Employees Concerned
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We have a supervisor who has filed an age discrimination complaint against us. Among the reasons he cited for us discriminating against him is a poor performance review back in June 2004 wherein one of the issues we had with him was his failure to follow-up on issues, plan schedules accordingly and follow directives from his supervisor. We are following due course with both his performance issues as well as the complaint.
The problem now is that several of his employees have come to me expressing concern about him. They state that he forgets things that he should know, forgets things that people tell him and seems very confused. I asked the employees if this is a one-time thing and their response was that it has been getting worse over the past couple of months. They are unaware of the complaint he has lodged against the company and are not looking to get him into trouble but rather are genuinely concerned.
My quandry at this time is whether to talk to him about the employees' concerns or leave things alone and deal only with the performance problems. In spite of the complaint I do not want to see this person lose his job if there is something wrong with him but I don't want to open us up to some type of retaliation claim either.
Any thoughts?
The problem now is that several of his employees have come to me expressing concern about him. They state that he forgets things that he should know, forgets things that people tell him and seems very confused. I asked the employees if this is a one-time thing and their response was that it has been getting worse over the past couple of months. They are unaware of the complaint he has lodged against the company and are not looking to get him into trouble but rather are genuinely concerned.
My quandry at this time is whether to talk to him about the employees' concerns or leave things alone and deal only with the performance problems. In spite of the complaint I do not want to see this person lose his job if there is something wrong with him but I don't want to open us up to some type of retaliation claim either.
Any thoughts?
Comments
Deal with the performance issues. BTW, I don't see anything possibly discriminatory in the earlier issue he raised about the performance review. Forget the age of the employee. Deal with performance and expected results.
BTW - I thought the same as you regarding the performance review as we had numerous concrete examples of the problems but the state of WI believes there is probable cause for age discrimination and a hostile work environment. The supervisor used two VERY disgruntled ex-employees as witnesses who supported his statements, etc. and, despite all our supporting documentation, etc. we will be going in front of an ALJ to address this issue.
Is the rumor of "deminished mental capacity" a fact and a safety concern for the company? I can picture myself forgetting to lock out/tag out a down machine. At 64 I too have found myself to becoming less able to remember, I am taking a lot of notes these days to help me remember. Is he or anyone else under his supervision in danger from "unsafe working environment", due to lost capacity to supervise, which is also a performance issue?
If he supervises an administrative portion of the company with little environmental safety issues, then I vote, as the others.
A little balance pressured me to post on this thread!
PORK
I agree with the rest that you need to separate the issues. Deal with the performance review on its own merit.
Now, as far as the complaint itself, you didn't indicate in your post if you will be represented by counsel, but I would think now may be a good time. I don't know about your state, but in mine, the term ALJ can sometimes amount to nothing more than a glorified referee and they tend to be very ee friendly.
Good luck.
Gene
As far as the age discrimination complaint, we have had our attorney involved from square one but thanks for the concern.
BTW - We suspended this EE back in Oct. for not following instructions that resulted in additional OT costs, etc. and have won the UI battle with the State of WI twice. He, along with his attorney, have appealed this decision to LIRC for review. We'll see what happens.
Thanks for the help.