On gardening leave but have been asked to assist with an internal grievance matter. Do I have to co-operate?
I resigned from my job over a month ago and am now on my 3 months gardening leave. Some of my colleagues were made redundant and are taking the firm to a tribunal. I have been cited as someone who worked with these people and could have information that could be relevant in the process. The company have asked me to come in and help with the grievance matter. What are my responsibilites especially as I am officially an employee of the company. Do I have to co-operate?
Asked by trailfinder
Posted in Redundancy and Capital Markets
24 Jul 2008
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UK

I'd do it for the experience and what you will learn. Grievance stuff is painful if you have to deal with the fall out, but you are in the position of being able to walk away from it all. If you have ambitions for a leadership role, this experience is something you cannot get from an MBA or whatever. Rather than grudgingly turn up and go through the motions, take it as a challenge to try and broker a deal or a settlement that both sides can live with. If you do it honourably then you can impress people, and in any market, that is the reputation you want to have. Of course, with all due respect, I'd expect you to fail. But as I say above, you're going anyway. This is a live fire training exercise. Do it and say thank you for the opportunity. I really doubt if the firm is dumb enough to make you do anything you don't want to. A witness under duress can do their case more harm than good.
DominiConnor 02 Sep 2008
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