By Michael Hunt
With many stores staying open during Thanksgiving this year thereby
forcing workers to miss out on spending the holiday with their families,
one store manager decided to take a stand on behalf of his employees —
and was promptly terminated.
Tony Rohr had held various position at the Pizza Hut in Elkhart, Indiana, since starting out as a cook there some ten years ago.
He
was eventually promoted to general manager of the franchise, but his
decision to refuse an order to open the store on Thanksgiving ultimately
cost him the job.
"I said why can't we be the company that
stands up and says we care about our employees and they can have the day
off," he told local CBS affiliate WSBT.
According to Rohr, the
store, owned by the franchise behemoth Franchise Management Investors
US, has typically been closed on Thanksgiving to give employees time off
to spend with loves ones.
When he was told to either open the
store or sign a letter of resignation, Rohr opted for a third option:
Sending his bosses a letter of protest.
"I am not quitting. I do
not resign however I accept that the refusal to comply with this greedy,
immoral request means the end of my tenure with this company," Rohr
wrote in his letter. "I hope you realize that it's the people at the
bottom of the totem pole that make your life possible."
WSBT says
the franchisee's director of operations insists Rohr quit, but also
acknowledged that the decision to keep doors open on Thanksgiving came
from corporate in response to other companies doing the same.
Pizza
Hut's corporate offices have so far remained mum on the matter, but its
Facebook page has been inundated with angry posts from customers
unhappy with Rohr's termination.
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