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Subject:
From:
"Alan R. Downing" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
For blind ham radio operators <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 17 Aug 2013 07:47:15 -0700
Content-Type:
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My employment situation was slightly different with respect to the company
that I had gone to work for upon graduation from MIT.  They transferred me
out to Phoenix from the Boston area in 1975.  Ultimately I got caught up in
what today would be called a whistle-blowing action.  Except, that term
hadn't been coined yet.  Lacking a cause of whistle-blowing, it became an
wrongful termination action.  It stemmed from me reporting several managers
for permitting another former manager into the office complex where we
worked.  The purpose of the former manager  coming onto the property was
specifically to get ahold of proprietary corporate data/information, to give
to his new employer, which was a competitor.  It is hard to believe that
such a blatant violation of security could happen, but it did, and my report
was fully confirmed by the security and legal departments, and those
responsible were reprimanded; not fired as they should have been.  However,
since these guys were over me and my department, they weren't overly happy
with me.  To make a lengthy and convoluted story short, I ended up suing the
company, and won a jury verdict, and a fair amount of dough, after a 7 week
trial in superior court.

There was a certain irony to this whole affair.  If I hadn't accepted the
transfer to Phoenix in 1975, I would have left the company and entered
Harvard law school that fall. 

What are you gonna do?

73



Alan R. Downing
Phoenix, AZ


-----Original Message-----
From: For blind ham radio operators [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
On Behalf Of Tom Behler
Sent: Saturday, August 17, 2013 7:00 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Update From KB8TYJ

Ron:

Well, from one former Department Head to another, I have to say that the 
situation you describe mirrors my experience exactly.

Far too many demands from all sides, with very limited resources and/or 
power to do what's truly needed.

Actually, I received excellent performance evaluations from both my faculty,

and the administrative side, but you just get to a point where you seriously

have to ask the question:  "At what cost should I keep doing this?"

Teaching clearly is my real passion in academia, and it will be a pleasure 
to be back in the classroom starting in the Spring semester.

I now have your personal e-mail address, and would like to share more with 
you off list at some point if you are interested.

73 from Tom Behler: KB8TYJ


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Dr. Ronald E. Milliman" <    [log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Friday, August 16, 2013 11:49 PM
Subject: Re: Update From KB8TYJ


> Tom, as the former Chair of the Marketing Department at Loyola University,

> I
> fully understand and support your decision to take a break from the 
> position
> at the university. I think being a department chair is one of the most
> stressful jobs in academia. You are caught in a kind of sandwich; i.e. you
> hear complaints from all sides, and in my case, I had limited resources to
> remedy the issues about which students, faculty, and administration were
> concerned about.
>
> I retired a year ago, and I have not missed the publish or perish pressure
> for one nanosecond! <lol>
>
> Kick back for a while, and enjoy ham radio, and you'll be a new man before
> you know it!
>
> Ron, K8HSY
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: For blind ham radio operators [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
> On Behalf Of Tom Behler
> Sent: Friday, August 16, 2013 7:00 PM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Update From KB8TYJ
>
> Hello, everyone.
>
> For a time, I debated sending this post, but have decided to go ahead with
> it, because I consider the folks on this list to be part of a great family
> that I have come to know over the past 12 years or so.
>
> If this is felt to be too "off topic" for some, please hit the good old
> delete button, and I promise I will not be offended.
>
> As many of you know, about a year and a half ago, I took the Acting
> Department Head position in the Department Of Social Sciences at Ferris
> State University.  When I took the position, I knew going in that it was
> going to be extremely demanding.  Not only would it be a 12-month 
> position,
> and would involve 50 to 60-hour work weeks, but it would involve running 
> all
> administrative functions for a department with approximately 30 faculty
> members, and 5 major University programs.
>
> By all counts from both administration and faculty members, I was a great
> success in the position, and met or exceeded all initial performance
> expectations.
>
> However, beginning in the late Spring of this year, I began experiencing
> some significant stress-related medical symptoms, and those symptoms
> steadily grew worse over the Summer.  Fortunately, the symptoms didn't 
> seem
> to aggravate my already-existing heart condition, but they became 
> important
> warning signs that I simply couldn't ignore.
>
> As a result, I have officially stepped down from the administrative
> position, and, with the authorization of my doctor, have taken a medical
> leave for the Fall 2013 semester.  Fortunately, I have ample accumulated
> sick time, so that this will not create a financial burden for my wife and
> I.  The plan is for me to take the Fall off, work on some other 
> professional
> projects, and then resume my full-time teaching in the Spring of 2014.
>
> I am nearing 60 years old, now, and still need to work a few more years
> before getting serious about retirement, so hopefully, this little hiatus
> will carry me through.
>
> I also am hoping that the time off will allow me to get more back into ham
> radio than I have been lately.  So, look for an increased presence from me
> on the list, and also on our week-end nets over the coming months.
>
> 73 from Tom Behler: KB8TYJ
> 

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