Today we had to fire a young engineer. Or, at least we thought he was an
engineer. Turns out he never got his
degree. We hired him as he was
supposedly graduating from college.
While he thought he was about to get his diploma he got a letter telling
him his GPA was too low to graduate. Unfortunately
he kept it to himself and started another lie.
Under the guise of taking classes towards a master’s degree, he was
really retaking classes to get a better grade to hopefully officially get a
degree. In the year and a half that he
worked for us he did pass his E.I. exam but did not officially get a number
from NSPE since he had not officially graduated.
This all came to a point when an opportunity presented
itself for him. A company we often work
with needed a young degreed engineer to go to Hawaii for a year and be a
construction quality reviewer on-site. This
person would need to go to a class for a week and get a certification, then go
live in Hawaii for a year. We naturally
submitted the young engineer with no family for an once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity. But that lie he was living
wouldn’t let him go. Unfortunately
rather than come clean, his dad came in and spoke to one of the company’s
partners.
It’s a disappointment that he didn’t come to us as soon as
he knew about it. If he would have done
that, we would have worked with him then and he would probably still be an
employee. It’s a disappointment that he
didn’t accept responsibility for his reality.
If he would have done that, it would have been reflected in his
accepting responsibility for his work as this was an obvious problem in his
work output. It’s a disappointment that
he can’t go and experience this opportunity.
Sin always costs more than we think it will. It’s a disappointment that his dad came to us
and he didn’t make him face his reality and be responsible for his actions. This is probably where the problem
originates, but he should be responsible for himself, especially at his age.
Yet again I see an application for Jesus in all of our
lives. … What a disappointment.