I quit, No, I take it back.
denjen
93 Posts
Following an arguement between employees, one employee announces "I quit" "I don't need this". Before he left the plant or even clocked out, he calmed down, and changed his mind. We allowed him to go back to work.
The next morning another issue arose between the same two employees. Tempers are running high and fingers are being waved. Threats made but nothing physical acted upon. Both employees have been sent home pending investigation of the threats that feel as if life threatening. It looks like we should have accepted his resignation because now we will have to terminate him, due to the information from the investigation.
Question - Can I say "we have decided to accept your resignation from Thursday night" even though he worked Friday morning? Or since we allowed him back to work, the resignation is no longer considered to be on the table?
Will this hold up in unemployment?
The next morning another issue arose between the same two employees. Tempers are running high and fingers are being waved. Threats made but nothing physical acted upon. Both employees have been sent home pending investigation of the threats that feel as if life threatening. It looks like we should have accepted his resignation because now we will have to terminate him, due to the information from the investigation.
Question - Can I say "we have decided to accept your resignation from Thursday night" even though he worked Friday morning? Or since we allowed him back to work, the resignation is no longer considered to be on the table?
Will this hold up in unemployment?
Comments
The employee criing victim called the police and filed a terroristic threat claim because he said it was life threatening. I was standing there in the middle of the screaming, all 30 seconds of it. The victim claims the other employee said "I will Kill you". I did not hear "Kill". I didn't see it as life threatening. Granted the victim was screaming and pointing his finger as well. The police have already said this is maybe third degree assault and it probably won't make it to court. If yelling is ground for termination, having any feeling of anger would become a disability.
We are following a progressive disciplinary process. The person in question is on the third and final warning. He is going to be termed reguardless.
I also want to comment on your statement: " If yelling is ground for termination, having any feeling of anger would become a disability." The issue is not the anger itself, but how the employee displays the anger. There are appropriate ways and inappropriate ways to show anger (or any emotion for that matter). If the employee's behavior was inappropriate given the situation, discipline/termination may be an appropriate response.
The statement that "anger would soon become a disability", came from a frustrated person. We respond to behaviors.
A high level employee, who's position is being eliminated, resigned as of October 15th. Now he says he's going to continue to work for free.
I don't think we can allow it under FLSA because if he works we have to pay him. But I think there are security issues also.
There is a huge internal "company politics" issue involved in the re-structuring of his position that I won't go into. I just seek insights on laws to look into to justify not allowing him to continu working after the 15th.
Thank you, Manyhats