EE wont do more work
LeslieC
204 Posts
As HR, I sat in on meeting between Manager and a staff member. Manager told staffer, "I need to be able to delegate more work to you." Staffer said, "I am not accepting any more responsibilities, I'm giving the company all that I can... you'll have to hire someone else (to do my job..)" He also stated, "you need to re-assign some of my current responsibilities to someone else, its too much."
Yikes, we need this guy to do more and he wants to do less. Manager and I agree we should let him go. He is over 55, so we are being (perhaps overly?) cautious. We are an at-will employer, I see no reason why, based on his refusal to take on a work load that we see as apppropriate for his job, we cant let him go without repercussion.
Any thoughts here? Any land mines I am missing?
thanks,
LeslieC
Yikes, we need this guy to do more and he wants to do less. Manager and I agree we should let him go. He is over 55, so we are being (perhaps overly?) cautious. We are an at-will employer, I see no reason why, based on his refusal to take on a work load that we see as apppropriate for his job, we cant let him go without repercussion.
Any thoughts here? Any land mines I am missing?
thanks,
LeslieC
Comments
>to do less.
By not taking on more he's doing less?
Cheryl C.
no he asked us to give some of the work load he already has to someone else. He wants us to lighten his current load, as we're asking him to take on a heavier one.
When you replace him with a younger person, be sure the bigger workload is included and that you do not reassign those other duties to someone else.
I understand that you're At Will. So am I, but At Will can go out the window if someone wants to complain that they were actually or constructively discharged on the basis of age.
Now if, after having done the assessment, you determine that the additional duties are relative to what you are asking of others I would sit down with him and inform him that these new duties are essential functions of the job. If he refuses and doesn't make any statements that bring some job protection law into the picture then you could look to terminate.
Based on the limited information provided, I would do a job analysis as Shadowfax recommends. Making sure that over the years he has not had too many things added to “his plate” because someone knew and counted on the fact that he would get the job done and would never say enough is enough. Of course I am assuming that he is a good employee otherwise you wouldn’t be considering him for additional duties. An analysis of what he actually does will show you if your request is reasonable and fair in comparison to other like positions. I believe additional conversation is appropriate and necessary with this employee before reaching a termination decision. You will also have some of the documentation to dispute an age discrimination complaint when he files. Tread carefully!
Do it before he can claim any discrimination, stress or work related injury. Place an ad the same day. Don't sweat the work, the others in his department will appreciate you getting rid of the non team player and will pick up the slack until you hir another.
My $0.02 worth,
The Balloonman
This is the part of HR that just aint fun....
It ain't fun, letting someone go never is but that is why they pay us the semi average bucks!
My $0.02 worth,
The Balloonman
>doing it.
In your initial posting, you stated that you wanted to delegate additional duties. Now, you are saying he is not doing the job he was hired to do. Statements appear to be in conflict-please clarify.
I take it he is an exempt employee (accountant). If you feel comfortable that what you are asking him to do in not unreasonable... you could have a performance problem. I would talk with him and explain that what you are asking him to do is not unreasonable and he should be able to complete this within a normal period of time. Again let him know that his job is not a 9-5 non-exempt job... you are paying him to get a job done, not by the hour. If he can't get the job done within this time, address it as a performance issue. (i.e. he accepted the work, but couldn't get it through or didn't do a good job with it, errors, etc.) However, if he outright refuses to do it, I would sit him down and explain the analysis of the job and duties are reasonable. That what his manager has asked him to do is a reasonable request. If he still refuses to do this, I would remind him that this is insubordination and could be grounds for immediate dismissal. Give him a day to think about it and then take action if he won't even give it a try. Or, you could give him the work to do and if he refuses, you could just ask him, Since we are asking you to do your job and you are refusing, I assume you are voluntarily resigning your position?
(The last suggestion would be to say you will be glad to take work away from him but his salary will be cut to .....$$$ since he was being paid to do more work and you will have to hire someone else to do the work he was being paid to do.
Good luck. Don't you hate it when people won't even cooperate and give it a try.
E Wart