Former Employee Criticizes Policy at Salvation Army 

When Knight arrived, he says, there were few formal programs — just "an AA meeting and a couple of Bible studies." He instituted group therapy sessions and formal assessments for clients; brought a mobile medical unit from Bon Secours once a week for physicals and checkups; employed part-time counselors and college interns in the facility; and worked with the state to develop release plans for men leaving prison.

Knight was fired March 31 with no prior warnings, he says. Fred Thornhill, administrator of the ARC division of the Richmond Salvation Army for three and a half years, told him that his "service was no longer needed as of that day," Knight says.

A person who answered the phone at the local ARC office referred calls to Thornhill, who was on vacation. An employee at Salvation Army's Southern Territorial Headquarters referred a reporter to a public-relations officer, who did not return calls.

Knight's firing was a surprise, he says, but he acknowledges that he and Thornhill had differences over how best to run the program. He also knew that he would receive no unemployment compensation, because his employee handbook states that the Salvation Army, as a church-related organization, is exempt from providing such benefits.

"The part that really threw me for a loop," Knight says, was when he tried later that evening to extend his insurance under the Consolidated Omnibus Reconciliation Act (COBRA). COBRA is a federally created plan that allows an employee who leaves a company to continue to be covered under the company's health plan for a certain time period.

Knight learned, however, that the Salvation Army was also exempt from that law. "So as of midnight on the 31st, I had no income and no insurance," Knight says. He was paid for his unused vacation and sick leave, he says, and that was it.

A spokeswoman for the U.S. Department of Labor says federal law exempts religious organizations from COBRA, although church plans may elect to comply if they wish. However, there are requirements that an employer must notify employees about the status of their coverage, she says.

The benefits coordinator for the Salvation Army's Southern Territorial Headquarters confirms that the organization has no compensation plan for terminated employees. The COBRA policy is stated in the handbook and a summary of health plans is given to each employee, she says.

Knight says he was never informed of the Salvation Ary's COBRA exemption. He's moving on to do his work elsewhere, he says, but criticizes the Salvation Army for its efforts to avoid "any kind of accountability to agencies outside themselves."

— Melissa Scott Sinclair

Comments (2)

Showing 1-2 of 2

Add a comment

 
Subscribe to this thread:
Showing 1-2 of 2

Add a comment

The Eastern Front 1941-45. Mechanized Warfare through the Eyes of a German Panzer Officer

Presented by Winidore Press Author and Editor Stephen Thomas Previtera....

Deep Run Horse Show

Horses and riders will be competing in more than 200 classes....

Dr. Sketchy's RVA

Cabaret figure drawing with Richmond's premier drawing club featuring burlesque models....

View all of today's events

  • Re: Bogart’s Restaurant Listed for Sale

    • I believe that I first went to Bogarts in 1977. When my wife and I…

    • on June 19, 2013
  • Re: City Denies Tax Break for Shockoe Apartments

    • Isn't it nice that every once and a while that when a pig jumps into…

    • on June 19, 2013
  • Re: Latino Students Protest Treatment at High School

    • Learning English is the most likely way to help assure lasting success in America. Not…

    • on June 19, 2013
  • More »
  • Facebook Recommendations

    Latest in Street Talk

    Copyright © 2013 Style Weekly
    Richmond's alternative for news, arts, culture and opinion
    All rights reserved
    Powered by Foundation