loyalty or what
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Have an individual as an employee of our homeowner association and also is a homeowner in the community.
On ee days off, and as a homeowner, she composed a letter and flyer urging other homeowners not to vote for a particular candidate for our Board of Director's election. The candidate (who is the current president) has seen the flyer and is very upset to the point of seeking termination of this employee, siting all employees should be in a neutral position. Association policy states that a homeowner may express any opinion regarding the Association, (even though that homeowner is an ee and opinions are not expressed, etc "on the clock".) He also states that if an ee is present on the property on days off, any board member may approach ee and order specific instructions to solve a problem. This particular ee has stated to the president that they are on their day off to enjoy the lake and to contact on duty personnel for resolution to his problem. This president is also seeking termination of this ee, siting insubordination.
Management is in agreement with ee, but president is adamant and will push issue for termination.
Isn't this opening a door to retaliation and a possible big-time law suit. Management has also been threatened that if they do not terminate ee, their position would be in jeopardy. This situation will more than likely come to a head in the next few days.
Please, any suggestions!
On ee days off, and as a homeowner, she composed a letter and flyer urging other homeowners not to vote for a particular candidate for our Board of Director's election. The candidate (who is the current president) has seen the flyer and is very upset to the point of seeking termination of this employee, siting all employees should be in a neutral position. Association policy states that a homeowner may express any opinion regarding the Association, (even though that homeowner is an ee and opinions are not expressed, etc "on the clock".) He also states that if an ee is present on the property on days off, any board member may approach ee and order specific instructions to solve a problem. This particular ee has stated to the president that they are on their day off to enjoy the lake and to contact on duty personnel for resolution to his problem. This president is also seeking termination of this ee, siting insubordination.
Management is in agreement with ee, but president is adamant and will push issue for termination.
Isn't this opening a door to retaliation and a possible big-time law suit. Management has also been threatened that if they do not terminate ee, their position would be in jeopardy. This situation will more than likely come to a head in the next few days.
Please, any suggestions!
Comments
That would give you a basis for termination. It shouldn't matter what the employee's opinion is. Management should look at the action objectively and sort it out. Eventually this employee will cite his/her first amendment rights.
Oh, by the way. Welcome to the Forum. I hope someone can be more helpful that this. Others who are more hip than I am will chime in and help you.
The candidate (who is
>the current president) has seen the flyer and is
>very upset to the point of seeking termination
>of this employee,
They are mad about the letter and that's why they want them fired.
siting all employees should be
>in a neutral position. Association policy states
>that a homeowner may express any opinion
>regarding the Association, (even though that
>homeowner is an ee and opinions are not
>expressed, etc "on the clock".)
The policy is in direct conflict with what the president sites regarding neutrality.
He also states
>that if an ee is present on the property on days
>off, any board member may approach ee and order
>specific instructions to solve a problem. This
>particular ee has stated to the president that
>they are on their day off to enjoy the lake and
>to contact on duty personnel for resolution to
>his problem.
I bet this happened a while ago and nothing was done. Now the president wants to fire this person and they think,"Oh yeah, I remember when they did that." It sounds from your post that the president just made this rule up out of the blue.
I honestly don't know if terminating the employee is illegal. But, there has to be some law in CA that prohibits it. Legal or not, it does not pass the sleep at night test for me. It would be wrong and cause many more problems than it would solve. I say fire the president.
His thought about "if an ee is present on the property on days off, any board member may approach ee and order specific instructions to solve a problem" is downright ridiculous. (Are ee's on call 24-7? Will this give board members permission to phone any ee in the middle of the night and demand help by way of the SPECIFIC INSTRUCTIONS they came up with in order to solve a 'percieved' problem?) This is just a bad idea on so many levels.
Any idea where the other board members stand on this issue? If it were me - I would do my best to reason with the president, and explain the issues (unemployment, possible lawsuit - people can sue for anything - Is the homeowners association prepared to defend a lawsuit? How will the others feel about this president then?)
In any case, this a no win situation if the ee is terminated. The rules should be changed so that no homeowner can be a ee (with a clause grandfathering in all current ee/homeowners).
Isn't this similar to the mayor of a municipality? There are specific prohibitions against EEs spending clock time on campaign issues, which your EE avoids, but there cannot be a prohibition against active campaigning, expressing opinions, even running against the incumbent. That is patently ridiculous.
Associations are funny little animials. It sounds like the president has his nose out of joint with respect to the EE actively campaigning against him. He needs to abandon the neutrality idea.
As to the 24/7 on-call, that could be a big issue with a non-exempt EE. Does the association's handbook include discussion about on-call pay versus overtime pay? Preventing an person from certain activities while on call (such as drinking), can lead to pay issues, but I confess I don't remember how they are handled right now.
Sounds like the directors need to meet, establish some policy parameters around these issues, and move on.
Also, one must consider the fact that the employee who wrote the flyer has a first amendment right of free speech on her own time, particularly. You may well have a lawsuit develop if the President prevails, but minimally you will have some very bad PR to potentially develop.
Even then though, I have seen some policies that will discipline if exercising those free speech rights caused embarassment or somehow negatively impacted a company's reputation.
How free is the speech if it gets you fired?
But that's probably another thread.
Back to the original topic, neighborhood association are the norm in Ca.,and many have a history of abusive behavior toward residents and are becoming subject to increasing regulation because of that. Nothing I am aware of applies to the topic of a Board member becoming too involved in the daily activities of an employee - that becomes a dicey situation for the management company to deal with.
Disclaimer: This message is not intended to offend or attack. It is posted as personal opinion. If you find yourself offended or uncomfortable, email me and let me know why.