Layoff and Temporaries
lynn7231
2 Posts
We may have to layoff 5-10 employees because we have lost a large client. The manager is fighting to keep a full time temporary employee from an agency. The temp has been with us for 3 months and is eligible to roll over to our payroll. The manager rates her higher than a lot of the department's full time staff. Has anyone handle this situation before? Does this pose any legal problems that anyone is aware of? We are in Ohio. Thank you.
Comments
If your company's plan is to lay off 5 to 10 employees but keep an agency temporary, you may wind up with morale problems. The message you would be sending to all employees is, "Don't bother working for us as an employee because you have less meaning to us than an agency temp."
Margaret Morford
theHRedge
615-371-8200
[email]mmorford@mleesmith.com[/email]
[url]http://www.thehredge.net[/url]
Hope this helps.
As for Margaret Morford's comments regarding a potential discrimination case, there will always be disgruntled employees who will look for a way to retaliate against the company if they are terminated. It is not illegal to hire a temp and lay-off a permanent worker (unless you have a union contract, then it might be breach of that contract). It is illegal to base your hiring decision on a protected characteristic, such as race, age, or ability. You will have the best chance of winning a discrimination lawsuit if you ALWAYS make hiring/firing decisions based on a legitimate business reason. Here, the legitimate business reason is that the temp is a better, more productive worker than the permanent employees. That is a perfectly good reason to hire her. You can bolster your legitimate reason by making sure that the temp's excellent performance and the permanent employees' poor performances are documented.
And there you have it!
Good luck!
Anne Hunter Williams
M. Lee Smith Publishers, LLC
I agree with Carol's analysis. Although, even in states outside California, I would not relish the idea of sitting on the stand trying to give credible evidence as to why I decided to retain a 3-month temp and let go a regular staff member. After all, you will be trying (unsucessfully I think) to convince a jury composed of people who likely aren't particularly fond of employers. She's right; you will be producing performance reviews and all the documentation you can muster in your defense. If you can't produce it, you'll be sunk! If you can, it better be darned good and more convincing than "The manager thinks the temp does a better job." I don't know whether you have a Reduction in Force policy but am assuming you do not have one and do not have a union either. AWilliams spoke in her answer of 'ability' being a 'protected' charasteristic. Not that I've heard of. And if it were, what measure of ability will you be explaining to the jury? The chances of an EEOC charge (age, race, sex, perhaps religion) are monumental if you decide to go with a temp instead of an EMPLOYEE. That coupled with the known reality of an ensuing morale problem would answer it for me and that would be to go by date of hire all things being equal. It also occurs to me that in situations where you have temps 'demanding' all the privileges and benefits that regular employees have, this would bolster that claim, since you may be giving them equal footing with employees at layoff time. All things not being equal, go with performance evaluations and other file documentation.