TVGuy wrote:oohrah wrote:Wrong. In Texas, you can be fired for any reason. In fact, you can be fired for no reason. You can also quit with no notice and no reason.
You can't be fired for
any reason. . . .
You also can't be fired for CC in your car:
LC §52.061. RESTRICTION ON PROHIBITING EMPLOYEE ACCESS TO OR STORAGE OF FIREARM OR AMMUNITION. A public or private employer may not prohibit an employee who holds a license to carry a concealed handgun under Subchapter H, Chapter 411, Government Code, who otherwise lawfully possesses a firearm, or who lawfully possesses ammunition from transporting or storing a firearm or ammunition the employee is authorized by law to possess in a locked, privately owned motor vehicle in a parking lot, parking garage, or other parking area the employer provides for employees.
I don't agree with either extreme, the truth is in the middle.
If someone has a gun in their car in a way that is compliant with LC §52.061, an employer who terminates employment and states they are terminating employment because the employee violated company policy regarding guns in cars, then I agree with TVGuy that the employer has created legal risk from a lawsuit because they violated LC §52.061.
However, I also agree with "oohrah" that Texas has employment at will. Therefore, if someone comes to HR's attention for having a gun in their car in violation of company policy, there can be great pressure on HR to "do something". Any manager worth their salt can find ways to document issues (like TAM's post) and generate paper trail to support a termination of employment. If there is someone who "needs firing", I can find a way to fire them that will always hold up under challenge. As far as firing them for guns in their car, a smart manager would never,
ever, state that as the reason for termination.
Although I currently work in a non-union business (Thank the Good Lord!), my early career was spent as a manager in strong union environments. I also created paper trail and terminated employment of union members that went to national arbitration and were upheld, so I intimately understand paper trail. Those terminations included "protected classes". No one is invulnerable.
Also, a smart manager can create a case that will also support getting unemployment denied. However, there are also cases where I simply wanted the person gone ASAP and was willing to pay the unemployment to get them out.
Our company policy does not allow firearms in the parking lot. I am not willing to take this issue on and officially change the company policy, because I see no point in becoming the "nail that sticks up gets hammered down". It is sufficient for me to know I cannot get legally charged with a crime and I know any other so-called "employment protections" are illusory and meaningless in the real world.