▲ | johnnyanmac 5 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
>It really doesn’t take a lawyer to know what “at will employment” means. It takes a lawyer to understand an individual's situation, background, and contract in order to see if this is just a bad but legal hand, or in fact something worth filing against. We don't know every engineer's story that is impacted here. >Companies have been giving employees an ultimatum between “relocate or quit” forever. Yes, and severance packages makes it less tempting to try and look into suing. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | scarface_74 5 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Were you really confused by “your contract” at any job? I’ve signed 10 over the years and they basically all spell out - how much you are going to get paid, when your start date is and you are an at will employee. I was also hired by BigTech in 2020 and assigned to a “virtual office” and my position was designated as “field by design” meaning that it was suppose to be permanently remote. There was nowhere in my contract that I would never be expected to return to office and in fact AWS did tell all of their “field by design” roles that they would have to come into the office by the beginning of the year. I was already gone by then. Don’t you think you would have heard at least one case of a successful lawsuit by employees of at least one of these companies? Especially the US’s second largest employer? You think a local lawyer “recommended by a family friend” is going to successfully take on a trillion dollar+ market cap company? | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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