Day 196 - 06 Dec 95 - Page 05
1
2 Q. "I left in August 1991" that should be, is that correct?
3 A. That is correct, yes.
4
5 Q. "I resigned after writing a letter to Head Office
6 criticising management style at the Company and certain
7 practices I was expected to sanction or enforce. I took
8 this decision despite the fact that I was generally
9 satisfied with my pay as Manager, and despite enjoying many
10 aspects of my work. Some of the practices which give me
11 cause for concern regarding my experiences. (1) Labour
12 Costs - There was a lot of pressure on management to keep
13 labour costs down. This applied on a store-by-store basis,
14 and also within the region as a whole. The store was
15 expected to keep within its set budget. When senior
16 officials visited the store we would have to increase
17 staffing levels, e.g. up to around 20 per cent of sales,
18 and then we would have to drastically decrease labour costs
19 for the rest of the week, e.g. down to 10 per cent, in
20 order to conform to the usually weekly budget for such
21 costs.
22
23 (2) Food Costs - Likewise there was pressure to keep food
24 costs down. This included being told to give smaller
25 portions of certain items, e.g. lettuce, and 'watering
26 down' other items. There was pressure not to throw food
27 away.
28
29 (3) Hours Worked - The pressure to keep labour costs down
30 resulted in certain unacceptable practices. For example,
31 people not being paid for the hours they worked with two
32 hours being docked off their time and clock cards being
33 altered. Some staff worked illegal hours. I resisted
34 this, but sometimes if there was no one else due to
35 under-staffing I had no choice. A few times a year under
36 18s worked beyond their legal time at night but were
37 clocked off at the correct time and given a bonus instead.
38
39 It was not abnormal for me to have to work 70 hours per
40 week. Those who were interested in promotion often would
41 feel they had to work very long hours in order to impress.
42 This was an unwritten rule. The schedule could be, and
43 was, used in a discriminatory way. I was told to use my
44 scheduling power to favour some crew at the expense of
45 others regarding getting the hours they requested," etc.
46
47 (4) Trade Unions - It was clear to me that the Company did
48 not want any union activity. This was an unwritten rule.
49 Crew seriously thinking of this would have been removed.
50 I was present when some of the workers discussed setting up
51 the 'McDonald's Freedom Fighters'. The idea started as a
52 joke in a pub, but the Company took this very seriously and
53 I was told to sack some of those involved under the pretext
54 that they were a 'disruptive influence'. I did not agree
55 with this and I later re-hired one of them, Paul Jackson.
56
57 In the end I left because I objected to being told how to
58 treat those who were employed at the store. Many of the
59 Company procedures and systems were fine in theory or on
60 paper, but in practice at store level it was impossible to