Tatoo Dilemma
System
5,885 Posts
The cold hard facts:
We are a municipality
EE is Hispanic
EE gets an extremely vulgar (with four letter words) tatoo on back of his neck
EE is a 'lead' - directs the work of a crew
Citizen sees tatoo; sends letter of complaint to Mayor & City Manager
A Notice of Intent to Dismiss is issued - EE has right to review and appeal of proposed action prior to becoming final.
EE promptly goes out on disability leave (stress related) - EE has previously been out on similar leave.
Policy fully covers pay while on leave for 90 days so long as EE follows parameters of policy and provides medical documentation updates.
We would like to proceed with dismissal, but EE is incapable (per medical documentation) of meeting with us to exercise his right to review & appeal, so we continue to keep him on leave and fully pay him.
While on leave, EE has filed a discrimination claim with EEOC alleging his 'dismissal' (which hasn't yet occurred) is based on his national origin (I'm not concerned about defending our position on that).
Any advice about what you would do in this situation would be appreciated.
We are a municipality
EE is Hispanic
EE gets an extremely vulgar (with four letter words) tatoo on back of his neck
EE is a 'lead' - directs the work of a crew
Citizen sees tatoo; sends letter of complaint to Mayor & City Manager
A Notice of Intent to Dismiss is issued - EE has right to review and appeal of proposed action prior to becoming final.
EE promptly goes out on disability leave (stress related) - EE has previously been out on similar leave.
Policy fully covers pay while on leave for 90 days so long as EE follows parameters of policy and provides medical documentation updates.
We would like to proceed with dismissal, but EE is incapable (per medical documentation) of meeting with us to exercise his right to review & appeal, so we continue to keep him on leave and fully pay him.
While on leave, EE has filed a discrimination claim with EEOC alleging his 'dismissal' (which hasn't yet occurred) is based on his national origin (I'm not concerned about defending our position on that).
Any advice about what you would do in this situation would be appreciated.
Comments
While in poor taste and all that, it may or may not be agaist policy, I don't know, but you would. Second if it would or can be covered then that would be the appropriate route prior to termination.
My $0.02 worth.
DJ The Balloonman
PS Do not construe my post to mean I don't think you should not term him, just under what you have said, I think you will lose any appeal.
I know it may seem a 'harsh' penalty for the tatoo, but a couple of things to contemplate - we're a 'right to work' state; displaying vulgarity is a personnel rule violation and grounds for dismissal; council/city mission statement is to act with integrity and good stewardship and provide excellent service - if you're a citizen would you approach a public employee who has a tatoo that says 'BIG DADDY SAYS F*** OFF'? We expect a higher standard of conduct from our employees than that. And, it's a citizen, who we're accountable to, that complained.
I do agree that this may not fly on appeal.
Thanks for the feedback.
You may be OK with the Race discrimination, but from a pure process standpoint, there will be some interesting questions raised by the plaintiffs counsel.
The delaying tactics used (going out on a stress leave) have been effective for this EE. He obviously was not so stressed he could not file the EEOC complaint - which is probably just a step to take before the private attorney steps in.
He is getting paid for 90 days while you are stewing - use this time to get your ducks in a row, the "fun" is about to begin.
Cinderella
1. He's had the tattoo for awhile.
2. He doesn't cover it one day and a citizen complains.
3. You want to fire him due to the complaint but he's on leave.
Why would you fire him? Can't you just tell him to keep it covered? It's a big deal to the ER because of it's vulgarity so he has to keep it covered.
I just don't see that this is worth firing someone over, especially if they are on leave.
Now if he refuses to cover it then that's different.
Just my thoughts.
2) suspend any further payment until he begins to cooperate.
3) Send him a letter of instruction identifying your specific needs and the out come of his failure to cooperate.
4) You stated he was Hispanic, is he legal, have you done a SSN & Name verification over the telephone with SSA?
PORK
I must kindly object to the suggestion that his SSN be verified and questioning his legality for employment because he is Hispanic.
The EEOC is already involved, doing an SSN check arbitrarily would only give them more to work with.
If SSN is verified, it should be done to ALL ee's regardless of national origin.
I think a business philosophy of providing excellent customer service - to the customer only - is fatally flawed. It has to carry throughout your entire organization - inside out for maximum impact and credibility.
Cinderella