Is it inappropriate to invite all my coworkers except for one person to an event?












3















I work in a fairly small department, I have 8 coworkers. 7 of them are great, we're good friends, and I love spending time with them - we hang out outside of work often, but usually in groups of 3-4. The other guy has sexually harassed me and my wife separately (my wife doesn't work here), gets really drunk and says racist things, and has to dominate every conversation.



I've recently moved to a new house, and I'd like to have my work friends over for a dinner party. I know it would be a ton of fun with the coworkers I'm close with, and this guy would absolutely ruin it. Would it be inappropriate to purposely exclude this guy?










share|improve this question







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synthesis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 1





    Do HR or your boss know about the sexual harassment already? If not, do you have enough documentation (dates, times, details, witnesses if any) to back it up if asked? If HR doesn't know or doesn't believe you, and the guy complains about being excluded, it could be hard to deal with.

    – Kevin
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    Yes HR knows, several employees have filed complaints over the past year and nothing's happened.

    – synthesis
    5 hours ago











  • Are they all peers, or are any of you in management?

    – thursdaysgeek
    4 hours ago











  • It's not a work-related function so no it's inappropriate. I'd recommend adding significant others or other friends to the mix so it isn't just your work friends. Seems less cliquey that way.

    – jcmack
    1 hour ago
















3















I work in a fairly small department, I have 8 coworkers. 7 of them are great, we're good friends, and I love spending time with them - we hang out outside of work often, but usually in groups of 3-4. The other guy has sexually harassed me and my wife separately (my wife doesn't work here), gets really drunk and says racist things, and has to dominate every conversation.



I've recently moved to a new house, and I'd like to have my work friends over for a dinner party. I know it would be a ton of fun with the coworkers I'm close with, and this guy would absolutely ruin it. Would it be inappropriate to purposely exclude this guy?










share|improve this question







New contributor




synthesis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 1





    Do HR or your boss know about the sexual harassment already? If not, do you have enough documentation (dates, times, details, witnesses if any) to back it up if asked? If HR doesn't know or doesn't believe you, and the guy complains about being excluded, it could be hard to deal with.

    – Kevin
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    Yes HR knows, several employees have filed complaints over the past year and nothing's happened.

    – synthesis
    5 hours ago











  • Are they all peers, or are any of you in management?

    – thursdaysgeek
    4 hours ago











  • It's not a work-related function so no it's inappropriate. I'd recommend adding significant others or other friends to the mix so it isn't just your work friends. Seems less cliquey that way.

    – jcmack
    1 hour ago














3












3








3








I work in a fairly small department, I have 8 coworkers. 7 of them are great, we're good friends, and I love spending time with them - we hang out outside of work often, but usually in groups of 3-4. The other guy has sexually harassed me and my wife separately (my wife doesn't work here), gets really drunk and says racist things, and has to dominate every conversation.



I've recently moved to a new house, and I'd like to have my work friends over for a dinner party. I know it would be a ton of fun with the coworkers I'm close with, and this guy would absolutely ruin it. Would it be inappropriate to purposely exclude this guy?










share|improve this question







New contributor




synthesis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I work in a fairly small department, I have 8 coworkers. 7 of them are great, we're good friends, and I love spending time with them - we hang out outside of work often, but usually in groups of 3-4. The other guy has sexually harassed me and my wife separately (my wife doesn't work here), gets really drunk and says racist things, and has to dominate every conversation.



I've recently moved to a new house, and I'd like to have my work friends over for a dinner party. I know it would be a ton of fun with the coworkers I'm close with, and this guy would absolutely ruin it. Would it be inappropriate to purposely exclude this guy?







colleagues relationships






share|improve this question







New contributor




synthesis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




synthesis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




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synthesis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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asked 5 hours ago









synthesissynthesis

191




191




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New contributor





synthesis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






synthesis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 1





    Do HR or your boss know about the sexual harassment already? If not, do you have enough documentation (dates, times, details, witnesses if any) to back it up if asked? If HR doesn't know or doesn't believe you, and the guy complains about being excluded, it could be hard to deal with.

    – Kevin
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    Yes HR knows, several employees have filed complaints over the past year and nothing's happened.

    – synthesis
    5 hours ago











  • Are they all peers, or are any of you in management?

    – thursdaysgeek
    4 hours ago











  • It's not a work-related function so no it's inappropriate. I'd recommend adding significant others or other friends to the mix so it isn't just your work friends. Seems less cliquey that way.

    – jcmack
    1 hour ago














  • 1





    Do HR or your boss know about the sexual harassment already? If not, do you have enough documentation (dates, times, details, witnesses if any) to back it up if asked? If HR doesn't know or doesn't believe you, and the guy complains about being excluded, it could be hard to deal with.

    – Kevin
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    Yes HR knows, several employees have filed complaints over the past year and nothing's happened.

    – synthesis
    5 hours ago











  • Are they all peers, or are any of you in management?

    – thursdaysgeek
    4 hours ago











  • It's not a work-related function so no it's inappropriate. I'd recommend adding significant others or other friends to the mix so it isn't just your work friends. Seems less cliquey that way.

    – jcmack
    1 hour ago








1




1





Do HR or your boss know about the sexual harassment already? If not, do you have enough documentation (dates, times, details, witnesses if any) to back it up if asked? If HR doesn't know or doesn't believe you, and the guy complains about being excluded, it could be hard to deal with.

– Kevin
5 hours ago





Do HR or your boss know about the sexual harassment already? If not, do you have enough documentation (dates, times, details, witnesses if any) to back it up if asked? If HR doesn't know or doesn't believe you, and the guy complains about being excluded, it could be hard to deal with.

– Kevin
5 hours ago




1




1





Yes HR knows, several employees have filed complaints over the past year and nothing's happened.

– synthesis
5 hours ago





Yes HR knows, several employees have filed complaints over the past year and nothing's happened.

– synthesis
5 hours ago













Are they all peers, or are any of you in management?

– thursdaysgeek
4 hours ago





Are they all peers, or are any of you in management?

– thursdaysgeek
4 hours ago













It's not a work-related function so no it's inappropriate. I'd recommend adding significant others or other friends to the mix so it isn't just your work friends. Seems less cliquey that way.

– jcmack
1 hour ago





It's not a work-related function so no it's inappropriate. I'd recommend adding significant others or other friends to the mix so it isn't just your work friends. Seems less cliquey that way.

– jcmack
1 hour ago










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















6














If you are all peers, it is simply very, very rude. It sounds like you may not care about that, since the person who you want to exclude deserves to be excluded.



If you are a manager, then it gets problematic, rather than just rude. According to Alison at AskAManager, you are opening yourself up to legitimate charges of favoritism. If you are in HR, that could also be a problem (Another AskAManager link).



If you are all peers, and you want to send a message as well as have a good time, then invite all but the one co-worker.






share|improve this answer



















  • 6





    The only think I'd change is that here it isn't rude; someone who has harassed you shouldn't expect to be invited anywhere.

    – dbeer
    4 hours ago






  • 2





    It is rude but like it is rude to insult someone that just punched you, an insult is rude by definition. I think what @thursdaysgeek meant is just that the other employee will feel insulted by being the only one not invited, whether the OP cares about it is up to him.

    – Echox
    4 hours ago











  • @Echox very much yes.

    – thursdaysgeek
    3 hours ago



















4















Would it be inappropriate to purposely exclude this guy?




It's your party.



That means you get to invite whoever you like and exclude whoever you choose.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    And he can cry if he wants to* (when the relationship with that co-worker sours even more) (*that song just popped into my head when I saw your comment)

    – Peter M
    2 hours ago





















1














Yes it would be rude, and the possible awkwardness is a risk that you would have to be willing to deal with.



But of course, not inviting him is the right move to make. Him spoiling your party sounds like a far worse outcome.



You just need to prepared for some perhaps passive-aggressive dynamics in the workplace - but I imagine this guy knows why he is being excluded.



The other awkward scenario is that he directly confronts you why he wasn't invited, in which case you can give him an honest and direct answer.






share|improve this answer































    0














    If it is not workplace related then you can invite whoever you want.



    But if it can somehow be seen as workplace related then this would constitute bullying by exclusion.






    share|improve this answer























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      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes








      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      6














      If you are all peers, it is simply very, very rude. It sounds like you may not care about that, since the person who you want to exclude deserves to be excluded.



      If you are a manager, then it gets problematic, rather than just rude. According to Alison at AskAManager, you are opening yourself up to legitimate charges of favoritism. If you are in HR, that could also be a problem (Another AskAManager link).



      If you are all peers, and you want to send a message as well as have a good time, then invite all but the one co-worker.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 6





        The only think I'd change is that here it isn't rude; someone who has harassed you shouldn't expect to be invited anywhere.

        – dbeer
        4 hours ago






      • 2





        It is rude but like it is rude to insult someone that just punched you, an insult is rude by definition. I think what @thursdaysgeek meant is just that the other employee will feel insulted by being the only one not invited, whether the OP cares about it is up to him.

        – Echox
        4 hours ago











      • @Echox very much yes.

        – thursdaysgeek
        3 hours ago
















      6














      If you are all peers, it is simply very, very rude. It sounds like you may not care about that, since the person who you want to exclude deserves to be excluded.



      If you are a manager, then it gets problematic, rather than just rude. According to Alison at AskAManager, you are opening yourself up to legitimate charges of favoritism. If you are in HR, that could also be a problem (Another AskAManager link).



      If you are all peers, and you want to send a message as well as have a good time, then invite all but the one co-worker.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 6





        The only think I'd change is that here it isn't rude; someone who has harassed you shouldn't expect to be invited anywhere.

        – dbeer
        4 hours ago






      • 2





        It is rude but like it is rude to insult someone that just punched you, an insult is rude by definition. I think what @thursdaysgeek meant is just that the other employee will feel insulted by being the only one not invited, whether the OP cares about it is up to him.

        – Echox
        4 hours ago











      • @Echox very much yes.

        – thursdaysgeek
        3 hours ago














      6












      6








      6







      If you are all peers, it is simply very, very rude. It sounds like you may not care about that, since the person who you want to exclude deserves to be excluded.



      If you are a manager, then it gets problematic, rather than just rude. According to Alison at AskAManager, you are opening yourself up to legitimate charges of favoritism. If you are in HR, that could also be a problem (Another AskAManager link).



      If you are all peers, and you want to send a message as well as have a good time, then invite all but the one co-worker.






      share|improve this answer













      If you are all peers, it is simply very, very rude. It sounds like you may not care about that, since the person who you want to exclude deserves to be excluded.



      If you are a manager, then it gets problematic, rather than just rude. According to Alison at AskAManager, you are opening yourself up to legitimate charges of favoritism. If you are in HR, that could also be a problem (Another AskAManager link).



      If you are all peers, and you want to send a message as well as have a good time, then invite all but the one co-worker.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered 4 hours ago









      thursdaysgeekthursdaysgeek

      28.3k1350108




      28.3k1350108








      • 6





        The only think I'd change is that here it isn't rude; someone who has harassed you shouldn't expect to be invited anywhere.

        – dbeer
        4 hours ago






      • 2





        It is rude but like it is rude to insult someone that just punched you, an insult is rude by definition. I think what @thursdaysgeek meant is just that the other employee will feel insulted by being the only one not invited, whether the OP cares about it is up to him.

        – Echox
        4 hours ago











      • @Echox very much yes.

        – thursdaysgeek
        3 hours ago














      • 6





        The only think I'd change is that here it isn't rude; someone who has harassed you shouldn't expect to be invited anywhere.

        – dbeer
        4 hours ago






      • 2





        It is rude but like it is rude to insult someone that just punched you, an insult is rude by definition. I think what @thursdaysgeek meant is just that the other employee will feel insulted by being the only one not invited, whether the OP cares about it is up to him.

        – Echox
        4 hours ago











      • @Echox very much yes.

        – thursdaysgeek
        3 hours ago








      6




      6





      The only think I'd change is that here it isn't rude; someone who has harassed you shouldn't expect to be invited anywhere.

      – dbeer
      4 hours ago





      The only think I'd change is that here it isn't rude; someone who has harassed you shouldn't expect to be invited anywhere.

      – dbeer
      4 hours ago




      2




      2





      It is rude but like it is rude to insult someone that just punched you, an insult is rude by definition. I think what @thursdaysgeek meant is just that the other employee will feel insulted by being the only one not invited, whether the OP cares about it is up to him.

      – Echox
      4 hours ago





      It is rude but like it is rude to insult someone that just punched you, an insult is rude by definition. I think what @thursdaysgeek meant is just that the other employee will feel insulted by being the only one not invited, whether the OP cares about it is up to him.

      – Echox
      4 hours ago













      @Echox very much yes.

      – thursdaysgeek
      3 hours ago





      @Echox very much yes.

      – thursdaysgeek
      3 hours ago













      4















      Would it be inappropriate to purposely exclude this guy?




      It's your party.



      That means you get to invite whoever you like and exclude whoever you choose.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        And he can cry if he wants to* (when the relationship with that co-worker sours even more) (*that song just popped into my head when I saw your comment)

        – Peter M
        2 hours ago


















      4















      Would it be inappropriate to purposely exclude this guy?




      It's your party.



      That means you get to invite whoever you like and exclude whoever you choose.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        And he can cry if he wants to* (when the relationship with that co-worker sours even more) (*that song just popped into my head when I saw your comment)

        – Peter M
        2 hours ago
















      4












      4








      4








      Would it be inappropriate to purposely exclude this guy?




      It's your party.



      That means you get to invite whoever you like and exclude whoever you choose.






      share|improve this answer














      Would it be inappropriate to purposely exclude this guy?




      It's your party.



      That means you get to invite whoever you like and exclude whoever you choose.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered 4 hours ago









      Joe StrazzereJoe Strazzere

      244k1197121011




      244k1197121011








      • 1





        And he can cry if he wants to* (when the relationship with that co-worker sours even more) (*that song just popped into my head when I saw your comment)

        – Peter M
        2 hours ago
















      • 1





        And he can cry if he wants to* (when the relationship with that co-worker sours even more) (*that song just popped into my head when I saw your comment)

        – Peter M
        2 hours ago










      1




      1





      And he can cry if he wants to* (when the relationship with that co-worker sours even more) (*that song just popped into my head when I saw your comment)

      – Peter M
      2 hours ago







      And he can cry if he wants to* (when the relationship with that co-worker sours even more) (*that song just popped into my head when I saw your comment)

      – Peter M
      2 hours ago













      1














      Yes it would be rude, and the possible awkwardness is a risk that you would have to be willing to deal with.



      But of course, not inviting him is the right move to make. Him spoiling your party sounds like a far worse outcome.



      You just need to prepared for some perhaps passive-aggressive dynamics in the workplace - but I imagine this guy knows why he is being excluded.



      The other awkward scenario is that he directly confronts you why he wasn't invited, in which case you can give him an honest and direct answer.






      share|improve this answer




























        1














        Yes it would be rude, and the possible awkwardness is a risk that you would have to be willing to deal with.



        But of course, not inviting him is the right move to make. Him spoiling your party sounds like a far worse outcome.



        You just need to prepared for some perhaps passive-aggressive dynamics in the workplace - but I imagine this guy knows why he is being excluded.



        The other awkward scenario is that he directly confronts you why he wasn't invited, in which case you can give him an honest and direct answer.






        share|improve this answer


























          1












          1








          1







          Yes it would be rude, and the possible awkwardness is a risk that you would have to be willing to deal with.



          But of course, not inviting him is the right move to make. Him spoiling your party sounds like a far worse outcome.



          You just need to prepared for some perhaps passive-aggressive dynamics in the workplace - but I imagine this guy knows why he is being excluded.



          The other awkward scenario is that he directly confronts you why he wasn't invited, in which case you can give him an honest and direct answer.






          share|improve this answer













          Yes it would be rude, and the possible awkwardness is a risk that you would have to be willing to deal with.



          But of course, not inviting him is the right move to make. Him spoiling your party sounds like a far worse outcome.



          You just need to prepared for some perhaps passive-aggressive dynamics in the workplace - but I imagine this guy knows why he is being excluded.



          The other awkward scenario is that he directly confronts you why he wasn't invited, in which case you can give him an honest and direct answer.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 3 hours ago









          dwjohnstondwjohnston

          986515




          986515























              0














              If it is not workplace related then you can invite whoever you want.



              But if it can somehow be seen as workplace related then this would constitute bullying by exclusion.






              share|improve this answer




























                0














                If it is not workplace related then you can invite whoever you want.



                But if it can somehow be seen as workplace related then this would constitute bullying by exclusion.






                share|improve this answer


























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  If it is not workplace related then you can invite whoever you want.



                  But if it can somehow be seen as workplace related then this would constitute bullying by exclusion.






                  share|improve this answer













                  If it is not workplace related then you can invite whoever you want.



                  But if it can somehow be seen as workplace related then this would constitute bullying by exclusion.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 5 hours ago









                  solarflaresolarflare

                  5,87821333




                  5,87821333






















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