What would you do?
HRockets
33 Posts
We are an at-will city. An employee who is still on 6-month probation has caused an embarrassment to the city. Now that a police report has been filed would you say thanks for the past two months and good-bye or would you slap his hand and ask that he promise not to do it again? I'm new to the forum and have enjoyed reading your many comments in the past.
Comments
or are you just looking for an exit door?
Please, in the interest of helping yourself, give us the details!
Please, in the interest of helping yourself, give us the details! "
Excuse me, but your point could have been made or your questions asked without being so crude about it. Do you think there are enough exclamation points? I did. Actually, this looks like something that would appear in "The Star" or Enquirer.
If that is what the forum has come to I will ask for my membership money back.
scorpio
Causing embarassment is also not an offense that would normally be a reason to terminate. I think my wife is embarrassed by 3 out of 5 of my clothing choices. Sometimes she just laughs as I am ready to go out the door.
But if the embarrassment is because of whistleblowing, then you have a "whole nuther kettle of fish" to worry about.
That's why posters are asking for a bit more detail, and can then give targeted advice.
Later that night they called the restaurant/bar and asked, "what time do you leave?" The manager felt the intent was to threaten her into being afraid to leave the building. We do not know for a fact that it was our employee who placed the calls or his friends.
So far, after reading the police report he was not truthful when we asked if he informed the manager that he was employed with the city. He said he never told the manager he was employed with the city, it was his friends who said he was. According to the police report he told the manager he was employed with the city as the code enforcement officer in the zoning dept.
I hope this is sufficient information. There will not be any action at this time. The fact finding phase is still ongoing.
I appreciate the replies and I will improve on posting sufficient information in the future.
PORK
I don't believe terminating someone for "embarrassing" a city is the way to go. At the very least, he threatened someone. He lied on a police report. He may very well have broken the law. The city's "embarrassment"
is a result of this person's actions. If the investigation proves the charges, he should be terminated for his actions and not because the city is "embarrassed".
On the other hand, you have also hinted at some honesty issues. Employees will make bad decisions from time to time, but the ones you have to watch are the ones who will deny their guilt, even in the face of overwhelming evidence. If you can't depend on reliable communications from an employee, then you've got troubles.
I own an IT consulting organization. The 2 people that you want to be the most trustworthy are the CFO and the IT guy. The IT guy owns the keys to the kingdom. All it takes is some booze and some dares and he will spill the info, and sometimes it doesn't even take the booze. I get many calls to "come in, and clean up" after the IT guy is fired or hauled off by the police. IT staff need to be held accountable if they enter the profession (do they even teach accountability in college anymore?). So if he isn't truthful, you hold him accountable, separate him from employement with your organzation, wihtout hesitation.