Need Sage Advice
NaeNae55
3,243 Posts
Hello All
I have a weird situation.
History:
About 7-8 years ago I had an employee in my accounting department who was disliked by other employees. (Good employee but had no life, was very nosy, and was too different for other employees to like.) One of the other employees realized Nosy was not only keeping track of her own time in her calendar, but also keeping track of every other employee in the department (including managers). This even included breaks. I advised Nosy that this behavior was offensive to other employees and to stop. She agreed.
Employee eventually was transferred to other department, and shortly there-after we got new ownership and all started over as new employees.
Current:
Nosy's supervisor came to me with a problem today. Nosy was showing her calendar (her personal property) to an exempt employee from another dept who saw all the names and times written there. Exempt employee asked Nosy why she was keeping track. Nosy responded, "Well, what if someone asks me if I know when someone left?"
No complaints so far from Nosy's depatment co-workers, but it is only a matter of time. Besides, this is offensive behavior. My problem, dear Forumites, is that I can't figure out any real rules Nosy is breaking by doing this. Nosy is a good employee (except that she annoys others so often) and will respond immediately if we can just give her a reason to stop. Please help.
I have a weird situation.
History:
About 7-8 years ago I had an employee in my accounting department who was disliked by other employees. (Good employee but had no life, was very nosy, and was too different for other employees to like.) One of the other employees realized Nosy was not only keeping track of her own time in her calendar, but also keeping track of every other employee in the department (including managers). This even included breaks. I advised Nosy that this behavior was offensive to other employees and to stop. She agreed.
Employee eventually was transferred to other department, and shortly there-after we got new ownership and all started over as new employees.
Current:
Nosy's supervisor came to me with a problem today. Nosy was showing her calendar (her personal property) to an exempt employee from another dept who saw all the names and times written there. Exempt employee asked Nosy why she was keeping track. Nosy responded, "Well, what if someone asks me if I know when someone left?"
No complaints so far from Nosy's depatment co-workers, but it is only a matter of time. Besides, this is offensive behavior. My problem, dear Forumites, is that I can't figure out any real rules Nosy is breaking by doing this. Nosy is a good employee (except that she annoys others so often) and will respond immediately if we can just give her a reason to stop. Please help.
Comments
She can certainly cite her rights to take notes and journal on her own time; however, she cannot cite a right to do that on company time. She is not employed as a time-keeper and she is not at liberty to make other employees uncomfortable with her journaling of their personal activities. Fire her is she continues and let the UI slide.
We had a similar situation in one of my previous workplaces where a receptionist thought she ought to write down the comings and goings of the people in the office. People started entering and exiting the back door in order to befuddle her. Finally management asked her to stop.
Anne Williams
Attorney Editor
M. Lee Smith Publishers, LLC
We had that situation a couple years ago in the place I used to work.
Just want to know how that should have been handled?
Don, you seriously need to write a HR/management book and send me a FREE signed copy. x:)
Thank you. Thank you. THANK YOU!
PORK
Also, turns out on this occassion she was only writing names down (including mine) and not times. However, she didn't really have a reasonable explanation for any of it (though she tried a few). We confiscated the calendar. If she can't replace it with one she has at home we agreed to give her the unused part of it back for her to use in the future.
Interestingly enough, it turns out this all came up because the exempt employee was complaining to Nosy about another worker in Nosy's department who has been absent on Mondays alot lately. Nosy pulled out her calendar to defend her co-worker. Tomorrow I will talk with the exempt employee and suggest that those kinds of complaints should be directed to her supervisor or me, and not other employees.
I would never have dreamed that HR would be so different from accounting, and so full of dealing with little children. What an eye opener to the human race taking over this position has been!
Thanks everyone for the good advice.
I'm really reaching with this but one thought that crossed my mind is that if she is "tracking" tardiness and time left early for exempts, could that leave you open to any problems?
I think the exempts will be ok. Management has always stressed that exempt employees are paid for a job, not their time. Also, the exempts in Nosy's orbit tend to work the most hours here. So, for instance, if I come in 10 minutes late it doesn't matter as I will be here at least an hour after everyone else goes home. Nosy is very aware that her supervisor and I are always the last ones here.
In the meeting she did try to claim she had a business reason. She said she needed to know when others were off so she wouldn't try to schedule her own time off at the same time. I let her know immediately that I couldn't buy it. First, her time off doesn't have anything to do with my time off so why was my time written recorded? Second, why have the person who called in sick yesterday down on her calendar on yesterday's date? Third, this employee is ALWAYS here. She takes one week a year and other than that takes a day whenever she maxes on her accumulated accrued leave time. (I don't believe she has called in sick one single time since she started here nearly 10 years ago.) We let her know that coordinating time off was the supervisor's job. She came up with a few more lame excuses, but nothing even remotely acceptable. She is fairly intelligent, so I think she didn't know the reason herself.
Thanks!