Proud
to Be A Trial Lawyer
Protecting the Rights at Home of Those Who Defend Freedom Abroad
When
Mark J. Meyer, of Readlyn, Iowa, completed his active duty service
with the United States Marine Corps he began reserve duty and started
a non-military job. Mark was a great employeehe received excellent
performance review ratings, even the highest possible rating. He was
quickly promoted to Assistant Store Manager and eventually to Store
Manager. In 2003 Mark was named 2003 Cedar Valley Area Employee of
the Year.
In May of 2004 Mark received word that his reserve unit was being
activated and deployed to Iraq. Mark personally notified his supervisor
that he had been called up to active duty to go to Iraq, so that they
would have notice that he would need a temporary leave of absence
from his job in order to meet his military obligations. Later that
same day his supervisor filled out a performance review of Mark that
was very poor and wrote in it that he would be terminated. Two days
later Mark was fired and escorted from the building.
In order to have income until he was sent to Iraq Mark re-activated
himself early and went to work at the Rock Island base. During this
time Mark was engaged, and when he received word that he was being
deployed to Iraq they moved up their wedding date so that they could
marry before he left. Because he had been fired and was forced to
re-activate early, Mark and his new wife, Destiny (pictured above
on their wedding day) were not able to go on a honeymoon and spent
the first few months of marriage commuting 3 hours to see each other
only on weekends.
Mark is pursuing a complaint against his former employer because
under the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act
(USERRA), a federal law, an employer can not discriminate if an employee
is called into military active duty. Additionally, the state of Iowa
has a Military Code that imposes criminal charges if an employer fires
or denies leave to a Reservist who is ordered to temporary active
duty.
His attorney, Ronnie Podolefsky, is outraged: "The men and women
being activated and deployed to Iraq deserve the assurance that the
jobs this takes them from will be there when they come home. It's
not only contemptible to fire someone called up to serve our nation,
it's against the law."
Read AAJ's eNewsletter: Legal
Rights for Soldiers
|