenhouse, growing flowers at the time for my daughter's wedding.
The development has drawn wide international attention, with diplomatic circles watching closely.





