Good employee, but tardy a lot
junebug
25 Posts
I have an employee who is tardy 2-3 times a week, an average of 5-10 minutes per occurrence. She is good at her job and I would hate to lose her, but her lateness can cause disruptions. Also, tardiness is an extreme sore spot for the owner of the company. If this doesn't improve (which it most likely will not)he wants me to make a policy that if a person is even a minute late, they are docked 15 minutes from their pay. Can this be done legally? Does someone have another suggestion to entice the employee to be timely that will not force me to eventually fire her? FYI we are a small firm of about 30 employees.
Thanks for your help.
Thanks for your help.
Comments
However I do not believe good employees are late a lot. This is a discipline issue. Either draft an attendance problem, or sit down with this individual and explain this is not acceptable and what the outcome for continue lateness will be............termination.
My $0.02 worth.
DJ The Balloonman
I agree that lateness is an issue...but there are people...and i can't tell you why...that will never be ontime for anything. And although I see the principle behind it....I cannot see losing an otherwise good employee over 10 minutes in the morning...that she likely makes up by skipping breaks, shortened lunches, or staying in the evening.
My other thought on the time issue is that the company is very likely to want this same employee to stay late to finish a project sometimes. We do this without OT here....so if i'm going to give up my lunch hour, or work late to help you meet a deadline...please don't raise the hairy eyebrow when I arrive 5 minutes late sometimes. This goes with the understanding that I don't work in a production environment...the rules are completely different there....
I hope it works out for all of you...
He is one of the ones that can never seem to get ANYWHERE on time. If you tell him to come in at 8:15, he'll be there at 8:20. His boss told him to be in between 8 and 8:30. But he is lucky, his job doesn't require him to really be on time. As long as the work is done, that's all that really matters. Now if you are a manager, the need to be a good example to subordinates is important.
NrdGrrl
This is an issue that is hard for me to even understand, in that if I was consistently arriving somewhere late, I would just leave earlier.
I love how some of these posts can turn into confessionals. Crout - I wouldn't bug you about tardy's if they were only occassional AND you have built a history of coming to work early AND it's not a disruption to staff. This may not sit well with some of our more 'black and white' forum members - but, I gotta be me.
I let employees know we expect them to begin working at the scheduled start time and tell them if they are the kind of person that has to get coffee and go through a routine, then get here early enough to complete that routine before the scheduled start time.
I do agree that employees who are typically punctual or early shouldn't be bothered when they are occasionally a few minutes late.
You stated that her tardiness can be dispruptive to your operations. Address it with her on that basis not as a moral failing.
(EDIT) I don't know how that happened. I ran two sentences together. I had the 67 mile commute and was NEVER late, in fact was always early. Then I was thinking about the guy who was always 10-20 minutes late. Actually I think James did that. I have never been late in my life over two or three times due to something I could not control!
It should give you at least some phone numbers to call in Texas to find the answers.
Flexing start times is legal, Docking one's pay for company administered punishment is a direct entrance into the fed or state courts.
NO DOCKING OF ONE'S WAGES AND SALARIES!!!
pork
Times have changed somewhat and it's really hard to find (and keep) good employees. Sometimes you just have to be flexible.