The Denver Post

Office parties revisited

- By Marley Jay

EEWith a series of highprofil­e workplace sex scandals on their minds, employers are making sure their holiday office parties don’t become part of the problem.

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 behavior.

TV and movies often depict office parties as wildly inappropri­ate bacchanals or excruciati­ngly awkward fiascoes, 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 misbehavio­r. Especially when too much drinking is involved.

According to a survey by Chicago-based consulting company Challenger, Gray & Christmas, only 49 percent of companies plan to serve alcohol at their holiday events. Last year that number was 62 percent, the highest number in the decade the firm has run its survey. The number had been going up each year as the economy improved.

“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 instead give employees two tickets they can redeem for drinks. It will also have more food than in years past. The company recently fired its editorial director, Lockhart Steele, after a former employee made allegation­s of sexual harassment against him.

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.

Yost said he always gets a lot of requests for advice in planning and managing these events, but he’s getting even more of them this year. He said he will be spending his corporate holiday party the way he always does: patrolling hallways, checking secluded areas and trying to watch for people who look like they are stuck in an uncomforta­ble situation.

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