Poll: Do you hire relatives?
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Does your company have a policy on hiring relatives of current employees? If so, can you give a quick summary of what the policy entails?
Thanks!
Thanks!
Comments
It probably depends on your type of organization, size, and the market for labor in your area.
In a small rural area like ours, you cant turn away applicants simply because they are related to eachother.
In a very small organization, hiring relatives could be a problem. From what I have heard, family run businesses are often very difficult work environments.
1.No person will hold a job over which an immediate family member exercises supervisory authority.
2.No person will hold a job while an immediate family member serves on the Board, its committees, Policy Council or Delegate agency Board if that Board or committee has authority to order personnel actions affecting the position. Members of the immediate family are defined to include: grandparents, husband, wife, father, father-in-law, mother, mother-in-law, brother, brother-in-law, sister, sister-in-law, son, son-in-law, daughter, daughter-in-law and all immediate step family members.
Half of the president's family works here (I've had a few touchy situations, but nothing serious, mostly people afraid of saying something that might offend the boss if it got back to him), and my own son is an AR/Escrow clerk. Once his co-workers found out he knows none of the HR secrets, he has had no problems. I busted the entire AR department (including my own kid) for sneaking out early the Friday before Memorial Day. They didn't think anyone would miss them, heh heh.
Hiring relatives can work out but there is usually a snag at some point. Avoid any chain of command - direct or indirect. Do not grandfather anyone. This has become a nightmare for us since some of those grandfathered are still 10-20 years away from retirement.
Good luck.
When I took my present job, I have had to just live with it. I work in manufacturing. We have a supv. who has or has had her brother, son and nephew and significant other working for her and her mother worked in another dept. You can't tell me she didn't show favortism. I think this was a real moral problem, but what can I do.
I think the GM has finally understood and is limiting her relatives.
However, I still firmly believe that family members SHOULD NOT report to each other... but can work for the same company.
E Wart