"Free Help" Court-Ordered Community Service
Tim Gebauer
Thrift, re-commerce & e-commerce expert passionate about finding new homes for previously loved items. Open to short term assignments.
This post is mainly for my not-for-profit friends. For a deeper narrative about the legal details?click this link.?
It’s been my experience that the people that bash these programs don’t work in stores day to day. They hear when something goes wrong, but don’t understand how many things go right.?
I don’t like to call people in these programs volunteers. Doing so diminishes the value of true volunteers that choose to actively support the cause. For that reason, I prefer they be called something else, community service participant seems to depict their role. Participant for short.?
It isn’t about diminishing participants, it’s about recognizing the essential difference in why they are there.?
I have found community service participants to run a similar spectrum as employees. Totally in it, to those that would rather sneak a smoke or stare at their cell phone.
I once had a bank VP that had 500 hours of service to do over a year. Yes, DUI. He chose one of our facilities that was far from his home and work to avoid meeting anyone he knew. That was fine with us.?
He was a skilled person used to leadership roles. He took his service seriously and showed up to get stuff done. Over the months he learned every job that didn’t involve cash handling. He became an informal leader of the community service corps. It became easy to forget he wasn’t a paid employee.?
He burnt up two weeks of vacation working full-time to knock out enough hours. I think he worked 60 hours each of those weeks. He was one of very few that I eventually trusted to even price wares.?
True, he was an outlier, they do show up from time to time.?
The other end of the outlier spectrum pushed one of our employees. It was some stupid disagreement on where something should be placed in the back room. There was no excuse. Thankfully we got it on videotape.?
As terrible as that was, I have had employees get into fights at work. Dumping an entire program because of that one-off when thousands and thousands of service hours had a good result does not make sense to me. Using the same logic, we would stop hiring employees.?
Most participants fall somewhere in between. So they must be managed not unlike employees.
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A key difference between participants and volunteers is how they are managed. If a volunteer steps away to chat on the phone with a friend for half an hour, well, that’s OK.
If a participant does the same, they are not fulfilling the requirements of working their assigned hours. There is a quid pro quo with participants.?
There are several pieces to making a community service program work.?
A few things participants can do that add value:?
Many of these things free up paid staff to do higher-level work. More production, customer service, better displays, and so on.?
Some math:
Let’s assume an average of 10 hours per day, 6 days a week, about 240 hours per month. If paid employees cost $15 per hour you have about $3,600~ in labor value. Getting a good return on that labor comes down to managing.
Thanks for reading!
Tim Gebauer - Thrift Retailer
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