Plecostomus
Commodore
Dear Ms. Geezer:
I fully understand that due to a internal biological process you are undergoing some severe hormonal transitions.
However this does not give you the right to lower the temp through the entire office and manufacturing area. We set the plant at 72 degrees, as that is our standard documented reference temperature.
It takes 12-16 hours for everything to equalize and balance out. Thank you so much for disrupting our workflow.
In the future do not alter the settings on the thermostat without checking with one of the younger nonmenopausal folk in the company. Failure to do so will result in termination.
Sincerely,
I.M. URBOSS
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Seriously, she turned the heat off at 630am because she was "hot" and the entire office and factory area dropped 20 degrees. We are waiting for everything to warm back up and equalize again. We do quite a bit of high-accuracy automation work so we maintain the entire building at 72 degrees so things don't change shape between one station and another.
The sign on the heater controls clearly state that workers are not to alter the settings at all... If it was up to me I'd fire her on the spot for ignoring a policy/procedure, we'll be having a meeting about this shortly to decide what to do with her.
Anyone else ever have to deal with this sort of company-wide SNAFU caused by a single worker who felt the rules don't apply to him/her/it?
I fully understand that due to a internal biological process you are undergoing some severe hormonal transitions.
However this does not give you the right to lower the temp through the entire office and manufacturing area. We set the plant at 72 degrees, as that is our standard documented reference temperature.
It takes 12-16 hours for everything to equalize and balance out. Thank you so much for disrupting our workflow.
In the future do not alter the settings on the thermostat without checking with one of the younger nonmenopausal folk in the company. Failure to do so will result in termination.
Sincerely,
I.M. URBOSS
---
Seriously, she turned the heat off at 630am because she was "hot" and the entire office and factory area dropped 20 degrees. We are waiting for everything to warm back up and equalize again. We do quite a bit of high-accuracy automation work so we maintain the entire building at 72 degrees so things don't change shape between one station and another.
The sign on the heater controls clearly state that workers are not to alter the settings at all... If it was up to me I'd fire her on the spot for ignoring a policy/procedure, we'll be having a meeting about this shortly to decide what to do with her.
Anyone else ever have to deal with this sort of company-wide SNAFU caused by a single worker who felt the rules don't apply to him/her/it?