General A thread to discuss and follow the incoming inflation bomb

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D

Deleted member 1

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I never said you did, personally.

is Ohio one of those states you can just fire anyone for no reason with no consequences?
Don't listen to him. Lars. He's evading the question. Ohio is indeed and at will work state. Out of unions that might have specific contract negotiations, you can fire anyone anytime other than protecting class issues that violate the law. Somebody's a great worker and doesn't do anything wrong? Without an employment contract You can just let them go.
Texas is the same way.
 
M

member 1013

Guest
Don't listen to him. Lars. He's evading the question. Ohio is indeed and at will work state. Out of unions that might have specific contract negotiations, you can fire anyone anytime other than protecting class issues that violate the law. Somebody's a great worker and doesn't do anything wrong? Without an employment contract You can just let them go.
Texas is the same way.
Wonderful
 

Hauler

Been fallin so long it's like gravitys gone
Feb 3, 2016
47,673
59,562
Don't listen to him. Lars. He's evading the question. Ohio is indeed and at will work state. Out of unions that might have specific contract negotiations, you can fire anyone anytime other than protecting class issues that violate the law. Somebody's a great worker and doesn't do anything wrong? Without an employment contract You can just let them go.
Texas is the same way.
Can I fire someone for no reason at all? Yup. Can they sue me? Yup. The only demographic you MIGHT be able to get away with such an action is a white male.

Regardless of race or gender, I've never fired anyone that didn't absolutely deserve it.

Edit: Other than the 2008 housing crash where roughly 75% of the employees were laid off - and eventually I was one of them too. But I view "laid off" differently than "fired"

Also...Tag me pussy.
 
Last edited:

Hauler

Been fallin so long it's like gravitys gone
Feb 3, 2016
47,673
59,562
Can people living paycheck to paycheck even afford a lawyer n stuff?
If they think it's a winnable case - or at least one they can get an out-of-court settlement from - they take it on with the stipulation that they'll take a percentage of the settlement.

Example:
Sue for $40k
Worker gets $20k
Lawyers get $20k
 
M

member 3289

Guest
If they think it's a winnable case - or at least one they can get an out-of-court settlement from - they take it on with the stipulation that they'll take a percentage of the settlement.

Example:
Sue for $40k
Worker gets $20k
Lawyers get $20k
Q @Qat this only happens when the lawyer is confident he/she will win. A lot of the time if you don't have the money, you simply aren't able to sue.