Fired Due to Not Being Able to Get to Work

Nurses General Nursing

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Hi everyone. I joined this page to ask this specific question. I used to be a PCA, and am currently a college student. During my winter break, I was home and there was a snow storm that made visibility terrible, and the roads were not even plowed. I was scheduled to come in that night for an overnight, and had told my employer I probably wouldn't be able to get there due to the snow over 24 hours in advance. I messaged every single other person that worked as well, and everyone either did not want to or were even further away than I was. I had to end up just saying that I could not come in. I drive a very old sports car that has BALD tires. When I even hit a patch a slush doing 5 mph, I will still slide. Living in a town with all hills that was unplowed and had ice all over, I couldn't even get out of my driveway, and knew there was no way my car would make it there. My family did not allow me to take their four wheel drive vehicles, or even my brothers car which is at least a little safer. I do not live at school, so I didn't have anywhere I could stay beforehand to make it to work. I ended up being fired, and was obviously upset. I got yelled at for being "unprepared" and "irresponsible", as if I could have just snow shoed there or had any other option. This is NOT my full time job, it was simply for patient care hours. I did NOT take on this job thinking I would have to do this, nor was it ever mentioned to me. There were people on campus that just did not want to go in and cover me. Is this really my fault? I hate losing a job and a reference, but I can't control what car my family gives me, or that I have no viable option. I'm an undergrad, not a nurse knowing fully well what I have to do. Also, on overnights you get paid $20 for the whole entire night. You don't get paid hourly. I don't think totaling my car or getting hurt or killed is worth any amount, much less $20.

Specializes in nurseline,med surg, PD.

239 comments. Can we stop beating a dead horse?

I worked as a PCA in college at a memory care home. I live in Michigan... SO MANY SNOW STORMS!! I get it, sometimes the next shift couldn't arrive because of the snow, so the shift before would have to stay longer. I want to say a few things.

1. Calling in advance 24 hours, was completely appropriate and you should not have been punished for it. I'm sorry you did.

2. 20$ a night is unethical. Min. wadge here in MI is 9.25$ per hour. So it looks like that was not a good place to work anyways.

3. Just don't include them on your resume. You won't have a gap in your resume, you're a student!

4. Lastly, and this is a biggie. I know you're a college student and money can be tight, but when you live in a state that has heavy snowfall you need to invest in snow tires. I'm not saying buy a new car, but at minimum snow tires. It doesn't matter the cost. It is for your safety and for the safety of those around you. Do you want to get stuck in the snow? Slide and hit another car? Hit a PERSON? You need to be responsible and do this. It really isn't optional when you live in a state with heavy snowfall.

It seems like everyone posting is in agreement that you should have made arrangements for inclement weather. Was a state of emergency called? Maybe you have grounds to fight it legally.

I've thought about what if I worked in a position when I really needed to go in. I made a mental note that I can technically walk 45 minutes to train station, take a train to the town my job is in, and then walk another 30 minutes to work. It would be a 2 hr commute but I'd make it in, lol

Studentworker, your present the argument that your not being able to work your shift was not your fault. OK, whose fault was it? Your family; well it's not their job it's yours. Your former employer; I believe you were hired to be there at a certain time. I agree the whole situation is unfortunate, but it was your responsibility to be there for your shift. You indicate you had voiced your concerns to your employer 24 hours hours in advance. That means you had 24 hours to figure out how to live up to that responsibility.

Specializes in NICU.

Yes the Subaru goes no matter what amount of snow is there.

Specializes in NICU.

Electricity being out is no excuse,I had no electricity during north blackout and then no electric after hurricane sandy for two almost three weeks, I never missed a shift.Had no food in fridge (all thrown out) no hot water,no heat, used my battery lamps had several ( I tired to prepare ,and a tank of gas)-there was NO other gas stations open with gas after the storm .

Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.
Yes the Subaru goes no matter what amount of snow is there.

Well there was this one time the snow was so deep I couldn't even FIND my Outback. And it generally goes better when the snow is no deeper than your front bumper.

I know what I'm about to say is probably something you write a million times already. But one why were you only working for $20 a night? Two within a 24-hour notice you could not find any person that you're friends with or anything that could drive you to work? Three I'm not going to be a jerk and tell you go buy a new car. But I just graduated college in May I know the struggles of a broke college student you're in a chat room with a whole bunch of broke at one point college students. But when it comes to basic maintenance on your vehicle that's something that is included in regular bills and if you could not afford to keep up with maintenance including tires or oil changes or anything else that goes wrong on your car there is an issue. There are a lot of student resources at colleges that are willing to help out with money problems and considering the fact that this is a safety issue for you and other drivers on the road because you have extremely bald tires that is something that could easily be getting paid for. You should be happy that you got fired from a crappy job instead of getting a ticket for a safety violation that would probably equal out to about as much as your tires would cost or more. Being 20 years old does not give you an excuse for being irresponsible and not being able to pay for tires on your car. The first time I went to school I was 19. I was going to college full-time, working part time, living out on my own not getting handouts from anyone. Did I struggle? Yes. Did I fail a class or two? Sure did. But guess what when I had an $400 bill because my exhaust decided to fall off while I was driving down the road I still managed to scrape up the money even though I knew it meant that quite a few of my bills were going to be behind I knew having a reliable car to work that wasn't going to get me tickets that I wasn't going to be able to afford was very important and I had to bite the bullet because no one else was going to. IT'S CALLED BEING AN ADULT!! So stop with the pity party, get yourself together, get a new job, take out a student loan if you have to, to replace those tires and move on with your life! Or continue to be a child, drop out if school, sell your car, and live in your parents basement for the rest of your life complaining about how the world did you wrong.

I worked as a PCA in college at a memory care home. I live in Michigan... SO MANY SNOW STORMS!! I get it, sometimes the next shift couldn't arrive because of the snow, so the shift before would have to stay longer. I want to say a few things.

1. Calling in advance 24 hours, was completely appropriate and you should not have been punished for it. I'm sorry you did.

2. 20$ a night is unethical. Min. wadge here in MI is 9.25$ per hour. So it looks like that was not a good place to work anyways.

3. Just don't include them on your resume. You won't have a gap in your resume, you're a student!

4. Lastly, and this is a biggie. I know you're a college student and money can be tight, but when you live in a state that has heavy snowfall you need to invest in snow tires. I'm not saying buy a new car, but at minimum snow tires. It doesn't matter the cost. It is for your safety and for the safety of those around you. Do you want to get stuck in the snow? Slide and hit another car? Hit a PERSON? You need to be responsible and do this. It really isn't optional when you live in a state with heavy snowfall.

#s1-3 = great advice. #4 = armed robbery=bad, bad, bad. $20 cannot invest in anything. Be practical.

That is absolutely bonkers.. I am not a Navy Seal. I do not think $25 is worth walking that far in that type of weather, and I don't believe most commenters on this website would walk for 5 hours in weather like that either. Considering my family and I were even numb from shoveling the driveway, perhaps walking isn't a viable option.

Again, like I have said before, I *cannot afford* these things. If I had money, I really wouldn't be driving a car like mine.

This is correct I wouldn't do that either and I've went to work in terrible weather before; But where I live they always cleared the roads , only one time they couldn't that time I stayed home. But when I become a nurse I will definitely buy some snow tires and a very good car ( looking at a Subaru, or one of those jeeps) from the good advice some of you left on this post.

There are some home care cases that are 24/7, with no family back-up.

In my personal opinion those patients should not be in a home.

They need to be in a facility

It is illegal in some states not to go in to work at a hospital or fire station, etc. It's under "abandonment" and "direllection of duty." It sucks. In the future, you will need to call your manager and explain that you cannot get to work. She may have already contacted responders with chained tires that will come get you. If not, call the Sheriff's Office or Police station and Fire Station. They should have the means or at least contact info to people who have been assigned to get staff to the hospitals. If they will not help you, ask them to put it in writing (CYA). Doesn't matter about your tires. New or old tires, you for whatever reason cannot (but wants to!) get to work. You would not pay for this service.

Also, bring a small overnight bag. You will probably be staying until the weather lets up. Not working! Don't ever let anyone guilt you or intimidate you to "help out" when your clocked out.

If this info, or related info, was not made available to you and you cannot find the policy (if you were ever told about it), you can fight for your job back. Then quit and list reasons. Your boss will want to fire you, but really can't be that obvious about it. You should have time to put in the required notice. Go to the top if need be, but go back, and then quit on your own terms or forcefully "request" to transfer floors/ Unit.

It's not about the $ or being "a child." That was just ugly. Most of us are proud of how far we have come from where we started. I've been homeless, had rusted out cars with crap transmissions, oil and radiator leaks, AND tires. How are you going to become more independent, savvy, professional, and confident without starting somewhere. You need to learn until you die. Learn from your mistakes and from others. Look everything up after you talk with your more experienced colleague. Never trust anyone who knows all the answers- they are less likely to keep up with new ideas and current literature or even lead you to someone who probably has the answer. This is true in life, not just nursing.

Haha! In 1998 I was in school and waiting tables at an Outback. It was New Year's Eve and I had plans. Plus, there was that Y2K thing. I was not going to work on New Years 99'. I was broke. Sharing a old, crap jeep, and was scraping by. I quit mid-shift. Childish- Yup. Responsible?- Nooo Worth it? DEFINITELY

Sorry!

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