So I’m a self-employed general contractor. I got a job to redo the plumbing system in a customer’s house and asked my dad to help me with it since it was a two-man job and he’s been a plumber for 40+ years.

This morning the customer called to say that last night a loose fitting came off and completely flooded their utility room. They were able to shut off the water immediately and sweep/wet-vac the floors, and it looks like there was no permanent damage other than to my pride.

The thing is, the joint that failed was done by my dad. My customer doesn’t know - I took full blame - but I feel like I don’t want to tell my dad either, and here’s the problem. I’m very big on honesty and I feel like I should tell him, or at the very least that I’d want to know if I was in his shoes. I just don’t know what it achieves other than making him feel bad about it too. I don’t want this to be the first thing that pops into his head the next time I ask for his help. I’d wish to keep this a good memory.

I’m torn here. I know my intentions are good, but I’m not sure whether I’m actually protecting his feelings or my own.

  • JoeyJoeJoeJr@lemmy.ml
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    11 hours ago

    What would you do if he wasn’t your dad? You mentioned you took full blame, almost as if you felt like you were covering for him, but I think even if it wasn’t your dad, you’re responsible for anyone you bring in, and the work they do, so taking the blame should be universal. And going forward, I’d expect a similar, universal approach. You could choose to not mention it but also not employ that person any more, mention it before the next job and ask them to be extra careful, change procedures to guarantee it doesn’t happen again…

    I don’t think him being your dad should necessarily afford him special treatment.