UPDATE 5/13/17: Jonathan Holley, the janitor featured in the video, has released a video update about the story. Watch it here.

This is not how you talk to your employees #webbbridgemiddleschool Alpharetta ga 2016-08-17T13:43:17.000Z

Susan Opferman, a high school principal at Webb Bridge Middle School in Alpharetta, Georgia, told a long time custodian named Jonathan Holley that she would have to speak to HR after he left work early because he came in early to let the fire department in for a routine inspection. It is heavily implied that the janitor was let go after the recorded event, as a later video of him shows him driving for Uber.

The original sharer of the video, Redditor Eric1221, claims that Holley was fired and that he is reaching out to him for an update.

The video is originally from August 2016 but shot to the top of Reddit today.

The video of the event was secretly recorded by Holley. According to the Digital Media Law Project, Georgia is a “one-party consent” state, meaning that only one of the parties has to consent to be recorded. Opferman did not know she was being recorded.

The video begins with Opferman asking Holley, “So, Jonathan, what are your hours?”

The custodian tells her that he works at the school from 6:30 a.m. to 3 p.m., but that this morning was different so he felt he could leave early. That morning the local fire department needed to do a routine inspection of the school and they came early, so Holley “clocked in” at 6:15 so that the firemen didn’t have to sit around and wait until 6:30.

Because of his early day, Holley decided to leave at 2:52.

Opferman contradicts this and says that she was calling for him at 2:45.

In a condescending manner, Opferman goes on to tell him that he should have made the firemen wait that morning, as the school is not officially open until 6:30. She says she will have to get human resources involved. She repeatedly asks Holley, “Who’s your boss?” And refers to herself in the third person as “Susan Opferman.”

Holley acknowledges this but then goes on to ask why the principal is always harassing him, citing past grievances. Opferman denies this and again says she will have to speak to HR. “We are done here,” she says.

The Fulton County Schools has released a statement to Heavy regarding the Holley and Opferman video. It reads: