TwistedSifter

Manager Had An Employee Take Maternity Leave, But The Replacement Employee Was Working Out Well, So She Fired The New Mom After She Returned

Source: Shutterstock/Reddit

When an employee takes maternity leave everyone on the team needs to step up and help to get the work done.

What happens when someone who was brought onto the team to help cover maternity leave ends up being better at the job than the original employee?

That’s what the manager in this story was dealing with, and she wants help figuring out if she made the right decision.

Check it out.

AITA for firing an employee returning from maternity leave?

I feel like the devil right now, so I’ll accept whatever judgement you all have.

I run a team of about 6 people.

Very generous.

Our company offers a large amount of maternity leave, 10 months.

One of my employees got pregnant recently, i’ll call her Jess.

Our team does project based work and in the period between her leaving for ML we finished up the project we were working on when she left, and started working on a project without her.

During this period, our team had to adapt to working without her expertise in certain matters.

We adapted and eventually some of us developed the skills needed to do some of her workload.

Sounds like things are working out really well.

The situation we have now is me, and 2 others split half the work that Jess used to do, and we hired someone new to come in to the team to handle the other part of Jess’s workload and then some.

This new employee came at significantly reduced cost, as he was straight out of Uni and we pay him a fraction of what Jess costs currently.

Now Jess has come back to the team, but there is another issue.

Oh, this is going to get complicated.

Our firm has informed us that for some reason we no longer have the budget for a 7 person team, and will have to let someone go.

This news came about when I submitted the paperwork for Jess’s return.

We are 5 months into a project that should take an estimated 10 months, and my decision came down to Jess and the man we hired to replace her.

The reason we hired a replacement, which is not normally what we do, is because we anticipated that for this project the workload would be far greater than our current capacity, which it is not.

I’m not sure that these reasons really matter.

As you can tell by the title, I chose the replacement. I did so for the following reasons:

  • Far cheaper, thus freeing up a lot more money than keeping Jess on
  • He was up to date with the project and we would be able to move forward seamlessly, whereas with Jess we would have to take time catching her up to speed on half the project
  • The clients already knew and liked working with him, whereas they didn’t know Jess at all
  • She has been out of the field for a prolonged period, whilst he has been here for the past 9 months, so she may, or may not, find it hard to adapt back to work life, whilst with him it isn’t a question
  • He performed his work better than she did hers and interacted better with the team.

Obviously, the ideal situation which I wanted was to keep both and not put a new single mother with no other job lined up out in the cold, but I had to do right by the team and firm.

Can’t blame her for being mad.

I told her I’d write her a brilliant Letter of Recommendation, and that in a few months she could try and apply for a job at our firm, hopefully we’ll have the budget, but she snapped at me and told me not to bother, and called me names and left.

I know I sound cold and heartless but I had to be fair to both employees, not just Jess, right?

AITA?

I’m not even sure what she did was legal.

Let’s take a look at the comments and see what we can learn.

She was wrong for so many reasons.

Hiring a temp would have been the right thing to do.

Yeah, that is not a good work environment.

This should be pretty obvious.

What’s the point in even offering maternity leave?

This woman is about to find out the hard way.

Thought that was satisfying? Check out what this employee did when their manager refused to pay for their time while they were traveling for business.

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