Hot in the city? No.
On Sat, 06 Aug 2016 20:04:56 -0500, "cshenk" > wrote:
>Cheryl wrote in rec.food.cooking:
>
>> On 7/26/2016 3:48 PM, Julie Bove wrote:
>>
>> > She'd get dressed, drive to work, only to have them tell her that
>> > she wasn't needed that day. When she tried to call ahead of time to
>> > see if she was needed, they told her that she wasn't allowed to
>> > call them. Or on the few occasions that she did work, they'd tell
>> > her that she had to stay late but wouldn't allow her to call and
>> > tell us this. This of course left her dad and I wondering where she
>> > was. The only thing we could do was drive there and see if her car
>> > was outside. He did call once to see if she was still there and she
>> > got in trouble for him calling.
>>
>> I'm sorry Julie but I find this very hard to believe. You might have
>> answered it later because as you can tell I'm not replying to a
>> current post because I've just been too busy. They wouldn't allow an
>> 18 year old to call home to say she has to work late? No fk'n way is
>> that happening anywhere.
>
>Agreed. This is bogus.
I would think that most parents would report this typeof thing to
Employment Standards (or whatever it's called in the US).
Doris
|