Someone in authority should speak to her and tell her that this is inappropriate.
Spike's Bitches 44: It's about the rules having changed.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Someone in authority should speak to her and tell her that this is inappropriate.
Absolutely.
It may just be notional, but it's a notion worth maintaining...Church and State, people. Church ≠ State.
Separate, if for no other reason than you should not have to divulge, defend or even discuss your internal life in the workplace.
I have an auto insurance question.
What is to prevent me from lowering my deductible right before I make a claim? My renewal date is coming up, and I've found some horrendous scratches on my car because someone hates me or something. My comprehensive deductible is $250, but for $40, I can make it $50 for the next six months, file the claim, and then take it back up again. That seems like a sound strategy, but there has to be a catch.
It is immoral?
Morals don't pay my rent!
The insurance company isn't stupid. Firstly, filing a claim will make them look at your file, and they will realize what you did. You may not pay now, but you will pay later.
Aw, Teppy, that was a wonderful story and photo. Sniffly over here.
Twilight Greeting Cards
As one who received a musical Harry Potter birthday card, I have no opinion.
That seems like a sound strategy, but there has to be a catch.
Odds are they'll drop you. Many insurance companies will drop you for small claims anyway, says Clark Howard, who recommends taking insurance with the highest deductible your loan company will allow and paying small claims, particularly when there's no other driver involved, rather than filing.