More to this, methinks...
Colonel, USAFR
I agree. The boy may have missed work more than once.
If he didn’t follow store procedures for asking for the time off, then yeah, he put himself on the chopping block. But if he did dot his Is and cross his Ts, follow all the store’s rules, and they fired him anyway? That manager should catch hell for it.
}:-)4
went to work for Food King about four months ago as part of a work cooperative plan at the school.
Failed in two areas. First he just didn’t show up for work and second he didn’t go to work as part of the high school work plan. I think he probably should stay a food sacker. The military is now receiving so many brilliant kids that a kid like this is not needed.
I am going to go with the kid on this on. After getting a call from the recruiter I think the manger had it in for the kid.
Some have, and apparently some haven't.
I recommend that everyone read the entire story. It's actually quite complete, and much better than the usual MSM story. Despite being posted on the KHOU site, it's actually written by a reporter at the Galveston County Daily News. That reporter could give most reporters in the "big" MSM lessons about how to write a story like this.
The reporter made a point of talking to both sides and pointing out the contrast between the two.
A short recap:
I've worked exactly the same job, at exactly the same age. I had to work the job around my school and other activities: that was a condition of being allowed to keep the job. I never had to put anything in writing, though. Scheduling conflicts arose, but we always worked them out without being threatened with the loss of my job.
This was before mobile phones, so I wasn't expected to call if I was going to be late. I just didn't get paid. I was never late often enough for it to be a problem, but it happened. As long as I called in when I couldn't get there at all, we were good.
Somewhere along the line, their relationship became strained, and it's hard to tell who is at fault for that. The teen sounds like he felt like he was being asked to do unreasonable things, and was powerless to do anything about it.
I never enlisted, so I don't have any direct experience. If this teen is having problems with authority figures now, the Marines may not be the place for him. But, I've see how basic training has really changed people.... for the better. He might thrive, instead.