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Scenario-An employee notifies his/her supervisor that he/she is taking a new job and will leave in two weeks. The next question deals with actions the supervisor needs to take in order to hire a replacement for the departing employee.
Scenario-An employee notifies his/her supervisor that he/she is taking a new job and will leave in two weeks. The next question deals with actions the supervisor needs to take in order to hire a replacement for the departing employee.
Scenario-An employee notifies his/her supervisor that he/she is taking a new job and will leave in two weeks. The next question deals with actions the supervisor needs to take in order to hire a replacement for the departing employee.
Scenario-An employee notifies his/her supervisor that he/she is taking a new job and will leave in two weeks. The next question deals with actions the supervisor needs to take in order to hire a replacement for the departing employee.
Scenario-An employee notifies his/her supervisor that he/she is taking a new job and will leave in two weeks. The next question deals with actions the supervisor needs to take in order to hire a replacement for the departing employee.
In the US workplace, the general health of an individual employee is no business of a supervisor. Supervisors are forbidden to enquire as to whether an employee has a particular health condition such as AIDS, diabetes, etc.
The relationship between an employee and a supervisor is a vertical relationship.
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The spelling for supervisor is supervisor; you had it spelled correctly in the question.
Your question is vague and therefore difficult to answer fully. If you do not feel this answers your question, please ask more explicitly or provide more details on the discussion page for this question. I am assuming you are referring to a workers compensation situation where the employee is claiming against the employer. The employer has a right to know what you are claiming. If you feel that your supervisor is attempting to harass or pressure you because of what you wrote in a workers compensation report, you should consult an attorney.
Yes, a Senior Supervisor must be a Category Supervisor.(See the Related question.)
Yes, you can. It is still up the supervisor whether or not the question is featured.