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This IT
manager works at a manufacturing plant where, he says, friendship is thicker
than employment.
"Management has often suspected some of the good ol' boys clocking in their
buddies who routinely come in late," he reports. "The union contract
specifically stated no surveillance systems are allowed, and management
couldn't prove anything until the day one of the gang called in sick shortly
after his shift started -- but he was already clocked in!"
Plant boss is at his wits' end. But the manager gets an idea. He's already
made friends with one of the plant's more popular workers, who likes to
tinker with computers, and fish thinks the guy might be willing to help.
"I was happy to give him obsolete equipment and help him with computer
problems, so we'd built a nice rapport," he says. "And he was an honest
fellow -- in fact, he was quite upset that the others were stealing from the
company.
"So the morning after a long holiday weekend, he went out and stood by the
time clock with a laptop and looked up at a dark area of the ceiling 45 feet
high. Then he looked at the screen and hit some random keys.
"He did this a few times until he made sure some of the workers noticed him
out there, and then went back into the office.
A little while later, the manager sends the worker out to stand by the clock
and wave his hand at the ceiling. After a minute or two, he comes out of the
office and tells him, "That's great, thanks."
It's not long before other shop workers ask their co-worker what he was
doing. "He just replied, 'Oh, nothing,' with a big grin," the manager says.
"They said, 'They put in a camera system, didn't they?' to which the worker
just replied, 'I don't know what you're talking about.'
"Rumors of a surveillance system spread like wildfire. The union obviously
couldn't prove that a camera system was installed, because there never was
one.
"And the good ol' boys stopped clocking in their buddies -- because now they
thought they'd get caught for sure."
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