Hi,
I've been notified that I have to attend a stage one absence review at work. I am not too worried about this because the trigger threshold is extremely low (7 days in 12 months) and my line manager has no concerns about my performance or absence. It seems to be just HR policy.
My issue is that the member of HR dealing with this initially communicated with one of my colleagues about the review instead of my line manager. She sent an email, including dates and recorded reasons for absence, to this colleague, advising him that I had triggered a formal review and outlining the process for setting one up. This colleague is a member of my team but is not and has never been my line manager. We are on the same level and have the same job title, reporting in to the same line manager. There is no reason other than ignorance of reporting lines (and failure to check their own records) for her to assume that I report to this colleague.
I try to be generous when people make genuine mistakes, but this seems to me to be really quite negligent. Fortunately, my absences were just down to coughs and colds, not to anything sensitive or confidential, but I now have no confidence that HR will protect sensitive information, should they hold any.
I only saw the original email recently but it was sent several weeks ago and I have received no apology, explanation from HR, nor any assurance that they will not repeat this error. In fact, I only know about their error because my line manager mentioned it and subsequently forwarded the email. In the email, the HR person acknowledges that she sent the first email to the wrong person but brushes it off as an 'oops, bad day' moment. I think it's a bit more serious than that.
Any advice on the best way of dealing with this?
I've been notified that I have to attend a stage one absence review at work. I am not too worried about this because the trigger threshold is extremely low (7 days in 12 months) and my line manager has no concerns about my performance or absence. It seems to be just HR policy.
My issue is that the member of HR dealing with this initially communicated with one of my colleagues about the review instead of my line manager. She sent an email, including dates and recorded reasons for absence, to this colleague, advising him that I had triggered a formal review and outlining the process for setting one up. This colleague is a member of my team but is not and has never been my line manager. We are on the same level and have the same job title, reporting in to the same line manager. There is no reason other than ignorance of reporting lines (and failure to check their own records) for her to assume that I report to this colleague.
I try to be generous when people make genuine mistakes, but this seems to me to be really quite negligent. Fortunately, my absences were just down to coughs and colds, not to anything sensitive or confidential, but I now have no confidence that HR will protect sensitive information, should they hold any.
I only saw the original email recently but it was sent several weeks ago and I have received no apology, explanation from HR, nor any assurance that they will not repeat this error. In fact, I only know about their error because my line manager mentioned it and subsequently forwarded the email. In the email, the HR person acknowledges that she sent the first email to the wrong person but brushes it off as an 'oops, bad day' moment. I think it's a bit more serious than that.
Any advice on the best way of dealing with this?
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