Reason to Believe Dishonest Employee

Hi All

I hope you are all well

We have a situation were an employee has asked for time off to attend their Gran mother's funeral, to which they were granted, however, we have very good reason to believe that the funeral that they attending was actually her partners Gran mothers funeral - have any of you dealt with this sort of situation before?

Your thoughts would be greatly appreciated 

Regards

Theresa

  • My partner and I work at the same company and we had our grandmother's funerals on the same day! This was several years ago but it was extra painful we couldn't be there for each other.
    Some people commented on the pains of having a couple working in the same organisation in a lighthearted way, but it was not the case at all.
    Like so many things, conversations rather than assumptions are sometimes hard but achieve so much more.

  • There was a recent survey which showed that very few people knew what their bereavement entitlement is
    We wrote an article yesterday saying that in these times it is well worth publicising it (rather than hiding it away n the Employee handbook)
  • Here it is:

    According to the survey, 77% of UK employees experience bereavement during their working lives. But despite this, 71% were unaware of their own organisation’s bereavement policies.

    Perhaps even more telling, just 6% of those who had suffered bereavement said that their organisation's policy was made clear to them at the time. In other words, the organisation had not reached out to them and explained precisely what they could and could not do.

    The majority, 54%, wanted either more time off or a phased return to work. 29% just wanted more practical support.

    And finally, probably the most damning statistic of all - only 21% of women and an even lower 12% of men felt that their employer talked properly to them and listened to them after bereavement.

    Nuff said