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An employee of the California Department of Motor Vehicles slept three hours a day for nearly four years – everything his supervisors knew, according to a state auditor's report released Tuesday.
And the employee is still working there. 19659005] Between February 2014 and December 2017, the employee spent approximately 2,200 hours of work, costing California taxpayers over $ 40,000, according to the audit.
The worker, who was not mentioned in the report, The operator responsible for updating information about address changes and new vehicle ownership forms.
According to the report, a typical data operator makes an average of 560 documents per day, but the operator handles only 200 checks found. His colleagues said his job was full of mistakes, according to the report.
The worker's supervisors were aware of his schedule but "did not take any disciplinary or medical action against the employee after the initial efforts failed. "The audit said.
In November 2016, the worker's request for reasonable accommodation was refused." Two months later, the worker's physician indicated that she could "perform all of her duties"
DMV officials told the state auditors that they had not instituted disciplinary action against the worker because her behavior had not been The legal and human services staff felt that the legal and human resources staff did not have the "appropriate language required for such a disciplinary action," said the audit
[D]. Employee not having corrected his behavior
The audit revealed that the appropriate documentation had been completed in March 2018 and that the employee would have been advised that 39 she could do the subject of disciplinary measures for sleeping at work. 19659005] State auditors recommended that DMV take action against supervisors who did not discipline the worker. The agency told state auditors that it was training supervisors "on the importance of following the progressive process of state discipline."
MORE THAN ONE MILLION ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS HAVE REGISTERED CALIFORNIAN DRIVER'S LICENSES, STATE DMV ANNOUNCES
According to report, human resources to determine next steps to take with employee
The case was one of 1,481 cases of allegedly abusive government activities that were the subject of an investigation by the California State Auditor Office during the year. Past year. a publisher for Fox News. Follow him on Twitter @bradford_betz.