Currently working as a Security officer in one of the most security-lax places I've ever been to, seriously believe I could walk in there on my
day off and drive out with a wagon full of stock.
Anyway the thing is this:
It's not a hard job, barriers have to be kept closed, sign people in and out, do a quick search of some of the wagons and wander round the place
ever couple of hours.
Lazy cow that I'm constantly lumbered with doesn't do any of this. I've seen her do 6 patrols in 8 months (we're required to do 6
a night) and I'm beginning to think the close button on the barriers will melt her fingers.
Worse bit is she's signing that she's doing this, along with some stuff I'm not doing either (she's making up patrol times, even
mine, plus these wagon searches she's put down that I've done one that was 30 miles away in Wigan at the time)
My worry is that one day I'm going to be getting into trouble for all this and not her, so I've been thinking about putting in an
anonymous complaint. It would have to be anonymous on the basis that I know the name of the last person to put a complaint in about her.
So really two questions, should I put this complaint in, and is signing paperwork that she (and I) have done things we haven't fraud (and
therefore not just a sackable offence but a prison-able one)?
I'd put it down in writing and personally say go see a manager about it. Its not fraud in a legal sense I wouldnt think - but there could be
legal implications if you work in a bonded store environment (so liable under Customs and Excise rules) but she could be sacked for professional
misconduct for falsifying records.
Problem is if you say nothing, i'm sure she'll quite happily drag you down with her if she gets collared by der management. Or you could be
called alsorts for blowing the whistle on her. Personally i'd take my chances by speaking to management - especially as she's implicating
you in her falsifying records.
Can you not speak to the woman in question about it? At least you can say you tried before going to management. Can you not tell her not to falsify
records on your behalf? I'd make sure you were doing a really good job yourself before inviting scrutiny.
Do you want to keep your job?
I'd agree, don't let her drag you down to her level. The longer you spend down there, the worse it is for you.
quote:
Originally posted by smart51
Can you not speak to the woman in question about it? At least you can say you tried before going to management.
Do you want to keep your job?
I'd agree, don't let her drag you down to her level. The longer you spend down there, the worse it is for you.
Personally I would just shop the bitch.
She is putting your current and future employment in jeopardy and obviously doesn't give a toss about you ,or her own job, or even the company
that pays her wages.
I thought that all security did that
She's obviously a pig and you have no chance, so agreed with the above, shop the bitch.
Why bother remaining completely anonymous (or trying to - it will be obvious its you if its just you who works with her and are getting work signed
off by her as done when it isnt) as management wont do anything about an anonymous report in most instances. I know I wouldnt anyway - in fact as a
manager, if a staff member couldnt report something in their own name to me then I would feel very suspicious as to the motives of the report.
If management know what she's like then you never know - they might just be waiting on the amunition to enable them to fire her sorry ass without
the threat of an unfair dismissal claim against them afterwards. I'd say put what she's done down in writing as this enables you to take
your time and really put down whats really happening - rather than potentially a middle manager twisting what you say. It also makes it official and
protects your own back if you have a copy of it if needed. I know personally i'd always take a written complaint a lot more seriously - even if i
shouldnt.
She's in a position of trust from her company.
She ain't trustworthy
she's tainting your reputation ( and you know it)
The longer you leave it the less you'll be believed.
Your livelyhood is at stake
HOW MANY MORE REASONS DO YOU NEED??
Get her sorted out. NOW
Id do it in writing too so you have more chance to compose it properly without incriminating yourself (ie admitting you knew she was falsifying
records).
I really dislike slackers.
Is it a biggish company, or more to the point do they have an HR dept/person? If you have, HR people just love making up policies for absolutely anything, and if you don't already have a whistleblowing policy they'd probably quite happily write one. A quick word with HR might be a good start before you go to your line manager.
Are you in a union? if not join one for the support they will be able to give you if it turns sour.
Duncan
I always had it hammered in that you should NEVER sign for something you didn't do, or didn't oversee. Different situation but I'd still shop her, either anonymously or otherwise.
I'll be calling them tomorrow and asking for a head office address, not going to my line manager cos he's just as bad really with this going
unchecked for 8 months..
Still the anonymous problem though... I feel that if I give my name out she'll know, even though I'm not the only one she works with. If she
doesn't get sacked on this I can seriously expect them putting us together, as my position there is pretty much cover for sickness and holidays.
However if I don't give my name it could so easily be ignored as they can't get back to me... That's the quandry now!
There's no way you can stay anonymous - she'll know.
Wite down your complaint and tell her you're putting it in since you have already asked her not to falsify your work.
You will be asked why you didn't do anything when she is eventually discovered. You will then be dragged down with her like a screaming Titanic passenger. I'd do it and look for another job at the same time.
quote:
Originally posted by RK
You will be asked why you didn't do anything when she is eventually discovered. You will then be dragged down with her like a screaming Titanic passenger. I'd do it and look for another job at the same time.
The real problem will come when someone does drive off with a lorry full of stock. At that point the police/insurance company get involved and
management start looking for scapegoats/video evidence.
At that point I'd expect she'll start trying to load the blame onto you.
You need to do something.
First thing I'd do is report the malfunctioning cameras to someone - make sure it's in writing/email (if you have a work address). I
suspect there's already stock walking out of the door. If the camera's get fixed she's under pressure to actually start patrolling as
there's evidence being generated of the slacking. If they don't you've got some teflon if it does all go pear shaped.
Then start correcting your entries in the log if it's still getting filled in for you incorrectly. Don't fiddle with her entries as
that's a step too far.
Often the only thing you can do is walk into another job as soon as you can. Better than getting sacked for whistleblowing or gross professional
misconduct.
The malfunctioning cameras have been reported over 100 times to our own head office and to the company management, plus one of the cameras that does
work faces right to our office door, anyone going in or out (along with anyone walking the perimiter in that area) is caught, so the fact that she can
get away with this drags our supervisor in too..
As for correcting any entries all I can really do in that respect is keep my own record separately, I'm clean of that anyway as she demands to do
all the paperwork, being the senior guard and all that, so I could have just noticed this last week
I'm gonna be looking through the jobcentre website too, you can't build a house with a broken saw and bent nails, and you can't keep a
place secure with no cameras and broken gates