Posted on Apr 22, 2015
What The Cluck? Popeye's Chicken Manager Fired After She Refuses To Pay Back $400 Taken By Armed Robber. Is This Fair?
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Responses: 34
It just froze again, but anyway she needs to move on to a better employer.
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MAJ (Join to see)
Roger that, MSgt Stephan Hall. the only thing I could think of, is you were a Popeye's stockholder and this discussion was driving the price of your shares down!
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MSgt Stephan Hall
Hahaha, anyone ever tell you the story behind Popeyes and Church's Chicken, husband and wife team got divorced she got the wishbone and bigger share of the franchise recipe.
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Gave this a lot of thought and couldn't decide either way. The article didn't supply enough information.
Since retiring I've been the manager of several cash businesses. There has to be more to the story than her being fired for extra money in the till.
Since retiring I've been the manager of several cash businesses. There has to be more to the story than her being fired for extra money in the till.
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I posted my serious thoughts on this, so now it is time to be a wise ass: They needed the deputy who mistook his pistol for a tazer in there. That would have ended it. He goes to hand the robber his wallet and shoots him instead.
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The Popeyes I've visited this year have all been severely understaffed as they can't find employees as wages are to low and the near by bums holding " will work for food signs" won't work, in addition, in most cases that poor shift manager is scrambling just to keep up with work load, having manager pay will never fly
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It is going to be a PR nightmare, I think Popeye's Corporate will look to resolve this and make it look like a one store issue.
The store has a policy on the amount of money in the register, while I don't doubt violation of policy is a reason to fire someone, taking in to account the actual operation of the store matter. If it happened during a rush, or off peak.
In the end if the store owner wanted to fire her, that was not the best time to do it. Especially not with the pay with the money or your job ultimatum.
The store has a policy on the amount of money in the register, while I don't doubt violation of policy is a reason to fire someone, taking in to account the actual operation of the store matter. If it happened during a rush, or off peak.
In the end if the store owner wanted to fire her, that was not the best time to do it. Especially not with the pay with the money or your job ultimatum.
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I worked for a company and had to do collecting at people's homes. We had a set amount of cash that we were allowed to carry. If that amount was reached the next stop had to be to make a deposit. If we were found to have more than that amount and the overage was not from the last collection it was a fireable offense.
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