Supervisor pits employees against HR
njmhr1109
18 Posts
A supervisor said to one of her employees "be careful what you say to "HR" in the smoking room, you have to remember that she will go to our manager and tell him what you say". The employee responded by telling the supervisor that HR knows that the smoking room is a place to vent, and that unless she told HR that she needed help with the matter or went to HR's office, what was said was off the record in the smoking room. Apparently, this supervisor has told her other hourly employees the same.
Do you think that this supervisor should be reprimanded?
Thanks,
njm
Do you think that this supervisor should be reprimanded?
Thanks,
njm
Comments
In answer to your question, I agree with Sonny. I think the time has come to have a heart to heart with the supervisor. Perhaps he/she has been burned before and now is intimidated by HR.
feels that because HR knows about her departements moral issues before
she does is not right. She also feels that when performance review time comes around for one of her eight employees, that HR knows to much about the way her employees feel and she resents this.
Although I admit it's somewhat of an "ego" problem that it is also somewhat of an ethical problem with a supervisor going against HR instead of supporting it.
tried to delete my latest posting to this thread ...
Actually, I sent a reply to your last response and that's the one I was trying to delete. You know, I'm not sure that there is an ethical issue involved here - maybe more of a respect issue. Since her supervisor did speak with her and mentioned the conversation - I would probably meet with the person and talk with her - in an informal manner - about her issues and concerns with HR. I would be objective and see if there are some things that you guys can agree on going forward. Just my thoughts...
It's not enjoyable being caught in the middle as we can often find ourselves since the truth typically lies somewhere in between both parties.
She may need help in learning how to communicate with her team and receiving feedback which typically boils down to matters of trust, keeping confidences and does the person do what they say they're going to do.