T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2038.1 | Can't do cause of legal | GUCCI::RWARRENFELTZ | | Wed Aug 05 1992 15:04 | 16 |
| RE: .0
You get back to the issue that this is an involuntary separation. This
is where DEC made its inital mistake.
Legally, they should have offered it as voluntary. Then come back with
the involuntary plan. The way it is now, if someone who was previously
let go in an involuntary separation discovered about some
"volunteering", DEC would have a nasty lawsuit to contend
with...possibly an a class action with our numbers who have previously
separated from the company.
DEC can't turn back the clock and do it right the "first time" and they
expose themselves if they want to "right" the situation now.
|
2038.2 | Where's The "exposure"? | ATLANA::SHERMAN | Debt Free! | Wed Aug 05 1992 15:45 | 12 |
| RE: .1 Are you sure of this? During the first TFSO two years
ago, a first-level manager here was allowed to volunteer for the
involuntary plan. This was well-known by folks who were later
tapped for either TFSO-II or TFSO-III, and thus could have made
it a legality issue, and didn't. Between TFSO-II and TFSO-III
another organization co-located here had their voluntary program
and several (between 3 & 20) first-level managers left.
Thus the precedent has already been set of starting with a plan
that was involuntary (with 'volunteers' allowed to take part)
and being followed later by a voluntary plan, which has been
followed by yet another involuntary plan.
|
2038.3 | No can't sue DEC | LACV06::STARS | | Wed Aug 05 1992 15:55 | 8 |
|
re.1
I think when you receive the tot. lump sump, Dec ask you to sign
some legal document that you will not "sue" them ; Therefore
they're covered. In addition, i know a few folks have gone happily
with the package but yet their activities are still remaining.
........???
|
2038.4 | out of our hands | SWAM2::SCHMAUDER_PA | | Wed Aug 05 1992 19:58 | 14 |
| RE.0
The "rumor" out here is that managers submitted names of folks based on
the criteria of 1. business need 2. PA 3. others....these names were
sent back to the "big" guys back east and was looked over by EEOC.
Latest I heard was the names have been sent back to the local districts
and whether you want it or not - you get it! Why would DEC do
something that makes sense and give it to people who really want it.
We have had people ask for it and told it was not in the local mgrs
hands to chose.
This has been going on for TWO years!! No wonder I'm stressed!!
-Pat
|
2038.5 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | just call me Lazarus | Thu Aug 06 1992 07:54 | 4 |
| Local management can always end-run the system if they have the guts.
This happened in my district (retrenchments Round Two). Two people
were known to be thinking about leaving (for personal reasons). Those
two got the package. QED.
|
2038.6 | | RAVEN1::PINION | Hard Drinking Calypso Poet | Thu Aug 06 1992 07:57 | 4 |
| Of course it helps if local management has some sense also. I offered
to take the place of a couple of people who were being TFSO'd that had
similar skill sets and families that didn't want to leave....whereas
I'm single and wouldn't _mind_ being paid to leave.
|
2038.7 | Local Management apparently can decide... | GUCCI::RWARRENFELTZ | | Thu Aug 06 1992 08:52 | 11 |
| RE: 2&3
I relayed what our Organization has been told by our manager and our
manager's manager. There were those in our department who have asked
to be laid off but the answer given by Management was "no volunteers."
I obviously do not know what has transpired elsewhere and I was only
relaying what I was told by our local management team.
Ron
|
2038.8 | | USPMLO::JSANTOS | | Thu Aug 06 1992 11:00 | 3 |
| For folks that want to leave or want to be laid off; Why don't you just
send a note to Bob Palmer and tell him "I want to be let go by the
company".
|
2038.9 | Let's create a market | METMV2::SLATTERY | | Thu Aug 06 1992 11:06 | 41 |
| RE: .0
I've got a great idea...let's auction packages off. Instead of doing a
private little swap with the person next to you let's create a real
market.
Here's how it would work...
1) Joe Blow gets a $50,000 package
2) Joe really wants to stick around so he puts his package up for bid
3) Bill Blow wants to leave but can't get up the nerve or energy to
write a letter of resignation unless someone stuffs his pocket.
4) Bill tells Joe he'll trade him a job for the 50k
5) Now Mary comes in. Mary has already written her letter and has a
job offer from another company.
6) Mary decides that she'll "sell" her job to Joe for only 40k
7) Joe does business with Mary. He gets to keep 10,000 and still has a
job.
8) We could even alter the Stock Quote program so that everyone in the
company can keep up to date on just what a job is worth.
What's wrong with this picture....
1) Joe was a poor performer and that's why he was getting the ax in
the first place
2) Mary was on the way out the door anyway so why should DEC give her
anything
3) Bill is sitting on the fence and can't make up his mind. This "new
market" would only get him to focus on how much he could get to leave,
not on his current job.
4) If .0 were allowed, this "market" would crop up in one form or
fashion.
RE: Legality of voluntary on involuntary
It seems to me that Digital should be able to get rid (call it whatever
you want) of anyone at anytime for any reason. The fact that the
governments of the countries where Digital does business don't allow
this is an impediment to doing business.
Ken Slattery
|
2038.10 | | RAVEN1::PINION | Hard Drinking Calypso Poet | Fri Aug 07 1992 01:58 | 8 |
| And without SOME Gov't. restrictions I'm sure we could count on
the big corp.'s to do the right thing, huh? And I'm sure _all_ the
people who are being TFSO'd are poor performers too. And _all_ of those
who are riding fence aren't doing their jobs either. Yeah right....
That's the problem with generalizing. It's so.....so, general.
Scott
|
2038.11 | | METMV7::SLATTERY | | Fri Aug 07 1992 10:25 | 49 |
| RE: .10
>
And without SOME Gov't. restrictions I'm sure we could count on
> the big corp.'s to do the right thing, huh?
What is the right thing?
In my book it is to run the company in a manner that maximizes long term
profit (shareholder value). If a company feels the best way to do that is
by abusing workers it is wrong and will go out of business. I have more
faith in the marketplace to "make" a company "do the right thing" than the
government.
This is the age old debate of personal responsibility versus having the
government look out for you.
>And I'm sure _all_ the
> people who are being TFSO'd are poor performers too. And _all_ of those
> who are riding fence aren't doing their jobs either. Yeah right....
I never said this. I created an example (maybe on the far end of the
spectrum) to illustrate how things would get out of control if .0 actually
happened.
Some further thoughts...
1) .0 actually combines the worse parts of a voluntary and involuntary
program... The people that can get jobs will end up with the package (these
are the most marketable and presumably most valuable to Digital). This is
the same thing that would happen in a voluntary program. On top of this a
new barter system is created that adds value to nothing.
2) Digital management has decided that an involuntary plan is the best
approach (I agree with that). You can argue that management is wrong but
it is counterproductive to turn an involuntary plan into a voluntary one
when management specifically created an involuntary one.
>That's the problem with generalizing. It's so.....so, general.
What's the alternative?
Digital senior management has to make some general decisions that must be
implemented by local management in a less general manner. Actually, the
government regulations that I dislike take much of the "non-general" local
authority away.
Ken Slattery
|
2038.12 | | DYNOSR::CHANG | Little dragons' mommy | Fri Aug 07 1992 12:38 | 4 |
| I personally know few people volunteered for the package. Some
got it, some didn't. It really depends on the managers. I
have never heard of swapping. I personally doubt it could
happen.
|
2038.13 | | WLW::KIER | My grandchildren are the NRA! | Fri Aug 07 1992 13:53 | 8 |
| We had a Consultant, who was a former Sales Support unit manager
volunteer and take the first field TFSO package and was hired back
as a contract Tech Writer within a couple of months and is still
working here. Her husband is an sales unit manager for one of the
Corporate Accounts in this same office (When he was made a manager
she gave up her SS manager position to avoid conflicts).
Mike
|
2038.14 | the right thing has many definitions | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | DEC Pro | Fri Aug 07 1992 14:06 | 30 |
| .11> >And without SOME Gov't. restrictions I'm sure we could count on
.11> > the big corp.'s to do the right thing, huh?
.11> What is the right thing?
.11> In my book it is to run the company in a manner that maximizes long term
.11> profit (shareholder value). If a company feels the best way to do that is
.11> by abusing workers it is wrong and will go out of business. I have more
.11> faith in the marketplace to "make" a company "do the right thing" than the
.11> government.
Problem is that the company is an abstract entity that really can't
*do* anything right or wrong. It is the people who work for the
company, as managers and employees, that do the right thing (or not).
So the "right thing" is to work to maximize financial results, but if
some individual or manager doesn't see it that way and starts to act
according to their limited personal perspective it can cause damage.
Sure, in the long run they will be identified and corrective measures
taken, but if the damage is a wrongful cost to some individual it may
not be possible to un-do it.
Thus it is necessary and appropriate to have some restrictions and
regulations in place to attempt to minimize the probability and
occurance of harm. The corporate management structure should do this
with individual employees and managers, but as some other discussions
of morality in business have recently noted this cannot be assumed to
value individuals so it seems also appropriate to have external legal
and governmental oversight and review to some extent.
|
2038.15 | | RAVEN1::PINION | Hard Drinking Calypso Poet | Sat Aug 08 1992 03:41 | 12 |
| Ken,
I just re-read may note and I'm sure it came off a bit more harsh
than I really meant it. The point I was trying to make is that we all
(me included) have to get beyond making judgements on others work without
some real substance on which to base it. That's what bugs me the most
about generalizations. Also, I didn't mean to imply that you did mean
that _all_ employees were [insert either case]. Maybe I'm becoming to
cynical to even write rational responses. :-)
Scott
|
2038.16 | | RAVEN1::PINION | Hard Drinking Calypso Poet | Sat Aug 08 1992 03:43 | 5 |
| add. to -1,
However I do agree with .14's assessment of "the right thing".
Scott
|