Cologne Teacher Faces Disciplinary Action After Appearing on TV Cooking Show While on Sick Leave
Cologne, Germany – A teacher in North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) is facing potential disciplinary measures after appearing on a televised cooking show while officially on sick leave, sparking outrage from politicians and raising questions about oversight of long-term employee absences. The educator’s participation in the program has prompted calls for stricter scrutiny of teachers and other civil servants taking extended medical leave.
The case centers on a teacher currently receiving a salary while absent from work due to illness. Potential sanctions range from a formal reprimand and salary reduction to reassignment or, in the most severe scenario, dismissal from the civil service. The controversy comes as NRW grapples wiht a meaningful number of long-term sick leave cases among its educators, fueling debate about accountability and the impact on the state’s education system.
FDP Vice-faction Leader Franziska Müller-Rech has sharply criticized the situation, stating, “Apparently, in North Rhine-Westphalia, brazenness wins.Such behavior is not only massively uncollegial, it harms the entire profession and trust in state action.” Müller-Rech is advocating for a standardized procedure requiring authorities to systematically assess the fitness for duty of employees on extended sick leave.
According to a recent “Situation Report on Long-Term Illnesses among State Employees,” 1,388 tenured teachers in NRW are currently on sick leave. The report details that 745 civil servants have been absent for more than six months, with 582 unable to work for approximately a year. Forty-seven teachers have been on leave due to reported illness for over three years, and 14 have been absent for at least five years. Notably, slightly more than half of these teachers have undergone examination by an official medical officer.