The 9 Craziest Work Late Excuses

While heavy traffic might be the most common reason for showing up late for work, it's certainly not the most outlandish, new research finds.

A study by online career site CareerBuilder reveals that frozen car keys and bear attacks top this year's listof the most outrageous excuses for arriving to work late. Among the other more memorable excuses hiring managers heard from tardy employees in the past year included:

  • Employee dropped her purse into a coin-operated newspaper box and couldn't retrieve it without change (which was in the purse).

  • Employee accidentally left the apartment with his roommate's girlfriend's shoes on and had to go back to change.

  • Employee's angry wife had frozen his truck keys in a glass of water in the freezer.

  • Employee got a late start because she was putting a raincoat on her cement duck in her front yard (because rain was expected later that day).

  • Employee's car wouldn't start because the Breathalyzer showed he was intoxicated.

  • Employee attempted to cut his own hair before work and the clippers stopped working, so he had to wait until the barbershop opened to fix his hair.

  • A bear attacked an employee's car (had photographic evidence).

  • Employee drove to her previous employer by mistake.

  • Employee claimed to have delivered a stranger's baby on the side of the highway.

Overall, more than a quarter of workers admitted to being late at least once a month, with 16 percent showing up past their scheduled starting time at least once a week.

"Employers understand that every now and again circumstances will arise that are out of a worker's control and unfortunately cause a late arrival to work," said Rosemary Haefner, vice president of human resources at CareerBuilder. "It escalates to a problem when the behavior becomes repetitive, causing employers to take disciplinary action."

The study found that more than one-third of hiring managers have had to fire someone for their lateness.

The research was based on surveys of more than 2,600 hiring managers and more than 3,900 workers nationwide.

This story was provided by BusinessNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow Chad Brooks on Twitter @cbrooks76 or BusinessNewsDaily @BNDarticles. We're also on Facebook & Google+.

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