hnd wrote:
i don't know if this fits, but maybe.
My best friend worked for the iowa dept of revenue. He was an auditor. Sometimes they would have to go onsite for a few weeks to do audits at places of business. He started and within a few months noticed a cubicle that looked occupied but he'd never seen the person. So he asked and someone told him it was a lady who did a lot of audits on larger firms that took a long time. he said after 3 months of never seeing this person, she was in the office one day. he introduced herself and she was not pleasant.
well come to find out, she basically had a 3 mo vacation and just had all the paperwork filled out like all was good. The office needed her to fill out some paperwork for insurance or something and called the business she was supposed to be at and they said, they'd gotten letters and talked to her a few times over the phone but she said she had all she needed and had only visited the office once 3 months ago.
the kicker. this was the 2nd time she has done this. the next kicker, they still couldn't fire her. it took her doing it a 3rd time before they could file the paperwork to have her fired. she got sent home but was still paid for like 6 mo before the paperwork went through.
Not the same thing, but what is your guys' ruling on this? My buddy's father was an elevator inspector for the City of Evanston. He was very connected politically. His best friend was the city manager. Evanston is a small town. Everyone knows everyone (and we all find Northwestern a pain in the ass). When his friend retired as city manager after a heart attack, he wanted to set it up so my friend's dad got the job. My friend's dad turned it down. He said it was a giant headache and he wasn't looking to have a heart attack himself.
Anyway, each week he would get a list of elevators to be inspected during that week. It was ostensibly a week's worth of work. Well, he would schedule all the week's inspections for Monday and Tuesday and on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday he would sit around Russ's gas station playing cards, telling lies, and drinking coffee. The new village manager who got the job he turned down was intimidated by this guy. So he had a cop follow him around and called him in for playing cards on city time. He offered to let him keep his pension if he resigned. He did. And then he took a job as an engineer at Northwestern.
So what say you? Did he get a raw deal or what was coming to him?