Clément starts his new life with a heavy debt.
This former railway worker, employed for eight years at the South East European Technicentre (TSEE) as an “electrical products technical referent”, owes 37,868.30 euros to his former employer, the SNCF.
This large sum is equivalent to the salaries that the railway group paid him from August 31, 2020 to September 30, 2022... when he no longer worked there.
“It took them two years to see it,” says the 33-year-old.
And today, they're putting crazy pressure on me.
» When contacted, the SNCF did not wish to “provide any comments concerning the personal situation of its agents”.
At the time, Clément took leave to resume his studies.
After an accepted request for “authorization of absence during working hours”, in March 2020, he began a degree in “science, technology, health” from September 1 of the same year at the University of Paris 12 ( he obtained it last October).
The agreement provides that Clément self-finances his training, costing 15,000 euros, part of which with his CPF account, then filled with 2,200 euros.
Clearly, the railway worker is leaving the workforce and the SNCF does not provide any funding as part of his professional transition.
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