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Autistic man ‘sacked’ from Waitrose gets job offer from rival store

An autistic volunteer who was told he had to stop stacking shelves at Waitrose when his mother asked if could get paid has been offered a job by rival chain Asda. 

Tom Boyd, 28, had been working unpaid at a branch of the supermarket giant in Cheadle Hulme, Greater Manchester since 2021, accompanied by a support worker.  

But when his mother Frances Boyd asked if her son could be offered ‘just a few paid hours’ in July, Waitrose head office told her Mr Boyd’s work experience placement had to end. 

Now, Asda has offered the volunteer two five-hour paid shifts a week. 

His mother told the BBC: ‘We’ve had some great news – Asda have offered him two five-hour paid shifts a week.’

She added: ‘It’s overwhelming and they are flexible to say if at any time he is struggling they are fine.’

Staff at the Waitrose branch allowed Mr Boyd to volunteer after his parents and support workers reached out to them with the request four years ago.

He eventually clocked up more than 600 hours ‘work’ – prompting his mother’s request for payment this summer. 

Tom Boyd, 28, (pictured) had been working unpaid at the supermarket giant since 2021

When his mother Frances Boyd (pictured) asked if her son could be offered 'just a few paid hours' in July, Waitrose head office told her Mr Boyd's work experience placement had to end

She blamed ‘head office’ for turning down the request – after bosses were alarmed by Mr Boyd’s amount of unpaid shifts and said he would not be able to work until they had resolved the situation.

Mrs Boyd revealed her son ‘absolutely loved’ his job, admitting she even lied to him that the store had been closed for cleaning, to avoid telling him he could not go back.

Before Asda’s offer, the family had been looking into whether they could get him work at another supermarket. 

Speaking from her £900,000 detached home yesterday, Mrs Boyd told the Daily Mail she would not be chasing Waitrose for any backdated wages for her son, adding: ‘It’s beyond that.

‘It’s about young people volunteering. Waitrose have apologised and said they are looking into it.’

A Waitrose spokesman previously said work placements, such as Mr Boyd’s, were typically set up in partnership with a charity, in collaboration with the individual and their family.

He said they were investigating Mr Boyd’s case ‘as a priority’.

Mr Boyd worked at the supermarket's branch in Cheadle Hulme, Greater Manchester (pictured)

What rights do volunteers have under law?

Volunteers do not have the same rights as an employee, because they do not have a contract of employment.

They will usually receive a volunteer agreement explaining the level of supervision and support; any training; whether they are covered under the organisation’s employer or public liability insurance; health and safety issues; and any expenses the organisation will cover.

While the volunteer agreement is not compulsory, it sets out what to expect from the organisation – but does not form a contract.

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Speaking about the incident, Mrs Boyd told BBC Breakfast yesterday: ‘He started at Waitrose because he was on a college placement. It began with one hour a week and it started building up over time as it progressed and got better at it and used to doing it and everything was working.

‘Eventually, when he left college we asked if he could increase that time to two days which it did. We thought this is working out, well why don’t we ask Waitrose if there is the possibility of paid work.’

Explaining his role at the store, the mother added: ‘He was bringing stock down from the stockroom, taking it onto the shop floor, stacking the shelves, tidying the shelves, putting everything in order and making sure everything was fully stocked.

‘He absolutely loved it. He loved that sense of belonging and the structure of going to work and the independence it gave him and feeling like a working man.

‘We’ve told him he was a working man once he started to go out and finish college and he used to say: ‘I’m working like my dad and my brother’.’

Mrs Boyd explained that she and her son were at first given hope that a request for paid work might be accepted.

She said: ‘They didn’t say no which gave us a feeling it was a possibility. There was no ‘no’ immediately, so we thought ‘there’s a chance here’.

‘But at the time they said ‘come back to us, we’ve got perhaps recruitment in January and then we can look at it again’.

‘Time just went by and I think by July of this year it went to head office, because they couldn’t make a decision within the store without taking it to head office. And once head office found out about it, the placement was stopped.’

Once the placement was ended, Mrs Boyd said her son struggled to understand why he could no longer carry on working at Waitrose.

She continued: ‘We had to sort of make a story up and say that the shop was being cleaned temporarily and that he couldn’t go into work until they cleaned it and then he might be going back and we left it at that.’

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