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Subject:Re: Employment Status - Summary to date From:John Gilger <JohnG -at- MIKOHN -dot- COM> Date:Wed, 6 May 1998 08:02:11 -0700
Welcome to the school of hard knocks! You are now a little bit better
tech writer than you were last week. Good Luck!
The learning never stops.
John Gilger
-----Original Message-----
From: JDigi88 [mailto:JDigi88 -at- AOL -dot- COM]
Sent: Wednesday, May 06, 1998 2:43 AM
To: TECHWR-L -at- LISTSERV -dot- OKSTATE -dot- EDU
Subject: Employment Status - Summary to date
I would like to thank everyone for their responses and their time. You
have
been great, and you have given me a lot to think about. At first, I
really
needed a reality check because they were telling me I was not fired.
Of the 32 responses, everyone agreed I was fired. Curiously, when I did
talk
today to the woman who sent the contract (Vice President), she expressed
surprise and wonderment that I would even think I was being fired. She
assures
me that was not her intention, and all I need to do is go to the bottom
of the
5-page contract titled, Contracting Agreement, cross out the word
"Contractor"
and write in the word, "Employee". I don't see myself doing that. I'm
thinking they believed I would just gratefully sign the contract.
Several people emphatically said DO NOT SIGN. There is an issue with
losing
unemployment if you willingly change from employee to contractor. People
thought there might be some room to negotiate a higher per-hour rate.
People
suggested considering taking what was offered while looking for
something
else.
Some people said, leave and do not look back. Some people had great
advice on
locating contract assignments.
Several people suggested seeking legal advice. At the very least, I
should
hire a lawyer to review the contract offered to see if it is equitable.
There
needs to be language in the contract that would protect me or give me
some
legal basis for redress if needed later.
I felt everyone's empathy, and that helped me a lot.
My temptation is to use this event as the occassion to just-walk-away.
If I
trust these people again, the next event is really my fault for
trusting.
Someone asked if I had any notice of this. I was a telecommuter, so
there was
email. The last email I had said the client accepted the training course
I had
written as is, with no changes--that I had hit another home run,
congratulations. If I knew how to read the signs, there probably were
signs
over the past months. I need to work on reading signs.
I will certainly leave this work situtation older and wiser. I'm
thinking,
older and wiser is not a bad place to be.
I have told them that I want the option to convert the insurance and
letters
of recommendation from them. I don't know if I'll get it, but my chances
are
better if I ask.