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One former PwC worker was working remotely from India, broke his contract and then challenged PwC when the company fired him.
Jasch Asher, a PwC worker who began working in the firm’s Dublin office in 2022, secretly left the country in 2024 without informing his employers and continued to work remotely until Asher was called into the office for a performance improvement plan meeting.
The meeting was scheduled for November 2024, and Asher declined the meeting, telling his supervisor that he was not in the office.According to his contract, Asher was supposed to work in Ireland with office attendance at least 2-3 days a week.After he canceled the meeting, Asher’s supervisor was under the impression that because he lived a five or 10-minute walk from the office, he would be able to attend the meeting later in the day.Asher said he had a cold and couldn’t come to the office.The supervisor asked him if he had been in the office earlier that week, he replied that he had been and then proceeded to make serious allegations against the supervisor and accused him of bullying him.The supervisor went to the Human Resources office and informed them that he had not seen Asher in the office for a while. HR checked Asher’s internet traffic and discovered that he had been working from India since September 30, 2024.
According to an Irish Times report, PwC’s remote working policy allowed a maximum of 30 days of work from abroad which Asher had already used.The HR executive held a conference call with Asher, where Asher denied being in India and insisted he was working from his home in Dublin. The supervisor who was also present on the call asked him to come to the office the next day. But Asher said he wouldn’t,Later that month, Asher finally gave in and admitted that he had been working from India for some time and was unable to return to Dublin because his landlord was in the process of selling the residence and also did not want to work for the supervisor.When Asher was fired, he moved the Labor Relations Commission against his firing and basically said he had his supervisor’s permission to work from India but was fired. The WRC judge dismissed Asher’s challenge as Asher, who represented himself at the hearing, told the panel that he had not mentioned to his employer that he was in India. He told the committee that he returned to India for family reasons.
