Boy (16) wins €9,000 equality claim over wearing earring at school

School ordered to change uniform policy after its rule on ear studs judged discriminatory on the grounds of gender

The student took a claim against his school to the Workplace Relations Commission under the Equal Status Act
The student took a claim against his school to the Workplace Relations Commission under the Equal Status Act

A 16-year-old transition year student has won €9,000 in compensation for gender-based discrimination and victimisation after he was punished for wearing an earring to school at the start of term last year.

The Workplace Relations Commission (WRC) has ruled that his school’s uniform policy was indirectly discriminatory on gender grounds, favouring female students over males by requiring ear studs to be worn in pairs – and has ordered the rule changed.

The decision on the boy’s claim against the school under the Equal Status Act 2000 was published on Tuesday by the tribunal in anonymised form. The school had denied his claim.

The student arrived to school at the start of the new term on August 30th last year with the upper cartilage of his left ear newly pierced and a round silver stud through it, the tribunal heard at hearings in November and December 2024.

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The school considered it to be in breach of the uniform rules in its code of behaviour, which forbids “all body piercings except one small stud in each ear”, the tribunal heard.

“I think their intention is that boys don’t wear studs ... I think they know boys won’t pierce the other ear because they’ll be called gay, they’ll be called names. They won’t go through the hassle of it, and they’ll take it out,” the claimant told the Workplace Relations Commission (WRC) at a hearing December last.

Asked why he chose to wear the ear stud, the young man said: “It’s my grandad – it’s a sense of my personality, following in the footsteps.”

The student’s solicitor, Gerard Cullen, said his client was presented with choices to either “remove the stud or pierce the other ear” or complete the three week healing process with a plaster covering the piercing. He called that “interference with bodily integrity”.

Counsel for the school Kevin Roche BL, appearing instructed by Mason Hayes and Curran, said that after the young man instructed a solicitor in the matter, he had been sent a legal letter to say he would be considered to be “in compliance” if he “covered the ear with plaster”. He said that had already been offered to the young man, and rejected.

The boy’s grandmother told the tribunal her husband and all of her sons had worn piercings in their left ears – and that she considered this the usual practice for a man to wear one.

A row broke out at a meeting between the boy and his family and the principal and deputy principal on September 4th, 2024, when the claimant’s mother and grandmother came to the school, the tribunal heard.

The complainant’s case is that in the weeks that followed he was subject to sanctions, including being placed sitting outside the principal’s office, being denied leave to go down to the town on his lunch break, and being assigned to evening detention which would have meant missing his bus home.

The school’s position is that it followed its disciplinary code at all times and sought to de-escalate the matter – with its barrister telling the tribunal that the first mention of legal action was on the part the complainant’s solicitor.

In his decision, adjudicator Brian Dalton wrote that the “apparently neutral” rule on ear studs was discriminatory on the grounds of gender.

He added that since the claimant had complained about that rule being unfair, it followed that the sanctions “solely arose because of [his] objection to an unfair practice” and amounted to victimisation.

Mr Dalton ordered the school to amend its rule on body piercings “so that it facilitates the wearing of one or two earrings”.

He directed the school to pay €9,000 in compensation to the young man.

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