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by trjordan
3410 days ago
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This is true, but I think you've overstating HR's loyalty to other individuals in the company. When an employees places a complaint against another employee, neither of those parties is "the company", even when one is in management. If the subject of the complaint is breaking laws, HR (who has the company's back) is rightfully incentivized to show that person the door. That person is a liability, and the company will have to pay if it is sued for that individual's behavior. If you're running the HR to mediate a personal fight, sure, there's a decent chance they'll side with the person with more organizational clout. But if you're bringing to light evidence of legal wrongdoing, HR is _absolutely_ supposed to be on your side. The company needs to know that, and protecting the company looks like firing the offending party. |
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Which is exactly what happens... When the harasser is not a 'Top performer' in a culture that claims to reward meritocracy.