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this post was submitted on 08 May 2024
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chapotraphouse
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If they require you to go back to the office, and you don't, they'd be able to fire you and not have to pay unemployment.
Yeah, you need to get fired for underperforming, not refusing to comply with "reasonable" requests. If they have a metric, fail it. When they ask why you're failing it, tell them you're doing your best and dodge the question or lie. Then agree to do whatever it is they request you to do to fix it, then fail the metric in a new way. Be generally unpleasant to deal with but not confrontational or openly provocative. Be polite, be compliant, be a pain in the ass.
If there are inconvenient rules they prefer you use discretion to enforce, show a lack of proper discretion in a way tht makes more work for your boss, but nevet let them know for sure that you're doing it out of spite.
Also, never sign anything on the way out. They can't make you sign anything. Just keep a copy of the document.
The exception might be severance pay, but only if that severance is better than your full unemployment and doesn't fuck you over in some other way (historically, this was a great way to tack on a non-compete you didn't sign when you took the job)
Go in and do it really half-assed, that's the American way
God I hate that termination letter. They say "you don't have to sign it but we want you to sign it but you don't have to sign it." I never signed that shit
On top of all that: befriend people, especially managers, in other departments/positions, preferably those that don’t interact with your direct coworkers and managers or those that aren’t affected by your work. If you need a reference, you won’t burn every bridge.
Yeah, dont make everybody hate you, lol
If you were explicitly hired into a remote role and they decide to try and force you to come in, that's a substantial change to your working conditions akin to constructive dismissal.
Depending on your state, you may be able to get unemployment from this situation if they fire you when you refuse this change to your role. The company will always lie about the circumstances but I've seen people still get unemployment out of it. This is much easier to demonstrate if you live far away from the office.
It is, effectively, a layoff that they want to avoid paying unemployment for.
I can't speak for other states, but here in California severance doesn't impact your unimployment claim, except that your first UI check will arrive the week after your last severance check.
The severance letter may indicate voluntary termination, which can affect UI