Well, he interviewed well . . .
mcmel
306 Posts
Ahem, I can admit my mistakes.
Two weeks ago I offered a job to a guy, he was supposed to start on Monday. When he called me instead of showing up, I knew something was up.
He said he was concerned that he didn't pass our physical/drug screen, so he was afraid to quit his other job and come in. (He did pass). I asked him point-blank what his concern was and he said he didn't know if the pot would be out of his system that he smoked "a few weeks ago", but of course he's clean now.
Yes, we still allowed him to come in, (afterall, he tested clean). But he came in with tennis shoes on. He knew he needed steel-tips, but didn't have the money to buy a pair of steel-toed shoes; he thought maybe he could work with tennis shoes for a couple days until he got his first paycheck. Of course, he was sent home.
Anybody else have any candid-camera moments when a new employee started? Please tell me it's not just me?
Two weeks ago I offered a job to a guy, he was supposed to start on Monday. When he called me instead of showing up, I knew something was up.
He said he was concerned that he didn't pass our physical/drug screen, so he was afraid to quit his other job and come in. (He did pass). I asked him point-blank what his concern was and he said he didn't know if the pot would be out of his system that he smoked "a few weeks ago", but of course he's clean now.
Yes, we still allowed him to come in, (afterall, he tested clean). But he came in with tennis shoes on. He knew he needed steel-tips, but didn't have the money to buy a pair of steel-toed shoes; he thought maybe he could work with tennis shoes for a couple days until he got his first paycheck. Of course, he was sent home.
Anybody else have any candid-camera moments when a new employee started? Please tell me it's not just me?
Comments
scorpio
But, I can understand your guy not having 98 bucks to buy steel-toes. You should have a policy of either buying them for the worker or advancing the money. What unemployed worker has money for uniforms or personal protective equipment?
We finally have this guy on board, steel-toes and everything. Hopefully it gets better from here on out.
Yes Don, I should have been out to pasture by now. I'm down to two days / week and my FINAL day is 11/17. Besides, I had to stay around to wish you a Happy Birthday next week, right?
Six months later, I opened the newspaper to learn that I had hired the "King of the Gypsies" for Greater Boston, and he was well known for his scams.
Turns out the guy was underage, 16, and used his brother's ID and info. That comp case cost the insurance company $20,000 AND the company $20,000. The reward is double if you hire a minor and he gets injured. No exceptions.
Interviewed a fellow for summer trim paint program. He interviewed like a dream. Sent him to Team Manager who rated him 95% on customer service skills and 98% on technical knowledge. Offered him job, contingent on background check and drug screen. Background came back with all kinds of charges, so sent him the no-thanks letters. He calls and says -- that's not him, but his son who has the same name (raised by his mom and was a nightmare for him). Had the company recheck -- no go. But he still insisted - I mean smooth as silk -- so I ran another check through another company and got a clean check. To make a long and horrible story short -- last week I had to testify in his parole revocation hearing. I have learned my lesson.