Andreas Flaten said he was shocked to see his final payment from an employer, 90,000 oil or grease covered pennies. $915 to be exact. Photo / AP
Andreas Flaten said he was shocked to see his final payment from an employer, 90,000 oil or grease covered pennies. $915 to be exact. Photo / AP
A global company has stepped in to solve quite a "coinundrum" for a Georgia man.
Andreas Flaten's former employer dumped at least 90,000 pennies on his driveway last month as a form of final payment for his work at an auto shop, he said.
When Bellevue, Washington-based Coinstar heard abouthis predicament, they decided that change was needed.
They picked up Flaten's coins on Thursday and rounded up the amount to give him a $1000 cheque.
They also made donations to two charities of Flaten's choosing: two animal shelters.
"Coinstar has been in the coin business for 30 years and we process approximately 41 billion coins annually – so picking up 91,000 pennies was all in a day's work," Coinstar CEO Jim Gaherity said in a statement.
Flaten said his former employer — A OK Walker Autoworks in Peachtree City — owed him $915 after he left his job there in November.
Explicit message placed atop the pile of coins. Photo / Twitter
He finally got his pay earlier this month in the form of thousands of oil- or grease-covered pennies dumped at the end of his driveway in Fayetteville, Georgia. Atop the pile: an envelope with Flaten's final paystub and a goodbye note that featured an obscenity.