tuna55 wrote:
friedgreencorrado wrote:
I don't want to insult xd here, but ever since the Corporate Overlords overran my once wonderful privately held company, I'm beginning to understand that the HR department is often the *enemy*, from resume to retirement. They're no longer just administrators dealing with employee benefits, etc., but now a full-fledged member of the "think of the stockholders" cadre. They are not there to find qualified people to recruit, they're not there to make the workplace a better environment, and they're certainly not there to represent your concerns to the organization at large. They're there to protect the company *from* it's employees. From finding "legal" ways to jettison older or newly disabled workers, to protecting the "rights" of the thin-skinned shiny happy people who take offense at *any* other employees' habits/appearance/words/etc. (after all, the `pantywaists' may sue!), to Zero-Tolerance documentation of simple mistakes in advance, so they can dissmiss at will *anyone* they wish for "non-performance issues". (so that they can illegally dismiss older/disabled workers without having to admit the *real* reasons for such dismissals)
Thanks for saying that, dude. I've worked in three different places as an engineer, and HR is always that way at every place. The first was the worst, though. I remmeber vividly walking into his office determined to get something, walking out with a bright sunshine smile on, making it ten steps, stopping in my tracks and realizing that I got nothing and he made me happy about it. The guy was good, but an ass. HR is supposed to deal with humans as a resource to the company. To liason your employment. What they actually do is consiper with other companies to fix wages, fire people for stupid reasons (sexual harrassment, holy cow!) and produce forms and paperwork while telling you you're not working hard enough, long enough, and you're not getting that rise we promised. I have no idea why. At some point, it's going to topple down, lawyers (and judges) and whiners will all die off, and the capitalism can work again. Right now, with all of the corporate welfare and personal welfare there is, it'll run just like this straight into the ground.
Thanks. I really believe that the evolution of HR from the simple admin of employee matters such as benefits/etc. to "potential profit center" really has a lot to do with this situation...and in the end, has much more to do with these matters than the question of whether or not one possesses a degree.
For example, recall what RobMopar said about his BIL?
Rob_Mopar wrote:
I tried getting him in where I am. He got in for the interviews and was liked by management. Got kicked to the curb by HR.
That's the kind of thing I'm talking about. And in the spirit of "full disclosure", I'll admit that I've recently witnessed my own HR department do something that absolutely disgusted me..a friend at work (again, in FD, actually an ex-girlfriend) was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis a couple of years ago. We work in TV, and her position at the time was with our "Live Event" group (the folks that coordinate the playback of commercials during ballgames, etc. with the remote truck broadcasting the signal to our home base before we sent it up to the sat for y'all to watch at home).
When she was diagnosed with MS, she (and our company) was told by her doctors that she should be reassigned to a position with less stress. Our company responded by returning her to the Master Control pool (the people who are responsible for maintaining the signal you recieve at home). That position "on paper" is less stressful, because the ad rates for commercials is less, but the low-level stress actually lasts longer because you're "on the air" for 4 or 8 hours, instead of the two or three hours that a live event (ballgame, etc.) lasts. She had further flare-ups of her disease, and suffered side affects from her medication. One of those was an increased need to urinate, which is a very bad thing for someone who is "on the air". One fine day, her management had a "consultation" with her about her frequent restroom visits, ignoring the reason for them, and with complete documentation of the exact dates and even the exact times of day she'd had to be relieved by another MC board operator to attend to her condition. She was repremanded for it.
We discovered later that HR had "commanded" her new supervisors to document this kind of thing, because they knew that although it was illegal to fire her for having MS, they thought they could do the deed by ignoring her condition existed (ironically, in the "spirit of equality with other employees") and using the side affects of her treatment as a weapon against her. Fortunately for her, one of the best MS clinics in the country is here in Atlanta, and their staff is familiar with the behavior of large companies for this kind of thing. Fortunately, they were able to get her on "long term disability", and eventually get the company's disability insurance she'd paid for for so long to pay her back.
Weird thing is, before our Corporate Overlords decided they wanted to kick her to the curb, she had an experience just like that of RobMopar's BIL. She wanted to keep working. She actually found a good position with our transmission (the folks that insure our signals from our output center reach the satellites, and also schedule/process the signals from our live remotes into and out of our facility) crew. The boss in that department valued her skill, her experience, and her desire...but HR squashed it because she'd have to take a pay cut to take the job. A pay cut she was ready to take for the opportunity to continue to work.
1.) Aplogies for the length of this post...It just takes a bit to explain what I'm trying to say.
2.) And again, aplogies to anyone who actually works in HR. I'm just hoping that you guys are different than the people that work in that department where I work.
3.) And back to the original topic...I really don't think whether or not you have a degree is really the problem here. I find that (once again, as Rob mentioned about his BIL) there is an artificial, bigoted wall in many companies (but not all..) between the applicant, and the manager that would like to hire that applicant, but can not. IMO, a "bad" HR department is often responsible for the inability to hire the right person for the job...and furthermore, responsible as well for inability of corporations to retain talented workers on the few occasions when other corporations are actuallly hiring. I know that the only reason I'm still where I am is because I'm a native Southerner, and I don't want to move to NYC or LA (or even Miami). If another "major player" in TV moved to Atlanta and offered equal wages/benefits for the same position I hold here, I'd walk away in a heartbeat.