Note: Pep Boys is not in the CCR
database (Central Contractors Registration) which makes Pep Boys a
"Non-Qualified Federal Contractor" under VEVRAA (Vietnam Era
Veterans Readjustment Assistance Act). A CC-4 complaint and a
Non-Compliance complaint can not be filed under VEVRAA by all veterans
affected by Pep Boys' discriminatory actions. Of course, VETS should be
notified of Pep Boys' violations of USERRA (Uniformed Soldiers
Employment and Reemployment Rights Act).
Subject: [VeteranIssues] Veteran's call
for Boycott of Pep Boys Stores
Date: Sunday, March 16, 2003 9:34
AM
To: Tucson Citizen
Newspaper:
Thank you for running this story... this
is just the tip of the iceberg... there is no veteran's preference in hiring nor
retention, and not enough employer support of the Guard and Reserve. A
number of reservist called up for this war and all others in the past, lose
their jobs... little is ever done about it. I will not visit another Pep
Boy store, and urge the thousands of my Veteran Issues readers to do the same...
enough is enough... Thanks also to B0z051 for bringing this to our
attention..
Name Deleted, Champaign, IL 217-359-5139
Editor, Veteran
Issues
former Tucson resident & a recent visitor to your great
City
OSCAR ABEYTA and IRWIN M.
GOLDBERG
Tucson Citizen
March 15, 2003
Automotive supply chain Pep Boys fired a
Tucson store manager because his military Reserve duties took him away from
work, according to a federal lawsuit filed here. It may not be an isolated case.
Several other reservists fired from Pep Boys in Tucson and Pennsylvania have
contacted a military advocacy group with similar
complaints.
Pep Boys' Tucson attorney, Todd E. Hale,
declined to comment on the lawsuit, citing company policy not to discuss ongoing
legal cases. In the Tucson case, Erik Balodis, then a store manager at the 7227
E. 22nd St. Pep Boys, was fired after being called to a U.S. Naval Reserve
exercise in June 2002. Balodis, a father of two young children, was unable to
find work for five months. He eventually found work as a store manager at Big
Lots in October 2002 but by then the family's finances were in
ruins.
In February, his family was forced to
sell its four-bedroom East Side home and file for bankruptcy. Balodis, who is
stationed in South Korea, now earns about $20,000 less a year, said his wife,
Kathy. Under the federal Uniformed Services Employment and Re-employment Rights
Act and Arizona state law, an employer may not terminate an employee who is
called to active duty.
In the lawsuit, Balodis' attorney, Andrea
Watters, said Pep Boys fired Balodis because his duties with the Navy were
keeping him from work. The suit says he told the company he was being called to
training in June of last year. On the day he reported for duty, he was told by
Pep Boys that we was being terminated for "job abandonment." The lawsuit
indicates Balodis had worked 20 days in a row for the company without a day off
before the termination.
"On the surface it appears it would be a
violation of section 4311, which is the section of the law that talks about
discrimination," said Capt. Eric Davis, a mediator in the Employer Support of
the Guard and Reserve's Arlington, Va., headquarters. ESGR is a volunteer
organization that works to help resolve employer issues with Reserve and Guard
members. "If an employer makes an employment decision on the past, present or
future military obligations, that sort of employment discrimination is illegal,"
Davis said.
The suit claims that, despite being an
employee who was recognized repeatedly for his good work with the company, Pep
Boys "demanded that he 'choose' his job over his military service." The suit
cites a letter sent to the Naval Reserve by Pep Boys, dated Sept. 11, 2001,
requesting Balodis "be exempted from any impending call to active duty as a
result of the tragic and senseless acts of terrorism. ... While I recognize Mr.
Balodis' commitment to protect and serve the nation, I must also make you aware
that he holds a critical position in the Corporate Structure of Pep Boys." Court
filings by Pep Boys, however, claim Balodis' termination had nothing to do with
his Reserve duties.
"Pep Boys consistently cooperated in
accommodating those obligations," Hale wrote. "Pep Boys made the difficult
decision to terminate him because his performance and judgement declined to an
unacceptable level. His military service played no role whatsoever in the
decision." The filing made reference to three company memos regarding
Balodis' performance and noted he had been demoted from district manager to
store manager in February 2002. But Watters disputed the company's claims. "I
believe he was being set up for termination," Watters said. "The bottom line is,
when they terminated him they issued a letter detailing why they terminated him
which did not raise those issues."
Other complaints Balodis may not be alone
in how he was treated by the Pennsylvania-based company. Two similar incidents
were reported to Arizona's state ESGR chairman, William Valenzuela. Valenzuela
said he spoke with two other Pep Boys employees who were called to active duty
and terminated by the company at about the same time as Balodis. And he said he
heard there may have been four others who faced a similar fate. He said Pep Boys
is the only company he's heard of that has had that many termination disputes
over military service here. ESGR did not take any action with the other two Pep
Boys employees because they had already contacted lawyers, which prohibits ESGR
from getting involved, Valenzuela said.
Davis said he received a complaint
Thursday from Pennsylvania regarding a Reserve member who was deployed to Bosnia
in May 2002. This reservist held a part-time job with Pep Boys and was told a
drain plug was not put in a vehicle, Davis said. "This would have happened nine
months prior to departure," Davis said. Col. Alan Smith of ESGR headquarters
said his office has received 4,000 to 5,000 calls in the past couple of months
and that, with the exception of the one case handled by Davis, Pep Boys hasn't
been mentioned.
Erik Balodis (right), a Naval reservist
from Tucson, receives an award for his work in the military. He is now stationed
in South Korea. Photo courtesy of Balodis family
Pep Boys has stores in 36 states. Aside
from Arizona and Pennsylvania, no other states with Pep Boys stores have
reported problems. Valenzuela said it's not unusual for companies to work
through ESGR with the military to reschedule or postpone reserve training to
accommodate work schedules. "During the time there's no war, the commanders can
work with that," he said. "Right now the commanders can't work with that." He
said he's seen an overall increase in termination complaints since the
situations overseas have intensified, and the military has called up more
Reserve units.
"There's all kinds of call-ups going on
right now, and there's some employers who are not going to go for it," he said.
In the vast majority of cases where service personnel are terminated because of
their military service, he said a phone call or meeting to inform the employers
of the law is all it takes to get the employee reinstated.
Family impact - Kathy Balodis has been
packing up the four-bedroom East Side house where she, her husband and their two
daughters have lived for three years. "Our dream home that we worked so hard
on," Balodis described it. With her husband off serving in Korea, she's had to
do the packing by herself. They're supposed to be out by the end of the month,
but she doesn't know where the family will be moving to yet. The family doesn't
want to move, but after her husband was terminated by Pep Boys, he spent five
months out of work. She said the family pretty much lived off credit cards
during that time. Eventually he found work as a store manager at Big Lots, but
their finances were in ruins by then. The Balodises put their house up for sale
at the beginning of February and filed for bankruptcy two weeks
later.
"I'm trying to get qualified to buy a
mobile home, but I don't know if that will happen with the bankruptcy. Maybe I
can get some help from my parents, but if not, we'll be living in an apartment,"
she said, eyeing the boxes in her living room dejectedly. The sad part of it
all, Kathy Balodis said, is that her husband was dedicated to Pep Boys and
planned to work there until his retirement. "He gave 100 percent to the company,
and when he had to give 20 percent to the military, they got rid of him. That's
just not right," she said. Whether her husband gets a big settlement out of the
lawsuit is not an issue for her, she said. "The main thing I want out of Pep
Boys is for them not to treat anyone like they treated my
husband."
Other Pep Boys news - Pep Boys stock
closed up 27 cents at $6.69 yesterday. That came a day after the company
disappointed Wall Street by posting lower-than- expected earnings for the fourth
quarter ended Feb. 1. It showed sales falling from $508.4 million in the fourth
quarter of 2001 to $482.7 million last year. Pep Boys reported a loss of $1.83
million, or 4 cents a share, for the quarter compared with earnings of $3.68
million, or 7 cents per share, in 2001.
THE LAW: Federal
A person who is a
member of, applies to be a member of, performs, has performed, applies to
perform or has an obligation to perform in a uniformed service shall not be
denied initial employment, re-employment, retention in employment, promotion or
any benefit of employment by an employer on the basis of that membership,
application for membership, performance of service, application for service or
obligation.
THE LAW: State
An employee has a claim
against an employer for termination of employment only if one or more of the
following circumstances have occurred: The employer has terminated the
employment relationship of an employee inretaliation for any of the
following: Service in the national guard or armed forces as protected by
(state law).