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The Unsettler
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If it's excusable the employee needs to show evidence. No evidence, buh bye.
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"I want my two dollars" "Goodbye and thanks for the fish" "Proud Member and Supporter of the YWL" "Brandon Won" |
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Do you really think this person would not have lied if he/she had been given 48 hrs.? If so, why? What about 48 hrs vs 10 days would turn an honest person dishonest? Quote:
No. To me lying is a much, much bigger problem and once it was confirmed that this person lied to us about a work related issue there was no way he/she would be kept on the payroll no matter what UI said about it and no matter what work related issue the lie was about. To me, honesty is a fundamental requirement to employer/employee relations. That's why I was so surprised that UI requires a written policy about whether dishonesty is or is not allowed in the workplace. Some of the comments here are opening my eyes though. Apparently dishonesty is tolerated by some employers. Do you lie to your boss?
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I'm with WD on this one (though he's wrong on just about every other issue
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Just curious- how much did your UI payments go up ?
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^^
I don't know yet. The HR person says, "A few bucks a month." It's based on how many people you lay off/fire over a period of time. A factory or construction company that has annual layoffs pays a higher rate than a company like ours. In 26 years I've fired 5 people and 2 of them collected UI, so it's not much money to us.
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. Last edited by wdfifteen; 05-13-2015 at 06:31 AM.. |
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Unfortunate..... you had her on attendance. You can never spend to much to terminate a bad employee and unemployment is a cheap cost. I also carry employee practices insurance which protects against wrongful termination. It does carry a significant deductible but also worth it.
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1989 3.2 Carrera coupe; 1988 Westy Vanagon, Zetec; 1986 E28 M30; 1994 W124; 2004 S211 What? Uh . . . “he” and “him”? |
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FUSHIGI
Join Date: Feb 2006
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It's remarkable that out of everything written, two words not necessarily referencing you personally resulted in an embarrassing tirade full of irony, self-importance/over-the-top douche bragging and then an insult.
Is this how you conduct your business each day? Quote:
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Cults require delusions. |
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Re-read your post, Pav. You open by saying that you're making an "open honest, direct" communication to me. I'm supposed to go "Oh he is not referencing me personally". Maybe you should not wade in with guns blazing next time if you don't want to be slapped around?
But whatever, man. I hope you and your sensitive feelings had a good day today after your cleansing cry last night. After reading all of the posts here, I reaffirm my earlier statement that the OP was well within his rights to fire the continually late employee. I had a cashier who showed up habitually late 2 years ago. I would give her warning after warning. She would lie about being in a car wreck, etc etc. My other employees would always call if they were running late, and it was never a problem. But this one gal would show up late, drunk half the time, and totally out of it. I finally fired her when she showed up several HOURS late. I re-hired her a year later. She was not a bad person, but I take employee morale very seriously. We have a pretty tight family among the crew because they all like the work that we do, I work harder than any of my employees, and they appreciate the pay, perks, food, crew clothing, etc etc. We make it a point to have fun, but they all know that our work is serious. An employee that disrespects the company also disrespects the crew family, and my guys and gals take it personally. I was asked to fire two people last year by my own head cashier. I try to give employees every benefit of the doubt. But one thing I won't tolerate, and will fire someone on the spot for, is bad prima donna attitude. I have sent people home for whining. My crew intituted that rule. You cry, you go home. Pav, you would be sent home by my crew. |
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Surprising that a liberal like yourself would be so willing to add to the unemployment numbers simply because someone is late to work. Not a very understanding attitude. Stop crying if you do not want someone to get unemployment do not fire them simple enough.
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89 930 Cab Black 11 Cayenne Last edited by Mike80911; 05-14-2015 at 04:49 AM.. |
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FUSHIGI
Join Date: Feb 2006
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Looks like "fragile ego" actually does apply to you. Discussion certainly does not. Knock yourself out delusional tough guy.
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You just need to be stroked and coddled juuuust right, haha!! I am going to guess that you are not nearly as outspoken at work, and you feel frustrated at not being asked nicely in a nice way to do your job. Which is the reason for the shrill stuff you post here. Go on and get down with your bad self, dude. |
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Thanks for your assessment. I guess you and I and the Unemployment bureau will have to disagree. They stated that where we went wrong was not spelling out in the handbook that lying to your boss about a work related matter was grounds for termination. They didn't even ask about our attendance policy.
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Yeah, I hear you. If we had ignored the lie and suspended the person for attendance, he/she would probably have stepped in it again eventually. But in the mean time we would have had someone in an important position on our staff who knew she could look is in the eye and lie to us and get away with it. I can't imagine what that would be like. As you say, its cheaper to pay the addition insurance.
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The Unsettler
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They were going to lie. They were going to be found out. Why would you give them 2 weeks to come clean when you did not owe them 2 seconds to provide proof? When an employee gets to the point of suspension it's done, over, one way or the other it's time to move that person along so you stick to the process and "git er done". Who cares at that point why, late or liar, does not matter, same end result. And you already knew they were lying. You called the police department and they confirmed no incident or report. Why did you drag it out? It served zero purpose. The only thing anyone got out of it was 2 weeks of unnecessary drama. 2 weeks that you could have used to verify with UI if firing for lying would exempt employee from receiving benefits. Like I said, I think you are a good guy, but you let emotion get the better of you on this one and I stand by my position, you made an avoidable tactical mistake.
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+1
Re-reading the OP, I see you knew right away there was no accident investigated by police, since you checked with the police. So you knew her lateness was without good reason. So why didn't you proceed immediately with the suspension? Were you unwilling to tell her flatly "Nope, I checked with police, I don't believe you, you're suspended"?
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The entire point of posting this story was to point out that according to UI an employer has to have specific language in the employee handbook that states that lying to your boss about a work related matter is grounds for dismissal. I am still astounded by that. The rest of the details don't really matter to me. YOU CAN LIE TO YOUR BOSS AND UI THINKS THAT'S OK UNLESS YOU WERE SPECIFICALLY TOLD IN THE HANDBOOK YOU CAN'T LIE. I find that incredible and I'm astounded that no one else thinks anything of it.
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. Last edited by wdfifteen; 05-13-2015 at 07:36 PM.. |
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The Unsettler
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As far as finding it incredible, no, not so much. In my business acquisition is a regular occurrence. The disparate HR policies are always a nightmare. You see and learn a lot when you deal with integrating companies. The first thing you learn is leave emotion and assumption at the door and focus on policy.
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"I want my two dollars" "Goodbye and thanks for the fish" "Proud Member and Supporter of the YWL" "Brandon Won" |
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I would always assume that terminating someone will result in their getting UI and your rates increasing. Even if done for a very legitimate, undisputed reason like low-performance or failure to meet goals, UI is pretty easy to get.
![]() ![]() Last edited by fongce; 05-13-2015 at 08:21 PM.. |
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