My wife works in a restaurant, and the power-tripping manager has instituted a new policy where all shift changes must be approved by management. I think that is reasonable enough, but they’re also asking the originally-scheduled employee why they are switching shifts, then approving or denying based on the answer.

For example, her coworker (Tom) wanted Monday afternoon off, and Harry agreed to cover the shift. The manager asked Tom why he wanted Harry to work for him, and Tom said, “I have a softball game.” Manager denied the shift change because it was “unnecessary”.

Is this legal? I feel like if you’re able to find someone to cover your shift, you don’t owe management any explanation why you need the time off. How should my wife approach this situation? Colorado, USA BTW.

    • @acunasdaddy
      link
      471 year ago

      If this is in the US employment contracts are virtually nonexistent.

      If a policy doesn’t discriminate against a protected class, it’s pretty much legal. Your recourse is to find another job.

        • APassenger
          link
          fedilink
          71 year ago

          With the country built into the community name. Less confusion and wasted energy that way.

            • @Madison420
              link
              11 year ago

              Not really, it’s a private company unless you sign a contract they can indeed make their own policies.

              • Trebach
                link
                fedilink
                11 year ago

                Within the laws of the location of the employer. That’s why state and sometimes even local laws matter.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        11 year ago

        I am pretty sure at any firm bigger than a mom & pop, there will be some sort of written agreement that the employee signs that establishes their intent to work for the employer. That’s an employment contract even if it’s not labeled as such. For example, they can sue if they aren’t paid their agreed compensation. Because there’s a contract for them to receive that compensation.

        • @acunasdaddy
          link
          11 year ago

          This is not correct. Wage theft is protected by law, not contract.

          An offer letter is specifically not an employment contract - that distinction is usually spelled out in the law and also in virtually every offer letter.