On 4/8/2012 7:15 PM, Patok wrote:
>
> What kinds of jobs are you two talking about? I've never ever worked at
> a place with clocks or time management. Even when I was in production
> (for a very short time), what counted was the number of produced units,
> not the time. It has to be some kind of blue-collar job, unionized at
> that, right?
It may be a case of when you worked. When I graduated from college in
1962 and went to work, we had time clocks and time cards, and this was
definitely not a unionized job. It was a few years later that the time
clocks disappeared.
Most of the time, I clocked out very shortly after quitting time and
left. Another employee was always standing in front of the time clock
waiting for it to click to quitting time. He would then pick up his
card, clock out, walk down the middle of the hallway, get in his car,
and drive about 15 mph through the company's roadways to the city
street. I was usually behind him frustrated at his slow speed. If he
wasn't in a hurry, why was he standing in front of the clock waiting for
it to click over? If he was in a hurry, why did he drive so slowly?
One day I had somewhere I had to be shortly after work. I worked out a
scheme to get away a bit more quickly. I went down to the time clock
earlier in the afternoon and moved the employee's time card to a
different location. When the clock turned to quitting time, he reached
for his card and began searching for it. I grabbed my card, punched
out, and got away more quickly that day.
Thereafter, he always had his card in his hand as he stood in front of
the clock.
Bill in Kentucky