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Ford Fired A Worker Over A $1.95 Cookie He Actually Paid For

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When Workplace Rules Meet Technology

Every workplace has its rules about theft. Usually, these policies keep things running smoothly, but sometimes, technology steps in and makes a mess of it all.

That’s exactly what happened at Ford’s Kentucky Truck Plant, where a longtime employee was shown the door for supposedly swiping a cookie. The twist? Turns out, he actually paid for it.

According to an exclusive report byShifting Gears, the incident centered around a $1.95 Grandma's Chocolate Chip Cookie purchased from a self-service snack kiosk inside the plant.

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How a $1.95 Snack Led to a Pink Slip

According to the report, the incident happened during an overnight shift in May. Kurt Kromm, who had worked at Ford's Kentucky Truck Plant for 11 years, said he felt his blood sugar dropping around 3:30 a.m. because he is diabetic. He grabbed a cookie from the Aramark-operated snack area and attempted to pay using a self-checkout kiosk.

Kromm says the first payment terminal glitched out, so he tried his luck at another kiosk before finally eating the cookie. Fast forward a week, and he’s being called into the office, accused of theft, and marched out by security – all over a snack.

Insisting he was innocent, Kromm presented his bank records for Ford and his union, which showed a $1.95 charge that matched the cookie. But the company wanted notarized copies before even checking with Aramark. Eventually, Ford confirmed he’d paid up.

Interestingly, other workers confirmed to Shifting Gears that the kiosks were known for glitchy screens and confusing messages, so it wasn’t just Kromm running into trouble. Ford wouldn’t talk specifics to the publication when asked for a comment, but admitted things could have been handled better.

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Ford

Ford Offered His Job Back

Once the dust settled, Ford tried to make things right by offering Kromm his old job back and back pay. But by then, he’d already landed a better gig closer to home.

Kromm wasn’t interested in coming back. After all that, he said his trust in Ford was shot. He also wondered why it took weeks of paperwork to prove what his bank statement showed in seconds.

According to the report, the United Auto Workers told Kromm that Ford plans to change its playbook: instead of firing people on the spot, they’ll suspend them while sorting out payment disputes. If that actually happens, maybe the next cookie crisis won’t end with someone getting the boot.

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Ford

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