Lord God Jose Mourinho wrote:
Based on the the fact that she is a single mother who claims she cannot afford to cover the costs of the card, quitting the job straight away on finding her pay is through the payroll card and then going to a lawyer to see if she has a case. That doesn't seem likely to me.
That is not evidence it's opinion based on putting two and two together and coming up with five.
If the lawyer contacts a McDonald's employee asking how they are paid then it's very likely that the employee will tell the company, alerting them to the fact he is a scam artist lawyer trying to make a fast buck off them.
What? Your not serious. Very likely that the employee will tell the company? Do you ring your bank up every time you get a cold call asking you to claim for miss-sold PPI to let your bank know there is a scam artist lawyer trying to make a fast buck off them? Or do you just put the phone down?
In any case solicitation of class action clients is not as simple as that kind of ambulance chasing. Defence lawyers in the US will always try and get such cases thrown out on the merest hint of lawyers inventing class actions.
She complained to a store manager and the "office" of the franchise.
And?
"Gunshannon said she had taken her concerns to the main office of the franchise holder - Albert and Carol Mueller, trading as McDonald's, in Clarks Summit. "
As its the franchisee who is her employer imposing the card and its the franchisee being sued who should she have taken it to? Seems she went to the right place to me.
So she certainly followed one course of action you think right. She tried to get the company to obey the law before she quit when they would not.
So there's around $300 of her money on a payroll card. She has a job. Because of the fees she refuses to use the payroll card. She then quits her job and goes to see a lawyer to see if she has a case.
What would she have done if the lawyer had said that it was legal for her to be paid with the payroll card? Wouldn't quitting her job have been a reckless thing to do, considering she is a single mother?
It's not legal so why do you ask? I would imagine it's common knowledge in the US you can ask to be paid in cash or by cheque. If she feels having these amounts deducted from her wages meant she could not live off the wage how could she stay as an employee?
It would be rational behaviour to go see a lawyer while you were still working, to see if it was legal. It is not rational to quit your job and then go and see if you have a case.
As I said I'd expect it to be common knowledge of your rights on how you can get paid just as you know many of your employment rights here.
The lawyer may even have advised against perusing a case despite the card payment being illegal but that doesn't mean she should still have carried on working their does it?
I don't know what your issue is. If she had carried on working there she was going to try and seek redress and as others have said accepting the terms might have made that difficult. You seem offended she decided to quit.