Office parties sober up
Firms limit booze, ban mistletoe to avoid scandals
As soon as you introduce alcohol at an off-site activity, people’s guards are dropped.
‘Tis the season to keep that office holiday party from adding to the list of workplace sexual misconduct scandals.
With the names of Weinstein, Spacey and Lauer likely getting more mentions this year than Dancer, Prancer and Blitzen, employers are making sure their yearend staff merrymaking doesn’t generate more inappropriate conduct.
There will be less booze at many. An independent business organization has renewed its annual warning not to hang mistletoe. And some will have party monitors, keeping an eye out for inappropriate behaviour.
TV and movies often depict office parties as wildly inappropriate bacchanals or excruciatingly awkward fiascos, if not, horrifyingly, both. But even a regular office party can be complicated because the rules people normally observe at work don’t quite apply, which makes it easier for people to accidentally cross a line — or try to get away with serious misbehaviour. Especially when too much drinking is involved.
“As soon as you introduce alcohol at an off-site activity, people’s guards are dropped,” said Ed Yost, manager of employee relations and development for the Society for Human Resource Management based in Alexandria, Va. “It’s presumed to be a less formal, more social environment. Some people will drink more than they typically would on a Friday night or a Saturday because it’s an open bar or a free cocktail hour.”
The Huffington Post reported Friday that Vox Media, which runs sites including Vox and Recode, won’t have an open bar this year at its holiday party and will give employees two tickets they can redeem for drinks. It will also have more food than in years past.
A survey by Bloomberg Law said those kinds of safeguards are common: while most companies ask bartenders or security or even some employees to keep an eye on how much partygoers are drinking, others limit the number of free drinks or the time they’re available. A small minority have cash bars instead of an open bar.
The National Federation of Independent Businesses recommends all of those steps, and adds another that might seem obvious these days: don’t hang mistletoe. It’s been giving those suggestions for several years.
Anthony Vitiello, the marketing director for software company UltraShipTMS, said he planned his company’s event and didn’t rethink it. For the last few years the firm has marked the holiday with drinks and passed hors d’oeuvres in the wine cellar of a local restaurant. Vitiello thinks the formal setting makes the event calmer.
“We haven’t had any incidents, not a single one I can recall, where anyone got loud or over-consumed,” he said. “While there are additional complications that are associated with a holiday event, that’s one day a year.”