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disciplinaries in work
hi all,
just wondering if anyone could help as i dont really have a clue. basically someone in work has been told they are going to have an investigation but it hasnt happened and he is a bit worried about it. he's nominated me as a witness to any meetings in his orginal letter it said something about misapropration of company money, cant remember exactly it was a while ago he let me read it. basically he cashed up his till at the end of the night, it was checked by a manger and he sealed it, logged the seal number and locked it in the safe. the next day the seal was off and money was missing from the bag. he was told he would have an investigation meeting before it would go to a disciplinary but it has never happened, when chased up he has been told it is in the post and given loads of excuses. is there some sort of cut off period where it has to be dealt with. he's worried about forgetting about it (like the general manager seems to have done) and then it being brought up at some future date. i always thought it had to be dealt with and a definative outcome come by a certain time but dont know if this is true or the timescales involved any help would be greatly appreciated |
Re: disciplinaries in work
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About 18 months ago in my last place of work, I was asked to represent someone at a disciplinary hearing. The meeting was conducted with 2 company directors and the HR manager, the guy in question had filled me in all the details before the meeting. (Or so I thought) I sat in the meeting hearing it all unfold, he was making excuses for the reasons of booking overtime on days he wasn't even at work, booking overtime when he was off sick, being off sick and claiming on his timesheet he was in work etc. Claiming money for a college course that he never paid for and never attended. The amount that he had fiddled ran into a few thousand pounds. I felt like an idiot, after the meeting I went to one of the directors and told him how I felt. The HR manager was also there and they both sympathised with my situation, after I explained I had a completely different story. After the disciplinary the guy seemed to stay out of my way, then I heard him going around telling people he was going to take the company to court because they told him in the meeting they would be meeting with him in a weeks time to come to a conclusion. I knew that no such claim was made, and I got a call from the HR and directors again who asked me if I agreed they had said words to this affect. fortunately for me, they knew my stance on the matter. I had told them I would of refused to come and represent the guy if I had been told the full story. The end result as it usually is, the guy is still working for the company. That's because companies seem so damn scared of going to a tribunal and losing these days, so even if they have cast iron evidence they will let the person off even if they have followed all the procedures etc. Steer well clear unless you think the guy really innocent and is being treated unfairly. |
Re: disciplinaries in work
thanks for your quick reply. to be honest i'd never even thought about that.
i dont think it would have gone as far as disciplinary, the till was checked by a manager and there were people there when it was locked in the safe so it was taken sometime after that before the next morning. might have to have a chat with the GM to see if there is anything he hasnt told me, for all i know it could be something a lot worse and it is still being investigated. cheers |
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This site www.emplaw.co.uk is the one I use for all the employment law stuff at work. The quoted section below is relevant to your colleague:
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Re: disciplinaries in work
There is no requirement for written notice of an investigation.
An investigation is simply a meeting to assertain facts. The employer and employee are both entitled to have witnesses present if they chose. What the parties say in the meeting is recorded and both parties then sign to agree that what is written is a true record of what was said. Both the company witness and employee witness do not speak during the witness and are merely present for verification [although commonly the company witness will be the person recording the meeting]. The information obtained in the investigation and any other evidence will then be evaluated and then disciplinary proceedings may or may not go ahead. If a disciplinary hearing does take place written notice (at least 7 days iirc) is required. The employee is required to attend, and if he/she doesn't a second meeting will be scheduled. If again he/she doesn't attend a third meeting will be scheduled but in the event of the employees no attendance the hearing will be held in his/ her absence. That said, the investigation in itself is nothing to worry about. |
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It could simply be that they are investigating other avenues first and can't rule him out, but he's low down on their suspects.
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It's the manager's problem, they signed it.:shrug:
£2,000 went missing from where i work once but nothing ever came of it. Everytime something gets lost or stolen they throw the 'investigation' word around to scare people but they never actually make it come to anything. They have to be careful i guess as they can't go round accusing people of theft. If it was me i'd go to the manager and casually say, 'so whatever happened to that investigation?! Did the money tunr up in the end, etc etc |
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Although it was the first time I have been directly involved in a disciplinary meeting, I did have a small insight/involvement in two cases in ntl. In the one case a guy had ordered a lot of equipment for his own use, again fraud running into thousands of pounds. It was unfortunately another case of HR screwing up where someone had committed gross misconduct. When someone goes to the purchasing department when his both bosses are away on more than one occassion, and tells them a pack of lies about an item needed urgently to keep customers on service, but it's something for personal use instant sacking should be the outcome. In the other ntl case, the guy went on long term sick to avoid the disciplinary action, in this instance he managed to go off sick (stress if I recall) and ntl paid him for about 2 years before they settled with redundancy. There was also a third case where a manager was caught on the fiddle, he was suspended on full pay for over a year, HR screwed up by cancelling the meetings, the guys solicitor started court proceedings against ntl and ntl settled out of court with a 6 figure sum. The majority of cases I have knowledge of like these, were badly handled due to HR department incompetence. |
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As in this case, they seem to be accusing this person of a criminal offence, it might be a good idea to check whether they feel it is appropriate to report the offence to the Police. If this isnt the case and they say not, then it weakens any case for any unofficial investigation. If you are not a recognised TU rep, then you could be putting yourself in a difficult position by representing this person. Also if you have insufficient experience, then the company could use you to facilitate any action against this person, i.e company procedures might say that a person can have a witness/rep, you have stepped up to do it,so they can proceed. Perhaps they would not be so ready to proceed if there were no rep/witness available? It swings both ways though-he could have had his hand in the till. Impartiality is the name of the game. |
Re: disciplinaries in work
hi all thanks for your replies, have spoken to the GM today to get both sides of the story, they have done their investigation and found there were no charges to be answered. apparently they sent a letter but it hasnt been recieved,.
a copy is in the post now, i think in furture im gona stay well away from this sort of thing! |
Re: disciplinaries in work
People need people in these instances. I dont think you should automatically stay away, just make sure you are comfortable with who you represent and have a comfort they are being honest with you.
Mrs H had to go through one of these, the fact that person she asked to support her was more senior and well regarded within the firm certainly added credibility to her case. Similar to the above case, most of the problems they were pushing on her they ultimatly had to drop as there was manager approval of everything. Probably the reason they decided no case to answer in the OPs case. |
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If you are a witness to an investigation you aren't representing anyone! I don't see why everyone is making such a big deal of this.
Where i work, if one of my staff has a cash variance on a till of over £3 (in a till that might contain >£5k) they are investigated. If they are 10minutes late for work they are investigated. If they don't follow the absence reporting procedure they are investigated. An investigation is nothing to worry about but simply a process that has to be followed to establish facts. |
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Hi All,
I Hope someone can guide here. My colleague at work recently went 'absent' from work giving an excuse about car trouble. It then emerged that that wasn't true. He has since told the truth that it was for a funeral which he hadn't mentioned to any line manager. He is being disciplined. What type of punishment can he get? |
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thanks for quick reply.
his record is clean. out of character. verbal warning? |
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No real way of telling. Different employers have different methods, you'll just have to hope they go easy on you.
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Um, each cases take different amounts of time, dependant on how serious the issue is really, I would look through the Disciplinary section of your employment contract just incase they try cutting corners :)
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Re: disciplinaries in work
I'd say it's absent from work without permission - Appropriate punishment would be a Final written warning. Most severe is being dismissed. But the employer has to follow it's own disciplinary policies and procedures and not make rules up as it goes along. Otherwise, the employee could take employer to a tribunal and win on the grounds of unfair dismissal.
It has been known that Employers have had the book thrown at them at tribunals for not following their own policies and procedures. |
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