Submitted by marqui4me t3_ygzq9h in personalfinance
My wife went to work with a company with a very high turnover rate, and was shown the door right before her benefits were set to kick in (along with the other new hires).
They specifically put in her termination letter that she "violated company policies." (It's neither here nor there, but I believe the company has a habit of getting these short term hires, dangling benefits, and firing them before they kick in).
Should she file for unemployment anyways? They obviously put this in the letter so that they don't have to pay unemployment as well.
edit: just to add a little more detail, she was given positive 30/60/90 day reviews by her superior. they locked her out of her computer before she was able to document and save all the positive feedback she received. the violations were being late to her desk (not to work), messaging the wrong person(s) about processes.
edit2: thank you for all the advice. she applied and I looked over everything... so we'll see what happens. to add one more piece of info, this company usually hires a lot of green employees so I don't think they're filing for unemployment. she was talking to a fellow terminated team member who didn't even think to file until my wife mentioned it.
KaiserSozes-brother t1_iubay58 wrote
I would file and argue for benefits if denied. It will cost you nothing.