Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't follow which contractor is which. Maybe try Contractor A, B, C for clarity?
I worked for Contractor A. That contract ended. I went to work for Contractor B. Contractor A is now a subcontractor to Contractor B. Dude from Contractor A emails me for drinks and dinner. I politely declined, and forwarded the email to my Contractor B's HR department. Next day, my employer Contractor B fired me and said I told them the job was too difficult for me to do. I never said that.
I found another contractor job within 3 weeks.
I still wonder what I could have done to save my job at Contractor B without dating the dude from Contractor A, a good twenty years older than me. I was not interested in him or encouraging him to ask me out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't follow which contractor is which. Maybe try Contractor A, B, C for clarity?
I worked for Contractor A. That contract ended. I went to work for Contractor B. Contractor A is now a subcontractor to Contractor B. Dude from Contractor A emails me for drinks and dinner. I politely declined, and forwarded the email to my Contractor B's HR department. Next day, my employer Contractor B fired me and said I told them the job was too difficult for me to do. I never said that.
I found another contractor job within 3 weeks.
I still wonder what I could have done to save my job at Contractor B without dating the dude from Contractor A, a good twenty years older than me. I was not interested in him or encouraging him to ask me out.
You decline the date.
You report to HR if it later escalates to harassing, but a date request is not harassment.
Anonymous wrote:Being invited for a drink is not a reportable "offense". What did you hope to gain by reporting it to HR? Now if you declined and he then harassed you or retaliated in some way that would be different.
Frankly, if I were your manager I'd view you as a potential trouble maker and want to get rid of you pronto.
Anonymous wrote:Drinks and dinner with a coworker may be friendly or a date. Either way, I'm not sure why you forwarded the email rather than accepting or declining. They may have thought you wete crazy or too socially awkward for them to work with.
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
You deserve to be fired if you reported someone for just asking you for a drink.
I have never heard anything so ridiculous.
I did not report him to HR. I simply wanted HR to know that since he worked for my previous employer, I turned him down for drinks and dinner and that I was not interested in socializing with him outside of work. I had no idea whether he would progress or escalate his invitations and I did not want my employer to think I was encouraging him.
Why can't dudes who are twenty and thirty years older than their captive office mates, find people their own age and outside of work to date?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You deserve to be fired if you reported someone for just asking you for a drink.
I have never heard anything so ridiculous.
I did not report him to HR. I simply wanted HR to know that since he worked for my previous employer, I turned him down for drinks and dinner and that I was not interested in socializing with him outside of work. I had no idea whether he would progress or escalate his invitations and I did not want my employer to think I was encouraging him.
Why can't dudes who are twenty and thirty years older than their captive office mates, find people their own age and outside of work to date?