Location: DFW TX
My fiancé is working this temp gig that provides an "Attendance" bonus. The job was a month long and 7 days a week 8 hrs a day. He was told that there would be an attendance bonus if he did not miss a day. He did not miss a single day.
One day, he was severely sick. Still came to work, still did his job. It was about 2 hrs before the shift was over and he had been sitting there with no work to do for over an hour so he asked the supervisor if it was possible for him to leave early as there was nothing to do and he has a fever and not lose the bonus. Supervisor advised that he will look into it then came back 30 mins later and told him he is good to go and to not worry about it.
They ended up extending his contract for an unknown period of time. No idea when it ends, maybe another month.
He asked today when the bonus comes as the initial month has ended. They told him he would not be getting the bonus. He tried to get more clarification on why and how he does not qualify and told them he would have never left early that day if it had disqualified him. He would have just worked the extra 1.5 hrs (of simply just sitting there playing computer games as there was nothing to do) for the $500.
I know $500 seems like such a small amount but that amount can really make or break someone's life right now. He has spent the last almost 2 months working everyday, missing personal events, becoming burned out, etc.
In addition to this, he does have a health problem that makes it difficult not getting a day of rest but NEVER makes it anyone else's problem and pushes through it.
I hate seeing him so stressed all the time and all for an extra $500 that has now been taken from him for seemingly no reason. Also having no idea when you will no longer have a job sucks but what can ya do in these times.
Is this grounds for potential legal action? What can he do/present to them himself to try and get the bonus he rightfully qualifies for and deserves?
Thank you for your time.
EDIT: This attendance bonus is part of the contract. will update with specific contract language. no idea how it works in legal space but i know in claims adjusting if we tell someone something is cover when it's not it can kinda fuck us and we end up paying so unsure for how it works in this sense.