reason4yourself
Junior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? MA
This is an unusual situation. Hired last Fall as an hourly employee for a project that is best described as experimental - not part of any specific department, autonomous, and with a throwaway title that has nothing to do with the actual role. I can only assume the title was provided for HR purposes.
Received an email today that explained that as of the end of May the company will discontinue my "draw". Nothing about being fired. In fact the email was quite nice overall regarding my effort on the project (it came from the executive who hired me).
I'm not a commissioned employee. I've had to fill out payroll timecards since taking the position. So I'm not sure why he used the language regarding a draw as if I am a commissioned employee receiving monthly advances. Not a single word about letting me go, or about my position and whether I am expected to simply stop working and stop submitting timecards.
In all my years I've never encountered anything like this so I'm not sure how to react.
Before I have a conversation with him, I'd like to know if any of you have advice about the best way to approach this. If they're not firing me, but not planning to pay me either, how would I even qualify for unemployment while I seek a new job?
Can a firm in MA legally keep someone on the books and reduce his pay and responsibilities to zero? I feel like I'm the Milton character in the movie Office Space.
Thanks,
R4Y
This is an unusual situation. Hired last Fall as an hourly employee for a project that is best described as experimental - not part of any specific department, autonomous, and with a throwaway title that has nothing to do with the actual role. I can only assume the title was provided for HR purposes.
Received an email today that explained that as of the end of May the company will discontinue my "draw". Nothing about being fired. In fact the email was quite nice overall regarding my effort on the project (it came from the executive who hired me).
I'm not a commissioned employee. I've had to fill out payroll timecards since taking the position. So I'm not sure why he used the language regarding a draw as if I am a commissioned employee receiving monthly advances. Not a single word about letting me go, or about my position and whether I am expected to simply stop working and stop submitting timecards.
In all my years I've never encountered anything like this so I'm not sure how to react.
Before I have a conversation with him, I'd like to know if any of you have advice about the best way to approach this. If they're not firing me, but not planning to pay me either, how would I even qualify for unemployment while I seek a new job?
Can a firm in MA legally keep someone on the books and reduce his pay and responsibilities to zero? I feel like I'm the Milton character in the movie Office Space.
Thanks,
R4Y
Last edited: