A OK Walker Luxury Autoworks in Peachtree City, Georgia, has
built Ford Mustangs for the Clint Eastwood film “Trouble With the Curve” and
for an attempt at a world record for land speed, according to its website. Now
the high-end car repair shop has acquired another rare distinction: It has been
accused of paying a former employee in pennies.
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To be precise, that’s 91,500 pennies, adding up to $915 in wages
owed — although Andreas Flaten, who was a manager at A OK Walker until last
November, has not counted them to make sure he got every last cent. He said his
former employer had left him a glimmering mound of pennies at the end of his
driveway on March 12 to punish him for quitting and persistently demanding his
final paycheck.
Since his girlfriend posted a video of the pennies on Instagram
on March 13, he has been attracting the sympathies of thousands of people also
navigating strained relations with their employers amid the pandemic.
“It would be one thing if it was just pennies,” Flaten said. “I
wish it was just pennies.” But the pennies are covered in a pungent, sticky
substance; Flaten suspects it might be power-steering fluid.
Miles Walker, the owner of the repair shop, did not respond to a
request for comment. He told CBS46 that he couldn’t remember whether he dropped
the pennies on his former employee’s driveway. “It doesn’t matter — he got
paid, that’s all that matters,” he said.
Flaten said that the foundation of his workplace dispute had to
do with his employer’s lack of sensitivity to his need to pick up his child
from day care at a certain time. Walker, the owner, recruited him, he said. And
he accepted the job because they had an agreement that he could leave at 5pm.
That arrangement became even more important during the pandemic,
when the child-care facility began closing early. But the promise evaporated,
Flaten said. That, and some other unpleasant exchanges, led Flaten to give
notice late last year that he was planning to quit, and then to walk off the
job even earlier than planned.
Months later, when his final week’s wages still had not arrived,
Flaten filed a claim with the US Department of Labor. The agency confirmed that
it had contacted the repair shop three times.
Around 7 pm on March 12, a video recorded by Flaten’s doorbell
camera shows a young man with long wavy hair on his front porch.
“Hey, your money is at the end of the driveway, bud,” says the
man, who Flaten said he believed was a current employee of the repair shop.
About an hour later, when Flaten tried to drive to the store, he
found his way blocked by a mountain of pennies. Placed amid the foul-smelling
coins was an envelope etched with an expression of unmistakable disapproval.
Inside he found his pay stub, but no check.
Flaten and his girlfriend, Olivia Oxley, spent the next few
hours transporting around 500 pounds of pennies up the slope of his steep
driveway into his garage by wheelbarrow. (The weight of the pennies has since
caused the wheels to collapse, he said.) His girlfriend posted about their
discovery on Instagram, where it captured the imaginations of many.
Reflections on the dumping also spilled into the Yelp reviews of
the repair shop, where one user wrote: “The owner paid an employee his last
check in pennies covered in motor oil. If he does that to his own people he’s
probably not worth trusting with your car.”
But back at A OK Walker Luxury Autoworks, the publicity has only
helped business, according to a woman who answered the phone there but declined
to be identified.
Flaten said that he had spent two hours one night cleaning the
pennies so that he might be able to drop them in a coin-sorting machine. He
sloshed them around in a giant vat of Dawn dish soap, white vinegar and water.
That failed. He has found that to get the greasy solution off, he has to wipe
each penny individually. It took him around two hours to get $5 worth of
pennies cleaned.
He has thought about filing a lawsuit, but he knows that what
happened may not be technically illegal.
Asked in an email message if it was legal to pay an employee in
dirty, grease-covered pennies, Eric R. Lucero, a spokesman for the US Department of Labor, wrote, “There is nothing in the regulations that dictates
in what currency the employee must be paid.”