Should I fight a forced resignation?
14 points| 0xtaj | 1 year ago
The facts: 1. The role is 5 hours away. I was commuting on a weekly basis to the office, every Tue-Thur and did 10 hours a day on site. 2. I was remote on Mondays, and off on Fridays. 3. I was still in my state-mandated probation of 1 year. 4. There has not been a documented issue. IE: there was never anything that I signed that said I was deficient in an area of my job. 5. There was one undocumented issue about 7 months in that I received a verbal counseling for. Again, nothing formal, and it was a personality conflict between myself and another manager/supervisor.
I have already been interviewing for other roles and had a final interview that I thought went well, but am waiting for the offer.
On one hand, it doesn’t really seem worth it to “fight” it, but on the other hand, I haven’t ever been formally counseld/written up.
Look forward to hearing everyone’s thoughts.
Thank you.
ano-ther|1 year ago
You can also think of it as face-saving since you didn’t get fired but left on your own.
But no, I wouldn’t fight it, just see what you can negotiate before signing.
RecycledEle|1 year ago
Not in my experience.
An hour with an attorney usually brings an hour of trolling from an attorney who wants to get you into so much trouble that it will cost you your life savings to avoid jail time when the original issue was "how much money should I ask for?"
cjbprime|1 year ago
1over137|1 year ago
mikemitchelldev|1 year ago
rahimnathwani|1 year ago
Pros of being fired: Maybe eligible for unemployment insurance. Maybe it will take ages for them to do it, so you'll lose less income.
Apart from the considerations above, it's worth reflecting on the experience and what you might have done differently. Even if only 1% of the responsibility lies with you, there may be some valuable lessons. Your perspective on this situation may change a year from now, or 5 years from now.
There are stressful work situations from 10-20 years ago, where my perspective today is totally different from how I saw things at the time. And in some cases my perspective evolved several times in the intervening years.
sloaken|1 year ago
IMHO - the government, especially the US government has a hard time getting rid of people who do not fit in. As such they have their probation period to make life easier.
When I worked in regular industry, we liked to hire people as contractors first and if they worked out convert them. This avoided having to layoff people who did not work out. You just claim the need for their contract work went away.
DO you want to stay where they do not want you? Be active in finding a new job. Worked your hardest on delaying your departure, until you line up a new position.
GianFabien|1 year ago
authun|1 year ago
However, if no exit package is provided, it might be better to let them terminate your employment. This would give you the freedom to discuss their practices and warn others.
lotsoweiners|1 year ago
lotsoweiners|1 year ago
unknown|1 year ago
[deleted]
YuriNiyazov|1 year ago
"Sign here that you are resigning"
"No thanks, you'll have to fire me if that's what you are trying to do"
0xtaj|1 year ago
nalekberov|1 year ago
Especially since the worksite is far away from your home.
0xtaj|1 year ago
paulcole|1 year ago
What happens if you get fired?
dustingetz|1 year ago
0xtaj|1 year ago