Resignation - Changed Mind
bamahr
208 Posts
I have an employee who put in a three week notice. This allowed us to recall an employee that we laid off. The employee who resigned is at the end of his notice and decides he does not want to leave. We have already had the laid-off employee working. The Manager wants to let the employee who resigned change his mind and lay-off the other worker again.
I don't want to do this - for many reasons. Ethically and morally it is wrong. What about legally? I almost don't care about legally it is just wrong.
I don't want to do this - for many reasons. Ethically and morally it is wrong. What about legally? I almost don't care about legally it is just wrong.
Comments
On the other hand, NOT allowing an employee to rescind a resignation sends a strong message to other employees to think long and hard before deciding to resign from their position, especially in the heat of anger or frustration.
Just my thoughts - hope it helps.
My $0.02 worth.
DJ The Balloonman
This is very frustrating .
Thanks for the input.
I heard a similar story from a former co-worker who dropped by to visit. Through a headhunter he had been courted for a payroll position that would have him move cross-country. He was flown out for interviews and was offered the job. He returned and gave his notice. Somewhere along the way of finalizing the arrangments he learned that the company did not plan to pay moving costs (the headhunter had said they would). He could not afford to do so and the deal fell through. He went back to his current employer, where he was in his final days before the original end date, but they had already filled the position. Luckily he bounced back with a new position after several temp jobs, and your resigned employee will too.
Please let us know how this turns out, and Good Luck!
Carol
Thanks for all the posts.