Marie-Yosie Saint-Cyr, LL.B. Managing Editor
Recently, a human resource person in one of the largest insurance companies in the United Kingdom mistakenly fired 1,300 global employees in its investment unit by email. The email asked them to turn over their security credentials and company property on their way out and to remember their contractual obligation pertaining to confidential information. Oops! The email was only meant to go to one employee.
Suffice it to say, several emails were sent after to the same recipients to correct and explain the technical error, apologize and inform these employees that they still had a job! However, I am amazed to hear that HR is still using email to dismiss employees.
What can I say? Dismissing an employee by email is a bad idea and a bad termination technique. It is also a practice that should be explicitly banned, or at least severely restricted, in your organization’s termination policy.
Although at times necessary, terminating an employee is already the most difficult tasks an employer or HR professional faces. It is a very unpleasant and stressful aspect of human resources management. It is filled with emotion, both for the employee and the employer.
Therefore, it is important that the employer remain calm, objective, methodical and rational throughout the termination process.
Dismissing employees by email makes the process harder, harsher and colder.
It is not illegal to fire employees by email, just inappropriate. In my opinion, use a bit of courtesy by not firing an employee using any electronic method: no emails, instant messages, voicemails or phone calls. It is better to do it face-to-face even when providing a termination letter to meet your requirement of a written notice.
In addition, involuntary terminations may result in a claim for wrongful dismissal being filed by the terminated employee. If the risk of such a claim is to be lessened, it is important to keep the emotional level associated with terminations under control.
I know a lot of HR professionals and employers try to avoid such termination meeting to avoid having to answer the question why? Don’t try to rationalize the situation to death. Have an answer prepared that is honest and correctly summarizes the situation without detail or placing blame. Most importantly, treat employees with dignity and fairly at times of termination.
This said, it may be difficult during a restructuring to meet each person face-to-face to conduct the termination process when performing a mass termination. However, during a restructuring, you will have already informed employees that permanent layoffs could occur and which departments will be effected. I still would not use email to send the final termination notice but would distribute a notice (through immediate managers and supervisors) in the form of a letter or package to each employee concerned with detailed information of how and when their exit from the company will occur during the restructuring.
Some other tips to ensure termination is done properly:
Yosie Saint-Cyr
First Reference Human Resources and Compliance Managing Editor
Employees can be dismissed for cause, and therefore without notice or severance, when their misconduct or performance is so egregious that the employment relationship has been irreparably harmed. In assessing this issue, employers must adopt a contextual approach, which considers not only the misconduct in question, but the entirety of the employment relationship.
Rudner Law, Employment / HR Law & Mediation
This year, Canada Day (July 1) falls on a Thursday. Unlike some public holidays, which shift dates in order to provide a long weekend, Canada Day is to be celebrated on the day it falls. This year, there has been much discussion of the fact that it creates a situation in which many people have Thursday off, and are then expected to return to work for one day before enjoying their weekend.
Rudner Law, Employment / HR Law & Mediation