Chuck(G) wrote:I've wondered what a modern orchestra would be like if it was run the same way a lot of commercial operations are. Tenure? Ain't no such thing--you can get laid off a day before you're vested for retirement--or just because you've turned 50.
It's been said that today's new employee can expect to change careers around six times during his or her working life. How many orchestral musicians or university professors do that?
Actually, you can't get laid off just because your are 50. You can get laid off for just about any other reason (such as a general reduction in force), but laying someone off just because they reach an age above 40 would be a violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967. To prove it, of course, you'd have to show a pattern of employees being "laid off" as they turn 50 (not at all easy, of course). To justify it as a reduction in force, the employer would need to demonstrate that forces are actually being reduced without discrimination. Companies can terminate at will, but they still have to follow their own policies in their employee handbooks. They can't disguise termination for cause as a reduction in force just because they can't build the case for termination their own rules require.
In a case like this one, however, we are talking about a true reduction in force.
But Alex's point is a good one, too. These are charitable organizations and in return for tax status they do have a responsibility to the community. One of those responsibilities, though, is sound fiscal management. Another is community service. Those two have to be balanced. Whether or not the employees of the organization qualify as "community" is not at all obvious to me, however. It would if they were volunteers. There's no question that they need to abide by their contracts, of course.
Chuck is right about the multiple career changes, though. I'm currently on my sixth employer (or fifth if you don't count an acquisition), and I still have at least 10 years and more like 15 years to go. I was RIF'ed from one (a thinly disguised firing that I did not contest because leaving that situation was really a relief), but all other changes were motivated by career advancement. I can't really expect an employer to be more loyal to me than I'm prepared to be to them if I'm given a better offer.
Rick "11 years in his current position" Denney