She Organized a Starbucks. Then They Fired Her | The Tyee
She Organized a Starbucks. Then They Fired Her | The Tyee

She Organized a Starbucks. Then They Fired Her | The Tyee

She Organized a Starbucks. Then They Fired Her | The Tyee
She Organized a Starbucks. Then They Fired Her | The Tyee
Wow. Moving someone to another location and then suddenly firing them for "communication standards?" Unless there's some highly compelling evidence to indicate otherwise, it's pretty clear cut what happened here. I guess they calculate it's better to pay a fine for a wrongful dismissal than to have a supervisor that is sympathetic to workers.
As a society, we should ensure everyone that goes through something like this ends up a millionaire who never has to work again.
That'll motivate workers to unionize more than anything else we could possibly do.
Want to fix this? It'll take a) jail time, and b) asset seizure.
Corporate structure deliberate distributes responsibility for things like this such that:
If, eg, Howard Schultz and his direct-reports faced fines and/or jail time directly, and those fines were orders of magnitude the harms of the action, then you'd see some of this stop.
In this region of Canada, at least, the maximum penalty for wrongful dismissal is ... Standard severance.
Source: a dear friend launched a successful human-rights complaint against a very deep-pocketed employer who blatantly violated clear medical orders and then fired him when he objected. Like, 100% dead-to-rights on a claim with no normal upper limit. Except here it maxes out at a pittance.
Maybe there too.
Depends on lawyer and time at employer. in Canada you can get severance pay + termination pay + closing pay