trying to come up with wording
System
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I am trying to shore up our discipline policies. I am sending out a reminder about the proper procedures that are outlined in the policy manual. What I am TRYING to do is to stop managers from overly relying on being "at will". They fire for performance without training, warnings,write ups etc.
I searched this site for at will postings but could find none. I know that there is someone/s that can loan me some nice wording to outline why "at will" does not protect us in cases of termination. Could swear I'd seen it before here. I've gotta come up with this quite lengthy document by the end of the day.
Thanks for any help!
I searched this site for at will postings but could find none. I know that there is someone/s that can loan me some nice wording to outline why "at will" does not protect us in cases of termination. Could swear I'd seen it before here. I've gotta come up with this quite lengthy document by the end of the day.
Thanks for any help!
Comments
However, what you want to do is to point out that a poorly documented, or abritrary or capricious termination, even though perhaps legal under the "at will doctrine" presents the company and thus the supervisor and manager with several major problems:
1. Increases likelihood that the employee will file a discrimination or wrongful discharge case, which costs the company money to respond to (even if there were no trial), and could cost the company subsstantial dollars (hundreds of thousand even) if there is a legal suit.
2. Creates retention problems. Why discharge an emplyee under at will doctrine if corrective steps can be implmented that would remove problems? It's an attitude approach by the manager and supervisor.
3. Increases operating costs to the company. The time and effort and costs to recruit and train an emplyee is tossed out when an emplyee is fired. Thus, invoking at will simply because it is available creates new costs to recruit and train indivduals which could have been avoid, perhaps, if steps other than discharge were taken.
4. Creates morale problems. Employees are human. They make mistakes. Most employees work hard and do their best. Efforts of the supervisor or manager -- efforts for which they are being paid as supervisor and manager-- to help the employee improve and remove those problems create a more loyal employee and acknowledges that the emplyee is still valuable to the comapny and would be more so if the problems did not exist.
5. Immediate discharge under the at will doctorine should only be done when the action of the emplyee immediately render the employee unsuitable for employment with the company. Or, discharge under "at will" should be used when prior reasonable steps that have not corrected the problem and there is no likelihood that any further effort by the supervisor or manager will correct the problem.