FeelingFrustrated
New member
What is the name of your state? Oregon.
Hello legal eagles! I'm not certain if this is an issue or not, but to help my lawyer friends avoid any issues with creating a client attorney relationship, I'd like to present this as a hypothetical.
There was an older gentleman working in the IT department of a local public transportation agency. He was at the organization for two months and was well liked and respected by his coworkers.. except for one, it seems. In the hypothetical, the IT guy had an encounter with a woman in finance (we'll call her Karen) which resulted in Karen being upset at the IT guy (let's call him Ron). Karen was at the watering hole saying nasty things to coworkers, which Runs boss heard. Ron's boss spoke to Karen's boss, and then Karen's boss spoke to her. On the day that Karen's boss spoke to her, Ron ended up finding a small, chewed off fingernail in his coffee. He didn't discover this fingernail until it ended up in his mouth. Ron emailed several people immediately and spoke to several directors as a result. Ron asked HR for a mini fridge and an email sent out to all employees. HR didn't feel they could do that, and after several months of inaction, Ron got upset and asked for an ADA Accommodation due to mental health issues being triggered by the act because he felt victimized and no one was helping. Unfortunately, no one saw Karen do the deed and the organization didn't have cameras at the watering hole.
Ron sent a long email with diagnosis notes from two psychologists as part of his ADA claim and HR decided to hire an outside attorney to investigate. The attorney found that the fingernail thing happened and also mentioned that the organization failed in regards to other aspects of employment involving Ron and she detailed these in a report. HR put Ron on admin leave for 4 months during the investigation, and when Ron returned to work, he was greeted by hostile supervisors and HR. HR refused to discuss the fingernail incident and began to deny it even happened by saying that they don't respond to factually inaccurate claims. They started forcing Ron to do work that's not listed on his position description and essentially took the majority of his tasks away by revoking rights. At one point, they forced Rin (who just had heart surgery) to work outside when it was 100 degrees with an AQI I er 300 due to wild fires. Ron was struggling, so he used his leave to go home early and his boss and HR threatened not to pay him and told him he still had work to do outside.
Are there any actionable items here for Ron despite not having proof of who did the fingernail thing? An investigation proves it happened but it also showed there wasn't proof to blame an individual. The organization is now saying horrible things about him which led to him having a job offer revoked. Ron also ended up posting reviews about this on Google, Indeed, and Glassdoor and I think that's why they were treating him poorly, and I think they wanted him to quit so they didn't have to deal with the fingernail issue.
Hello legal eagles! I'm not certain if this is an issue or not, but to help my lawyer friends avoid any issues with creating a client attorney relationship, I'd like to present this as a hypothetical.
There was an older gentleman working in the IT department of a local public transportation agency. He was at the organization for two months and was well liked and respected by his coworkers.. except for one, it seems. In the hypothetical, the IT guy had an encounter with a woman in finance (we'll call her Karen) which resulted in Karen being upset at the IT guy (let's call him Ron). Karen was at the watering hole saying nasty things to coworkers, which Runs boss heard. Ron's boss spoke to Karen's boss, and then Karen's boss spoke to her. On the day that Karen's boss spoke to her, Ron ended up finding a small, chewed off fingernail in his coffee. He didn't discover this fingernail until it ended up in his mouth. Ron emailed several people immediately and spoke to several directors as a result. Ron asked HR for a mini fridge and an email sent out to all employees. HR didn't feel they could do that, and after several months of inaction, Ron got upset and asked for an ADA Accommodation due to mental health issues being triggered by the act because he felt victimized and no one was helping. Unfortunately, no one saw Karen do the deed and the organization didn't have cameras at the watering hole.
Ron sent a long email with diagnosis notes from two psychologists as part of his ADA claim and HR decided to hire an outside attorney to investigate. The attorney found that the fingernail thing happened and also mentioned that the organization failed in regards to other aspects of employment involving Ron and she detailed these in a report. HR put Ron on admin leave for 4 months during the investigation, and when Ron returned to work, he was greeted by hostile supervisors and HR. HR refused to discuss the fingernail incident and began to deny it even happened by saying that they don't respond to factually inaccurate claims. They started forcing Ron to do work that's not listed on his position description and essentially took the majority of his tasks away by revoking rights. At one point, they forced Rin (who just had heart surgery) to work outside when it was 100 degrees with an AQI I er 300 due to wild fires. Ron was struggling, so he used his leave to go home early and his boss and HR threatened not to pay him and told him he still had work to do outside.
Are there any actionable items here for Ron despite not having proof of who did the fingernail thing? An investigation proves it happened but it also showed there wasn't proof to blame an individual. The organization is now saying horrible things about him which led to him having a job offer revoked. Ron also ended up posting reviews about this on Google, Indeed, and Glassdoor and I think that's why they were treating him poorly, and I think they wanted him to quit so they didn't have to deal with the fingernail issue.