Just Curious
lnelson
670 Posts
I have an ex-ee who was terminated approx 1yr ago.
It seems he is looking for a job and listed us as a reference. I normally confirm dates, salary, position. Unfortunatley someone other than me took a reference call and gave info they should not have, within 30 min of the call the ex-ee calls and speaks with me stating I gave a bad reference to prospective employer. I informed him that I had not gotten any reference calls pertaining to him. He then asked that if I do get a reference call could I give another reason for termination (such as laid off) I informed him I do not give that information out. He stated that he spoke to a perspective employer and they were given that information. What is the repercussion of this?
Sorry for the longevity.
Lisa
It seems he is looking for a job and listed us as a reference. I normally confirm dates, salary, position. Unfortunatley someone other than me took a reference call and gave info they should not have, within 30 min of the call the ex-ee calls and speaks with me stating I gave a bad reference to prospective employer. I informed him that I had not gotten any reference calls pertaining to him. He then asked that if I do get a reference call could I give another reason for termination (such as laid off) I informed him I do not give that information out. He stated that he spoke to a perspective employer and they were given that information. What is the repercussion of this?
Sorry for the longevity.
Lisa
Comments
Now, if whomever took the call said he was terminated and it is not your company's policy to release that information, I suppose you might see some backlash if the ex-ee wanted to pursue it. Especially if the reason he did not get the new job was because of the reference that was given. However, as long as the reason given for termination was the truth and you can back it up, you should be ok.
As long as the information was REQUESTED by the prospective employer and the information that was GIVEN was truthful, you should be okay.
Where employers get in trouble is when the information given was NOT REQUESTED, but rather provided voluntarily, or when the info that was given was inaccurate.
This is for CA, it will vary by state, and I have no idea of the verbage for other states, and I won't guess. x:D
CA Labor code 1050-1053. Good luck, and tell your people to keep their mouth shut and let you handle it. x;-)
The person who took the call apparently just said he was terminated and did not give a reason for the termination. I got this out of her by pulling teeth. I should have been a dentist.=P~
Oh yeah I faint at the sight of blood, that's why.x:-8
Thanks for the information everyone.
Lisa