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Where’s the Line ?

Right and wrong in a for-profit world

Using Kids as an Escape Clause

March 30th, 2007 @ 7:55 am

4 Comments

Categories: Office Life, Personal Conduct

Tags: Where's The Line?

A female coworker is always showing up late and leaving early because of some "emergency" involving her kids. I don't have any children, and this irks me. I know that having children is a big responsibility, but others in my office make it work. I feel as though she's using her children as an excuse to cover her own laziness. Where's the line?

Emergencies are rare. Poor planning does not constitute one. Your coworker is giving working mothers a bad name.

Having children is a full-time job; so is a full-time job. To be successful as a working parent you've got to build a proper support network to account for the eight-plus hours each weekday when you've got to be in the office. There is no way around it. Millions of people do it. If your coworker cannot fulfill her office duties, then she is defaulting on the promise she made to her employers and needs to make some changes to her support network.

The thing about having a proper support system is that it should actually give you considerable leeway during the workday. Whoever is watching the kids - a spouse, a nanny, daycare, grandma - understands that the office comes first and they, not your employers, need to be prepared to handle child-related inconveniences. 

Of course, having children does present other problems that are not so easy to manage. Once you get outside the workday window, handling office responsibilities becomes a big problem. The babysitter has a date; grandma has bingo; daycare closes at seven; your husband needs to work on his novel. A few readers took issue with a previous post about whether or not it was fair to ask people without children to shoulder the burden of staying late and traveling. Comments took issue with my assumption that those without children are typically younger and should accept the grunt work as part of working their way to the top. The readers pointed out that not all childless workers are young; duly noted.

The fact is that children should never intrude on work time unless it is a real emergency. And work should not expect to intrude on children time unless it's a similar crisis. Your coworker is not respecting this bargain.

To get her up to par is going to take some nudging from a higher power. If you confront her, she's going to either hit you with another excuse or play the mother card. You need to gently raise the issue with your boss. Prepare an offhand list of her indiscretions, but don't make it like you're monitoring her every move. Simply let it be known that you find her conduct to be unfair to others. Your boss is probably aware of the problem, and the fact that you've spoken up will require them to address the situation. Next time she pulls a fast one, your boss should slow her down.

Have a workplace-ethics dilemma? Ask it here, or email wherestheline@gmail.com.

 

 
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  •  
    1

    jtncarter

    04/04/07 | Report as spam

    I do not agree

    ?understands that the office comes first?
    ?child-related inconveniences.?

    Sorry, but the office does not come first to raising the next generation of adults. I am guessing you do not have children. If you do, I would question your closeness to them. Also, a child should never be viewed as an ?inconvenience.? That being said, it is a general rule of moderation. We all have different feelings about work-life balance but in my life it is God, my wife, children, family, and then work. I can find another job. It?s going to be tough to find another child. This generation demands that employers are compassionate about the fact we have a life outside of work. Welcome to 2007, better get used to it.

  •  
    2

    deirds

    04/17/07 | Report as spam

    choices to be made

    I am a working mother. I have a very strong support network to cover all emergencies and have also advanced in my career whilst having 3 children.
    I made sacrifices on both sides to obtain a good worklife balance but when I am work, as I have chosen to be, I am at work. When I am at home then I am at home.
    I have to agree that a strong support network is crucial to working and being a parent.
    I have grandma, auntie, and at one point an after school club and a private nursery. I chose this to enable me to work. If you cannot commit yourself to your current job and run a family then you should make the decision to look for a job that enables you to do what you want to do with your family or make alterations to your current life so that it all works together.
    Also i do get time off if needed for emergencies involving children the same way that other colleagues use doctor and dentist; plumber and delivery apppointments.

  •  
    3

    joomlacoach

    04/05/07 | Report as spam

    Problem Solved

    Adopt a Kid. No seriously, ignore it and focus on your job.

  •  
    4

    ddyck@...

    08/16/07 | Report as spam

    Quality of Work to be the judge

    In our company we try to exude a culture of work/life balance. If Suzy has to leave early to go to the children's school play, then it is only fair that Donna (childless) can take the same approach to put in extra hours training for her marathon race. What really matters is the accountability for a job WELL done. Or not.
    If you have a culture of "*** for tat" versus doing excellent work during the time that you do put in, growth and productivity will be thwarted no matter...

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