ivauir
SNIKT!
- Joined
- Jan 13, 2002
- Posts
- 1,476
Dangerkitty said:Hey Goggles you dont even know me. How do you know I am not a lawyer?
You are giving free advice on the internet ....
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Dangerkitty said:Hey Goggles you dont even know me. How do you know I am not a lawyer?
flylears said:Guys/Gals,
I am disappointed to report that I was let go from my flying job after serving five+ loyal years of service just for fulfulling a long term professional goal.
The good news is that I was fortunate enough to pass Phase I of the JetBlue interview process and presently waiting to hear the results of Phase II.
Can anyone of the many professional people on this board give me some advice on what to do in the meantime?
Thank You
bluejuice787 said:Through the PRIA process you can find out exactly what your previous employer said about you. It is federally protected and any company that is fallicious is subject to criminal penalty and fines.
bluejuice787 said:And to the guy who says that you have no leg to stand on in an "at will" State you do not know what you are talking about.
Juice
You can get get a good "At Will" attorney at Wal Mart for about 275.00.Dangerkitty said:Why? If he/she lives in an "At Will" State, he/she can be fired for any reason. A lawyer would do nothing except cost he/she money.
Dittopilotyip said:Good advice here, get some input from Cage Consulting on the proper path. I would not go the lawyer route. It could bring heartburn to your next employer. Stay away from any bad mouthing of the employer who fired you. That also gives a bad taste. Just make a factual statement. You were let go because you interviewed at another company. That alone says volumes about the low life of the company that fired you without getting into name-calling.
surplus1 said:Be careful about "outing" the company. In the process you may inadvertently justify your termination.
Getting even isn't always the best solution. Good luck.
Ben Dover said:Dude,
Just because it's an "at will" state doesn't mean they can fire you for no reason.
Read the excerpt below:
...an at-will statement does not really give employers free reign to terminate employees for no reason. There are two reasons for this. First, although every state except Montana recognizes the at-will employment relationship either by court decision or by statute, most also restrict it in some way. Courts in a majority of states have limited its application by allowing the at-will relationship to be restricted under several legal theories. For example, employees have claimed that their employer’s policies were contracts which the employer breached, that their termination violated some public policy, that their termination violated a “whistleblower” statute or statutory anti-retaliation provision; or that the employer’s action constituted a wrongful act (or, in legal jargon, a “tort”). The result is a patchwork of case law that varies from state to state, making it difficult for employers to know when, or if, they can rely on the at-will nature of the relationship.
The second reason for caution is that many employees are specially protected under federal or state discrimination laws, which must be complied with regardless of at-will status. Therefore, if you terminate a protected employee for “no reason” or without following your normal disciplinary process, you are raising a red flag that the termination was for improper or even discriminatory reasons. Thus, you may be provoking a challenge to the termination which otherwise might not have occurred.