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the expenses of collection were paid by petitioner. The six
video workers had to sign in and out of work and had assigned
places of work in Mr. McLean’s office and at “the warehouse
area”.
For videos that were up to 3 days late, the “regular
employees” would call the customer. After that, the four
collection people would call. If there was no response, they
would send a letter by regular mail. Petitioner paid the
postage. If after the first mailing there was no answer, the
video workers sent a letter by certified mail, the postage for
which was also paid by petitioner. If there was no response 10
days after the mailing of the certified letter, the video workers
would prepare an application for a warrant. Mr. McLean reviewed
the applications, which he was required to sign. Then his
administrative assistant would file them.
Tracey Ashley, one of the two teenagers who worked at the
North Moreland location, occasionally worked at Mr. McLean’s
location with one of three video workers from the Metropolitan
location, Felicia Reed, Eric Patrick, or Andrea Trent. When one
of them worked at North Moreland, he did the same kind of work
Tracey Ashley was doing, regular video store employee duties.
According to Mr. McLean, he treated the video workers as
contractors because “They could have used their own supplies,
utilities or whatever.” He added the pay for his three employees
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Last modified: May 25, 2011