Archive for April, 2010

Caution: Toxic Co-Workers Ahead

April 29th, 2010

Toxic co-workersAs we’ve mentioned before, co-workers play important roles on your workplace experience. They, at the very least, can annoy you. They can make life better (or at least more romantic). And they can just be weird.

According to Linnda Durré, Ph.D., co-workers can also be toxic. She doesn’t mean they get on your  nerves, but they actually cause you harm on some level. As the author of “Surviving the Toxic Workplace: Protect Yourself Against the Co-workers, Bosses and Work Environments That Poison Your Day,” she knows a thing or two about identifying harmful associates. Luckily, she has advice that doesn’t just help you identify problems but that also teaches you how to address the issues. Today’s guest blogging duties come from Durré herself.

Here are 10 toxic co-workers and how to deal with them, according to Durré.

1. VIC THE VIOLENT ONE
Vic the Violent One is a genuine threat. Do not approach Vic directly. Document every transgression with date, time and place. Some people use their cell phone cameras, video cams and/or audio tape recorders to record his outrages. Report Vic to HR. Security may have to be called. Some people carry Mace or a taser for protect against Vic. If HR doesn’t take action, ask for a transfer to a different department, see if you can work from home and/or go to EEOC, the media, or the union or get an attorney and sue. Protect yourself. You and others can file a law suit and allege a hostile work environment.

2. ANDY THE ALCOHOLIC/DRUG ADDICT
Andy the Alcoholic/Drug Addict is dangerous, and if he is a driver for the company, he can cause fatalities. His behavior is a cry for help, even though he is in denial. Report him to HR and your boss to take action, like ordering him to a 30-90 day de-tox/rehab, hopefully covered by insurance. If HR won’t do anything, bond with co-workers, Andy’s friends and family and hire a qualified interventionist for a group confrontation about his addiction (my website has a list of interventionists around the country). Talk with Andy privately, take him to an AA, CA and/or NA 12 Step Meeting because Andy has to “hit bottom” and/or have “a moment of clarity,” to recognize his addiction is killing him if he doesn’t stop. He’ll thank you for saving his life when he gets sober.

3. STAN THE STALKER
If Stan the Stalker is a spurned lover, he may stalk you. If his ex was your co-worker, he may hound you for information. Either way, be careful. He may seek revenge and he can possibly do you physical harm, kidnap, or even murder you. He may be delusional and suffer from erotomania – the “relationship” may be in his mind. He may need medication. Go to HR and your boss and tell them immediately. Set limits, tell him his behavior is inappropriate, and if he doesn’t stop, you may need a restraining order and police protection. Move to another department, take another job, work from home, or move to another state. Carry pepper spray or get a taser if he threatens you.

4. SID THE SEXUAL HARASSER
Sid the Sexual Harasser doesn’t understand “no.” Set limits, be firm, clear and yell if you must, making sure you have witnesses, proof and evidence when you report him to HR and/or your boss.  Tell him that what he is doing is illegal, unethical and immoral and it must stop now! If the company doesn’t take action, they can be sued for allowing a hostile work environment to be created. Be assertive – the law is on your side.

5. SAM THE SMILING COBRA
Sam the Smiling Cobra smiles while he sets you up and stabs you in the back. Cover yourself, document everything with e-mails, phone logs and letters, cc’ing them to your boss and the HR department. Keep a file locked with a complete copy in your bank’s safety deposit box. Ask for a transfer to another department, work from home, or go to a different company. San may be a psychopath/sociopath who wouldn’t think twice about ruining you or having someone – including you – killed if they got in his way. Read Snakes in Suits.

 6. GRETA THE GOSSIP
Greta the Gossip is a vicious rumor mill. Set boundaries and limits clearly and assertively. Inform her you know she spread the falseties. Go to HR and file a formal complaint. Confront her directly with them present. Insist they discipline her, require an apology letter, cc’ing it to the department. If HR refuses, send an e-mail to your co-workers refuting any malicious rumors, stating you confronted her and she has not apologized to you or anyone via an e-mail about her vicious rumors, as you requested when you went to HR, who did not handle the matter. Set the record straight and protect yourself.

7. PAUL THE POLITICALLY INCORRECT
Paul is either a deliberate bigot/ racist/sexist /homophobe or totally clueless like Michael Scott on “The Office.” He may be violating federal and state laws as well as company policy by creating a hostile work environment, so document everything and always cc it to your boss, the HR department and co-workers. Make a tape of your office and cell phone messages from him and print out his e-mails to you. Make copies and keep all evidence in a safety deposit in your bank in case of a law suit. Bring Paul to HR and tell Paul directly that his insensitive remarks interfere in your work, offend people and need to stop. Ask HR to order Paul to a refresher course in diversity training.

8. THOMAS THE THIEF
Thomas can steal your ideas, take credit for your work and/or take items from your desk, wallet and purse. Change your computer and cell phone passwords daily, close and lock your desk and carry your purse and valuables to the bathroom. Use your camera to document when you find your things in his possession. Call him out in a meeting that he took your idea. Whether you have proof or not, confront Thomas so he knows you’re onto his game. Be firm, clear and direct with him because he’s in denial and he has an addiction. Report him to HR, even if you have no proof. Ask co-workers to be witnesses for you.

 9. GORDON THE GRINCH
Gordon the Grinch is negative, pessimistic and insulting. Set limits, confront him and say, “Gordon, I appreciate that you are a dependable worker here, and I know you don’t like your job, but I do. I’d prefer you keep your negative comments to yourself and let me work in peace. Perhaps the free counseling sessions at EAP – Employee Assistance Program – might lift your black cloud. ” Unless he has a near death experience and realizes how precious life is, Gordon won’t change. Ask HR to speak to him, move away from Gordon, transfer to another department, work from home, start your own business, or work for another company. If not, wear ear plugs, play music through ear buds. Protect yourself from Gordon’s negativity.

10. PAM THE PASSIVE AGGRESSIVE
Pam is passive-aggressive—she does nasty, aggressive acts in a passive manner. Pam “forgets” to tell about the urgent call or that your overnight delivery has been sitting on her desk for hours. Confront Pam that you’re onto her game because she thinks you don’t know.  Tell her to communicate honestly and openly rather than sabotage you. Allow her to be assertive, which may be scary for her, given her programming that “anger” isn’t “nice.” Pam needs assertiveness training workshops, to listen to self-help CD’s and read as many books about it as possible. If she takes your advice, she will be incredibly grateful to you for freeing her from her own emotional prison.


Linnda Durré, Ph.D. is a psychotherapist, business consultant, corporate trainer, national speaker and columnist. She has hosted and co-produced two live call-in TV shows, including “Ask The Family Therapist” on America’s Health Network, which was associated with Mayo Clinic. She is the author of “Surviving The Toxic Workplace: Protect Yourself Against Co-Workers, Bosses, and Work Environments That Poison Your Day” (2010 – McGraw-Hill). www.survivingthetoxicworkplace.com

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Aadhaar does a double in biometrics

April 29th, 2010

Long-standing debate over the biometrics Aadhaar will employ to identify those enrolled in the programme has come to an end with the release of the UIDAI’s official position on fingerprinting and retina scanning. Surprise, surprise — they’re planning to utilize both. Why? Fingerprinting doesn’t work in under-15s, as their prints aren’t fully developed yet. And manual laborers who use their hands often see their prints completely rubbed away. Read it for details.

Courtesy: LiveMint

New variant of Storm worm emerges

April 28th, 2010

A new variant of the Storm worm has emerged, but it does not appear to be as well-designed as its older relative, according to computer security researchers.

The Storm worm first appeared in early 2007 and spread quickly, making it one of the most prolific and widespread worms ever. Once it infected people’s computers, the worm sent million upon millions of spam messages.

Courtesy: Infoworld News

Google finds fake anti-virus programs on the rise

April 28th, 2010

Fake anti-virus software is becoming more prevalent on the Internet, with its creators using clever methods to fool users into installing the programs, according to a new report from Google.

Courtesy: Infoworld News

Scientists say recession may spark Baltic TB surge

April 28th, 2010

London: The Baltic States risk seeing an upsurge in tuberculosis (TB) cases because of the recession brought about by the financial crisis, scientists said and Latvia is particularly vulnerable.
Researchers who studied the effects of recession on rates of the highly infectious disease during the fall of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s found a strong link between the two and said on Wednesday their findings suggest a similar pattern could emerge now.
“Put simply, there’s a lot less money around for spending on public health,” said Nimalan Arinaminpathy of Britain’s Oxford University, who led the study.
Tuberculosis, which is caused by the Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacteria, is one of three primary diseases linked to poverty, the other two being AIDS and malaria.
The scientists designed models based on economic figures and tuberculosis data and predicted that Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania could see TB increases in the coming years.
Their estimates were for 200 excess cases of tuberculosis per 100,000 people in the population in Latvia, 130 per 100,000 in Lithuania and 75 per 100,000 in Estonia compared with some 40 per 100,000 in Russia over the period of recession and recovery.
“An upturn of TB in any region becomes a concern for neighbouring countries, and because people travel so much these days it also becomes a concern for countries further away,” Arinaminpathy said in a telephone interview.
Tuberculosis killed 1.8 million people in 2008, or nearly 5,000 people a day. More than 2 billion people are infected, but most TB infections are latent with carriers showing no symptoms.
The disease can be cured with antibiotics, but they must be taken daily for months to be effective and public health funding cuts in some countries may mean fewer drugs are available.
Because people do not always take the drugs as directed, multiple drug-resistant strains called MDR-TB are also emerging and the World Health Organisation (WHO) has said there is an urgent need for countries to set up laboratories to fight it.
Arinaminpathy and Christopher Dye of the WHO’s department for HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria and neglected tropical diseases, used WHO data on TB cases and deaths from 1980 to 2006, and World Bank data on Gross Domestic Product.
Analysing 15 countries in central and eastern Europe, they found strong links between the lost economic productivity during recessions and excess numbers of TB cases and deaths, they wrote in the study in the Royal Society journal Interface.
“If TB epidemiology and control are linked to economies in 2009 as they were in 1991 then the Baltic states, particularly Latvia, are now vulnerable to another upturn in TB cases and deaths,” they wrote.

Courtesy: LiveMint

The future’s 15 most wanted workers

April 28th, 2010

This spring there seems to have been an explosion of positive employment news that’s left skeptics wondering, “Is this news too good to be true?” and job seekers crying foul. 

While we are not out of the woods yet, President Obama was cautiously optimistic in a recent radio address. “Even as we have come a long way, we still have a ways to go,” Obama said.  “No matter what the economic statistics say, I won’t be satisfied until folks who need work can find good jobs.  After a recession that stole 8 million jobs, this is going take some time.”

Considering some of the most recent indicators that the economy and employment are improving, one can’t help but be hopeful:

  • For the third consecutive quarter, more employers are projecting they will increase headcount in the next three months while fewer employers are expecting staff cuts, according to CareerBuilder’s Q2 2010 Job Forecast. Twenty-three percent of employers plan to add full-time, permanent headcount in the second quarter while 8 percent plan to downsize staffs. Looking at actual hiring for the second quarter in 2009, 18 percent of employers reported they had hired full-time, permanent staff while 17 percent reported they had decreased staff.
  • In its April 2010 Industry Survey, the National Association of Business Economics increased job creation for the first time in two years. The share of respondents expecting their firms to add employees over the coming six months rose to 37 percent, up from 29 percent in January’s survey. The percentage of firms cutting jobs moved lower — from 28 percent in January to 13 percent in April. “After more than two years of job losses, job creation increased in the first quarter of 2010, suggesting a better outlook for hiring over the next six months,” said William Strauss, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago.
  • In April, Moody’s Economy.com reported that, “based on data through February, 205 metro areas nationwide appear to be in recovery, 21 more than in January. By population size, the largest metro areas to move into recovery over the month (January – February) were Santa Ana, Calif., Nassau N.Y. and San Jose, Calif. Smaller metro areas are more likely to be in recovery at this point than larger ones; although more than half of all U.S. metro areas appear to be recovering, they represent only 41 percent of total metropolitan gross domestic product.”
Jobs of the future
This map from DismalScientist.com shows states that are moderating and recovering from the recession.

Unfortunately, it’s not expected to be smooth sailing when we come out on the other side of the recession. As difficult as it may be to believe given today’s still shaky employment situation, economists are projecting a labor shortage in the near future.

“By 2018, with no change in current labor force participation rates or immigration rates and an expected return to healthy economic growth, we will have more jobs than people to fill them,” wrote Barry Bluestone, Dean of the School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs at Northeastern University, and Mark Melnik, Deputy Director for Research at the Boston Redevelopment Authority in their report “After the Recovery: Help Needed.”

The report, which was sponsored by MetLife Foundation and Civic Ventures, a think tank on boomers, work and social purpose, predicts that within the next eight years there could be at least 5 million potential job vacancies in the United States, nearly half of them (2.4 million) in social sector jobs in education, health care, government and nonprofit organizations, assuming a return to healthy economic growth and no change in immigration or labor force participation rates.

The report identified 15 jobs that will provide the largest number of potential new encore career opportunities in the coming decade.   

  1. Business operations specialists
    Total job openings due to growth and replacement needs: 1,609,000*
    Current U.S. salary: $44,522**
  2. Child-care workers
    Total job openings due to growth and replacement needs: 532,1000
    Current U.S. salary: $24,354
  3. Clergy
    Total job openings due to growth and replacement needs: 217,700
    Current U.S. salary: $51,746
  4. General and operations managers
    Total job openings due to growth and replacement needs: 502,200
    Current U.S. salary: $94,706
  5. Home health aides
    Total job openings due to growth and replacement needs: 552,700
    Current U.S. salary: $27,345
  6. Licensed practical and vocational nurses
    Total job openings due to growth and replacement needs: 391,300
    Current U.S. salary: $44,738 for LPNs; $39,272 for vocational nurses
  7. Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants
    Total job openings due to growth and replacement needs: 422.3
    Current U.S. salary: $30,494 for nursing aides; $33,822 for orderlies; $24,695 for attendants
  8. Medical assistants
    Total job openings due to growth and replacement needs: 217,800
    Current U.S. salary: $35,986
  9. Medical and health service managers
    Total job openings due to growth and replacement needs: 99,400
    Current U.S. salary: $39,956
  10. Personal and home care aides
    Total job openings due to growth and replacement needs: 477,800
    Current U.S. salary: $27,345
  11. Receptionists and information clerks
    Total job openings due to growth and replacement needs: 480,200
    Current U.S. salary: $30,887
  12. Registered nurses
    Total job openings due to growth and replacement needs: 1,039,000
    Current U.S. salary: $61,423
  13. Social and human service assistants
    Total job openings due to growth and replacement needs: 153,900
    Current U.S. salary: $34,324
  14. Teachers
    Total job openings due to growth and replacement needs: 2,676,500
    Current U.S. salary: $54,273 for all; $35,810 for elementary; $47,603 for high school; $68,456 for postsecondary
  15. Teacher assistants
    Total job openings due to growth and replacement needs: 412,700
    Current U.S. salary: $24,429

 

*Total needs over the entire 2008-18 period according to Bureau of Labor Statistics (http://www.bls.gov/emp/ep_table_102.htm)

**Average annual salary according to www.CBsalary.com

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Companies Hiring: The Northeast Edition

April 28th, 2010

companies hiringLast week I explained that each Tuesday we’re going to be featuring hiring information for some companies and positions on a regional basis. We realize that people all over the country are looking for work, so we want to help as many people as possible. Hence this regional feature. And yes, Hawaii and Alaska, we’ve got your back, too! We’re working our way clockwise through the regions. Last week was the Midwest and today is the Northeast.

For a refresher: You can click on the state to see a list of its job opportunities, on the company name to view all of its openings, regardless of location, and you can click on the job title to go directly to that opening. Also, we try to present a diverse group of opportunities, so we highlight jobs for various industries and educational levels.

Here are your Northeastern job opportunities:

Vermont
Green Mountain Coffee RoastersHuman resources services coordinator
State of VermontNetwork administrator III

New York
Morgan StanleyFinancial advisor
Saks Fifth AvenueManager of communications, training and alertline

Pennsylvania
NHS Human ServicesBehavioral specialist consultant (BSC)
Devereux Foundation JobsOccupational therapist

New Jersey
Quest DiagnosticsPhlebotomy services representative
Princeton UniversityPlumber

 Connecticut
SikorskyMechnical engineer
GE CapitalTechnical advisor

Rhode Island
Schneider ElectricSenior attorney
SunBridgeDirector of nursing

Massachusetts
Verizon WirelessRetail sales representative
Sovereign BankEnvironmental risk analyst

Maine
Carquest Auto PartsCustomer service teammate
UnumProject coordinator

Next week, the South!

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Effective Networking: Assumptions About Your Contacts Can Hinder Your Job Search

April 28th, 2010

IT professionals who prize order and predictability, and possess a high need for closure are likely making erroneous assumptions about their networks–assumptions that could seriously hamper their job searches, according to research from MIT.
Courtesy: CIO.in

Arizona’s New ‘Papers, Please’ Law May Hurt H-1B Workers

April 28th, 2010

Arizona’s controversial new immigration could lead to arrests of legal H-1B workers, and prompt some tech firms to re-think whether to locate in the state.
Courtesy: CIO.in

Terry Childs found guilty

April 28th, 2010

Terry Childs, the San Francisco network administrator who refused to hand over passwords to his boss, was found guilty of one felony count of denying computer services, a jury found Tuesday.

Childs now faces a maximum of five years in prison after jurors determined that he had violated California’s computer crime law by refusing to hand over passwords to the city’s FiberWAN to Richard Robinson, the chief operations officer for the city’s Department of Technology and Information Services (DTIS).

Courtesy: Infoworld News