"Looking for Mr. Goodfellow..."
Different management for starters. That is not make light of the sacrafice and financial loss, but it is a different team entirely.
Secondly, the issue had to do with Work Brain as our own Spin Doc admits to back timing clock-outs in order to cover employees late arrival.
Jester:
In a perfect world, everyone would come to work on time, but as you and I both know, the world is far from perfect. There are events which occur that are beyond the control of the employee and may prevent them from reaching the time clock at the designated time. From the managers perspective, there are also times when shift coverage is far from ideal due to sick calls, vacations, and refused overtime.
As the owner of a company, or a manager, would it NOT benefit you to adjust an employee shift forward by 30 minutes if it helps to cover a shortfall on the backside of the shift? As I said in a prior post, it creates a win-win situation for both the employee and the company, as long as it is applied fairly and consistently across the board.
In all of my years as a manager in every company I have worked for, I have applied this policy fairly and consistently to EVERY person who had a verifiable reason for being late. I did not discriminate based on my relationship with the employee, their attendance or disciplinary record, or for any other reason. Everyone got a break as long as their story checked out.
When I was a manager for US, there were also other ways to deal with attendance issues, such as last minute shift trades. If an agent called me and told me they were stuck in an airport somewhere because they could not get on a flight as a standby, it was my personal policy to try and find someone to cover their shift. Again, I applied this equally and consistently across the board, regardless of my relationship with the employee.
I garnered a lot of respect and had loyal employees because I was fair and consistent.
It's a two way street. Too many upper management types tend to view it as a one-way street, and that's why employees are skeptical of management intentions. Again, if upper management would step back and take the bullseye off the front line workers, they may be amazed at how much better their operation will run.
So Retorts Jester.