• The Wesley Neumann Labour Court case stems from his refusal to reopen Heathfield High during the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020. 
  • He challenges his dismissal as unlawful and argues that the disciplinary authority itself was irregular. 
  • The case raises far-reaching questions about parental democracy, school safety and accountability in education governance. 

In June and July 2020, at the height of the first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic, Heathfield High School principal Wesley Neumann faced an impossible choice. Parents and teachers feared for their lives, classrooms could not be properly sanitised because staff with co-morbidities were absent, and the school’s water and ablution facilities were inadequate. Despite these conditions, the Western Cape Education Department pressed ahead with reopening schools. 

Neumann, backed by the Heathfield High School Governing Body and the wider community, chose to support the campaign for schools to remain closed until infection rates subsided. On 4 July 2020, the Governing Body wrote to parents urging them not to send their children to school until it was safe to do so. On the same day, Neumann joined other concerned principals in sending a memorandum to President Cyril Ramaphosa and Premier Alan Winde, appealing for the temporary closure of schools. 

Just weeks later, on 23 July 2020, the national government announced that schools would indeed close again from 27 July to 24 August, vindicating the campaign. Yet it was Neumann who was singled out. While many principals and teachers had voiced similar concerns and participated in the campaign, Neumann was the only one formally charged with misconduct. 

Targeted for defending his school community 

The disciplinary charges were signed off by then Head of Education Brian Schreuder. Neumann was accused of inciting learners, parents and teachers not to attend school. He has always insisted that his actions were motivated solely by a duty of care to protect lives at a time of real danger. “I felt that I was being victimised,” Neumann later explained, “because other principals did the same yet faced no consequences.” 

During arbitration hearings, Neumann’s immediate superior, Circuit Manager Jacqui du Plessis, confirmed that he had complied with departmental instructions once schools reopened for Grade 12 learners in August 2020. She testified that he ensured learners attended classes, teachers returned to work, and the School Governing Body was informed of all instructions.  

Despite this compliance, Neumann was dismissed in May 2022 following disciplinary proceedings. His internal appeal failed, and on 20 June 2023 the Education Labour Relations Council commissioner Jonathan Gruss confirmed his dismissal. 

The irregular appointment of the education head 

The legality of Neumann’s dismissal has been further clouded by questions about whether Schreuder had the authority to discipline him in the first place. Schreuder retired in 2017 when he reached the age of 65, but his contract was extended for two years and then extended again from April 2019 to March 2021. The Public Service Commission investigated these extensions and concluded that the second extension was irregular. It recommended that the Premier of the Western Cape approach a court to set aside the irregular appointment. 

Neumann’s case argues that if Schreuder’s extension was unlawful, then he had no legal authority to institute disciplinary action against a principal. This strikes at the very foundation of Neumann’s dismissal, raising not just questions about fairness but also about the lawfulness of the entire process. 

The respondents in the case 

The matter before the Labour Court names several parties. The Western Cape Education Department is the First Respondent, while the Education Labour Relations Council is the Second Respondent. The commissioner who presided over the arbitration, Jonathan Gruss, is the Third Respondent.  

The current Premier of the Western Cape is the Fourth Respondent, and former premier Helen Zille, who presided over the extension of Schreuder’s contract, is the Fifth Respondent. Schreuder himself, the former Head of Education, is the Sixth Respondent. The Public Service Commission, which investigated the irregularity of his contract extension, is the Seventh Respondent, although no direct relief is sought against it. 

For Neumann, the case is deeply personal. His career path, which began at Heathfield High in 2008, saw him promoted to Deputy Principal in 2016 and Principal in 2018. He insists that his record of leadership, service and academic performance at the school demonstrates that the trust relationship between him and the department remained intact. 

Beyond one principal 

Supporters argue that this case goes far beyond one man’s employment dispute. The South African Community for Education has consistently backed Neumann, insisting that his dismissal was not about insubordination but about punishing a leader who dared to place the safety of children, parents and teachers above rigid bureaucracy. The organisation argues that undermining the Heathfield School Governing Body’s decision during the pandemic amounts to stripping parents of their democratic right to protect their children. 

Neumann was never suspended during the process, was once even offered a demotion, and had no prior record of discipline. His consistent performance record and strong results, they argue, demonstrate that dismissal was a wholly disproportionate sanction. 

The case, the organisation insist, is about whether principals and school communities are permitted to act in times of crisis, and whether education will serve the people or the ego of a few powerful officials. 

What is at stake on 17 September 

On 17 September 2025, the Cape Town Labour Court will finally hear the matter. For Neumann, it is the culmination of years of legal battles, personal hardship and community solidarity. For school communities across the Western Cape, it is a test case on whether the voices of parents and governing bodies will be respected when it comes to protecting their children. 

The outcome will not only determine whether Neumann is reinstated, but also set a precedent for the balance of power between education officials and communities. It will decide whether educators can be silenced for defending school safety during Covid-19, or whether the principles of justice, democracy and care will prevail. 

Western Cape Premier, Alan Winde. Picture: Facebook

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