Re: Letter of DisapprovaltreacerbulletJanuary 12 2010, 08:46:10 UTC
Subject: Letter of Disapproval From: Dr. Herbert Martin Allardice To: Erica Susan Greens _________________________________
Good afternoon Mrs. Green,
I would like to personally apologize for what you and your staff went through. Clearly, it was more of a disturbance than I would have liked. However, I must adamantly oppose your interpretation of InfoCorp code, which expressly allows for swift transportation of biological specimens through all corporate areas providing that proper safeguards are in place and that approval has been made by a department director.
The transportation elevators on the south side of the Michelson office building in which we both labor during employment hours were in disrepair and would have taken many hours to fix. We could not leave the specimen in the lobby, because it would have eventually evacuated its bladder and caused a serious health concern. Since the nearest alternative elevator to the laboratory area was through your offices, my subordinate was correct to select that route for transportation.
The homo turpis in question was not only restrained by leather straps and behind the bars of his containment unit, but under watch by four armed InfoCorp guards and two members of the Denver constabulary. Your staff was in no danger. It shows, because nobody in this incident was harmed by his transportation through your office area, even though it displayed unruly behavior that my subordinate informs me to likely have been instigated by the scent of your perfume.
Indeed, my apology is not for what occurred itself, but for how you weren't warned ahead of time that the specimen would be transported through your work area. My chief subordinate in this matter had the opportunity to give you and your staff a 10-minute warning ahead of time, and failed to do so. Rest assured that this will be part of his permanent record in our database and the matter will be raised at his annual review in 10 months.
Be most assuredly well, Dr. Herbert Allardice, Ph.D. Director of the Department of Biology and Genetics
From: Dr. Herbert Martin Allardice
To: Erica Susan Greens
_________________________________
Good afternoon Mrs. Green,
I would like to personally apologize for what you and your staff went through. Clearly, it was more of a disturbance than I would have liked. However, I must adamantly oppose your interpretation of InfoCorp code, which expressly allows for swift transportation of biological specimens through all corporate areas providing that proper safeguards are in place and that approval has been made by a department director.
The transportation elevators on the south side of the Michelson office building in which we both labor during employment hours were in disrepair and would have taken many hours to fix. We could not leave the specimen in the lobby, because it would have eventually evacuated its bladder and caused a serious health concern. Since the nearest alternative elevator to the laboratory area was through your offices, my subordinate was correct to select that route for transportation.
The homo turpis in question was not only restrained by leather straps and behind the bars of his containment unit, but under watch by four armed InfoCorp guards and two members of the Denver constabulary. Your staff was in no danger. It shows, because nobody in this incident was harmed by his transportation through your office area, even though it displayed unruly behavior that my subordinate informs me to likely have been instigated by the scent of your perfume.
Indeed, my apology is not for what occurred itself, but for how you weren't warned ahead of time that the specimen would be transported through your work area. My chief subordinate in this matter had the opportunity to give you and your staff a 10-minute warning ahead of time, and failed to do so. Rest assured that this will be part of his permanent record in our database and the matter will be raised at his annual review in 10 months.
Be most assuredly well,
Dr. Herbert Allardice, Ph.D.
Director of the Department of Biology and Genetics
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