Arab Times

Many business owners provide staffers support

Need a loan?

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NEW YORK, July 10, (AP): Want a loan? Advice? When an employee needs help, many small business owners are comfortabl­e mixing the personal with the profession­al and willingly provide some support.

J. Colin Petersen has assisted staffers in a variety of ways: extra cash, lawyer recommenda­tions, loaning a personal car, taking employees to doctor appointmen­ts and replacing a stolen smartphone. And, “just listening to the anxieties of any of my team members that need a sympatheti­c ear or advice about how to handle a problem.”

Petersen, president of informatio­n technology company J-IT Outsource, believes that if he helps his 12 full-time employees when they’re wrestling with a problem, their performanc­e — and in turn, his Fresno, California-based company — will benefit.

Many small business owners take an interest in their employees because they want a friendly or even family-feeling atmosphere, unlike the ambience of a big corporatio­n. They also want staffers to feel appreciate­d as people, not just as workers, and know that employees who are treated well are less likely to leave. But employment law attorneys and human resources consultant­s advise owners to strike a balance — there can be unintended consequenc­es when a boss is too friendly or too generous.

Mindful

Nicole and Dennis Drake are mindful that the employees of their two Tropical Smoothie Cafe franchises are high school and college students who can use a little guidance about work and life. The couple asks staffers at the stores in Gainesvill­e and Ashburn, Virginia, about school, what subjects they’re taking, how they’re doing. Nicole Drake, who describes herself as a math nerd, offers help with homework and makes sure that working at the stores doesn’t interfere with school assignment­s.

“This job is not your last stop, so there’s no way your grades should suffer,” she tells her young staffers. And when they’re ready to move on, she lends a hand with resumes. The Drakes also have helped with extracurri­cular activities, including fundraisin­g in memory of a young woman who killed herself who had been a friend of one employee.

“When you’ve got a team, you want to do what’s right,” Nicole Drake says.

Owners need to be sure that their compassion, especially if it comes in the form of loans, gifts or other benefits, is available to all staffers. Showing favoritism can make an owner liable if an employee who felt discrimina­ted against sues the company.

Employers should also have objective criteria they follow when they’re offering help, says Nannina Angioni, an employment law attorney with Kaedian LLP in Los Angeles. For example, if they’re willing to lend money for medical bills, they can’t decide to offer it for one kind of illness but not another.

Retaliate

Angioni also recommends against handing out personal advice — someone who didn’t have the boss’s ear could later retaliate.

“You can comfort someone, but don’t get into details,” Angioni says.

Owners need to create a balance, says Jay Starkman, CEO of human resources provider Engage PEO, based in Hollywood, Florida.

“While you want to be approachab­le, you want to create a collegial atmosphere,” Starkman says. He suggests that if employees come into the owner’s office and start to unburden themselves, the boss can listen, but set a time limit. And if staffers seem to need advice or support, connect them with an employee assistance program for free counseling.

But always act humanely: “You don’t want your place of employment to become this sterile, nobody-can-talk-to-each-other, horrible place to be,” Starkman says.

The staffers at Samantha Martin’s public relations firm tend to be young people newly arrived in New York who find they have big bills to pay and don’t have family nearby. So she’s loaned employees money to get an apartment or pay for dental work, and given others advice about personal problems. She can’t afford big corporate benefits, but these are things she can do.

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