Jason Tierro, an inventory Jason Tierro, an inventory clerk at Lexmar Company, is responsible for taking a physical count of the goods on hand at the end of the year. He has been performing this duty for several years. This year, Jason was very busy due to a shortage of personnel at the company, so he decided to just estimate the amount of ending inventory instead of doing an accurate count. He reasoned that he could come very close to the true amount because of his past experience working with inventory. Besides, he was sure that the sophisticated computer program that Lexmar had just invested in kept an accurate record of inventory on hand.
No more tile dust, no more forty-mile an hour winds blowing through the plant, and no more Al Wright for me”, Roberts replied. Wright, the plant manager, and Roberts, journeyman maintenance mechanic for TileElite, had been at odds for years. Roberts had been hired during a manufacturing plant expansion at Tile-Elite and Wright had promised Roberts a production supervisor’s job upon its completion. However, when the expansion was completed and the last production line was ready to produce, Wright told Roberts to forget the supervisor’s job because he was more valuable to the company as a maintenance mechanic. “I know what I said, Gary, but I think you’re going to be a mechanic here even if you stay twenty years,” Wright had stated at the time.
It is very obvious in this show because they seem to always solve the case the same day as they found about it or a few days pass throughout the episode. In our reality there is no chance any of the cases that have appeared on the show can be solved as quick as they make it seem on TV. The majority of the cases can actually take up to several years until the sentencing. The whole process in the science lab is really slow and would make a really boring show if they showed every single machine running its full course instead of just 2 seconds of the process. Fingerprinting itself takes up two weeks to go through and even after they get put into the system it takes hours to run it through every databases.
They made sure that every month we had safety meetings to prevent any injuries to the workers. At the end of the month if there weren’t any accidents they gave us an hour lunch with their treat!! To this day I still keep in touch with some of the workers through face book. Some of the older ones went out on disability for Carpal Tunnel. CONCLUSION Being put in a team to do assignments can be very hard for some people because they may like to work alone.
My coach started to ring the items as I stood there and watched. She explained that I should scan every item no matter how many of the same items the person has. Lastly ,my coach let me do it and told me that I would have the hang of the register in no time and would be able to be on my own very soon. The next day I was told to arrive to work at 11:30am and will be on the register alone. When I arrived the first thing I did was to count my till to make sure there was one-hundred dollars to start off with .I headed for register two, calling out “next”, letting the customer know that I was ready.
My Chief walked pass me and said “Don’t stress out Chitjian, you’re my best dispatcher I got, if anything goes wrong you’ll know what to do and make sure you call me.” He left the tower and went home. I was on duty all by myself at that point, but I was qualified to handle everything. Every few days I would have to be in the tower alone until the next day. The weather outside the harbor sounded as if it was screaming louder every minute. I was a bit nervous because this was my harbor and Mother Nature was giving it a beating.
Testing a Theory Holly Regan PSY/201 4/28/2013 Dana Wyss I cleaned banks and other businesses in the evening and was to stay with-in a scheduled time frame in order to make it to the next account by a certain time. One evening while I was training a new girl, my boss casually supervised me. About a quarter of the way through our shift, I was reprimanded for not cleaning in the mannered routine I was originally taught when hired. I stood my ground and said my way was better and she will see by the end of the night. We finished out the night a bit ahead of schedule, my boss attributing it to there being an extra helping hand.
If someone can get 7 innocent men to confess to a murder that they had nothing to do with I lose a lot of faith in our justice system. If this is true and the men were innocent it makes me sick to my stomach to think that 7 grown men will confess to something that they had nothing to do with in order for the interrogation to be over. That is not how justice is served, I believe serving justice is doing the right thing, telling the truth and finding the truth through facts and rational means. After seeing this movie I think trapping someone in a room for 8 or more hours and interrogating them with no lawyer present is completely irrational and by no means finds the truth. Justice absolutely cannot be found through these techniques because threatening someone and forcing them into a scared confession is no way serving justice.
Exactly one month ago my life was decent and know I'm being pushed off a cliff. My dad had a decent job and my mom and me had no need to work. Now as I walk into the crowded, cold store I take my food, say thanks and sit. As I sit I look up and realize its 10:45 am, and I quickly look away. Exactly one month ago at this exact same time, time stopped for me and it was the last time I looked at a clock.
Unwinding in front of my computer screen after a long day at school I notice an unread email: Detention Notice for Lunch Absence. This message has got to be some kind of cruel joke. Not only have I not missed a lunch this week, I have not missed one all year. However, once again due the grand inefficiencies of lunch room I will be spending my Saturday morning not in my bed, but in a bland room biding my time. Given the sufficient funds I would fix the numerous issues the lunch room at my school has allowing it to become a more efficient system.