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Better together: Spouses share lives, workplace

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Pam Doherty said the best part about working with her husband is that they already have an idea of what kind day it has been.

“At the end of the day, you have a feel for what happened, and if one or the other comes home in a peculiar mood, well, you have some idea as to how it got that way,” Pam Doherty said.

Terry Bishop, an associate professor of human resource management at Northern Illinois University, said spouses in the same workplace is becoming more common.

He said companies have been starting to enact policies that allow for spouses to be hired.

Many of these policies are put into place to try to attract talent to a company, especially if the new hire would have to move.

Under these policies, if an employee’s spouse has the required qualifications for a job, they will have preference to be hired, Bishop said.

“In that tendency, it might lead to more spouses in the workplace,” Bishop said.

Bishop said many businesses will prohibit a person from reporting to his or her spouse, and the couple should be in separate chains of command, so a supervisor can’t influence someone else into giving a certain performance review.

“If it sours, it can distort into potential problems of sexual harassment or inappropriate contact,” Bishop said.

Bishop said that if an employee’s spouse is hired, businesses should be clear that the person is qualified for the job. The spouse’s co-workers also should be involved in the hiring process and meet the potential employee before he or she is hired.

Lynn Neeley, a professor of entrepreneurship at NIU, said it’s very common for spouses work with one another, especially if its a family business.

Whether the situation will work depends on the people involved, Neeley said.

Joe and Amber Martin Johnson have worked together for almost seven years at Martin Johnson Tax and Financial Services in Crystal Lake. They have been married for 15 years.

Being in the same office doesn’t mean they’ll interact, Joe Johnson said. “There might be days I don’t see her.”

They have their own clients and their own expertise. Amber Martin Johnson helps with taxes, Joe Johnson does financial planning, and they have separate offices within the business.


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