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Ontheroad · M
Sort of... I for a short period worked as a manager for a chain of restaurants (4 of then in the town I lived in) that constantly was plagued with staffing shortages. The rule was to check the posted work schedule at the beginning and end of each shift - a rule I always followed. One day I had to work a double (not unusual) and at closing time I checked the schedule, then helped the closing shift, got the cleanup done, did the closing accounting and made a night deposit on the way home (at 3 in the morning)... I forgot to check the schedule on the way out and of course, the area manager had called in a last minute change that someone (one of closers) had noted on the work schedule. It had me opening up another manager's store at 5 that same morning.
Regardless, I didn't see it and went home to fall soundly asleep without a thought in my mind (it was the first of two days I was to have off). Several hours later I awoke to the sound of my phone ringing and still mostly asleep answered it. It was the area manager ranting and raving about me missing a shift, that he'd called me several times and left multiple messages, and so on and so forth. Told me to meet him at my restaurant in an hour, which I told him I couldn't possibly do, that it would take me nearly two hours to get there... pissed him off even more.
On the way in I made the decision to quit - that working 70+ hours a week and still get chewed out was more than I was willing to put up with.
Anyway, as I walked into the restaurant I saw the area manager and went to talk to him and tell him I was, as of that moment, quitting. Before I could say a word, he said "you are fired". I laughed, tossed him my keys and said you can't fire me, I quit.
So it was a quit/fire 😁. Interestingly enough, when I filed for unemployment (he fired me before I quit), the company objected saying they had reason to fire me. Turns out their own policy manual clearly stated policy was to check the work schedule at opening and closing time. which as far as the state was concerned, was the posted opening and closing time of the restaurant. That I had done and the area manager made the change almost an hour after that time. Case closed and I totally enjoyed getting the unemployment money and ran it for as long as I could 😉.
Regardless, I didn't see it and went home to fall soundly asleep without a thought in my mind (it was the first of two days I was to have off). Several hours later I awoke to the sound of my phone ringing and still mostly asleep answered it. It was the area manager ranting and raving about me missing a shift, that he'd called me several times and left multiple messages, and so on and so forth. Told me to meet him at my restaurant in an hour, which I told him I couldn't possibly do, that it would take me nearly two hours to get there... pissed him off even more.
On the way in I made the decision to quit - that working 70+ hours a week and still get chewed out was more than I was willing to put up with.
Anyway, as I walked into the restaurant I saw the area manager and went to talk to him and tell him I was, as of that moment, quitting. Before I could say a word, he said "you are fired". I laughed, tossed him my keys and said you can't fire me, I quit.
So it was a quit/fire 😁. Interestingly enough, when I filed for unemployment (he fired me before I quit), the company objected saying they had reason to fire me. Turns out their own policy manual clearly stated policy was to check the work schedule at opening and closing time. which as far as the state was concerned, was the posted opening and closing time of the restaurant. That I had done and the area manager made the change almost an hour after that time. Case closed and I totally enjoyed getting the unemployment money and ran it for as long as I could 😉.