Why would you answer a Texas phone number when you are on vacation?Well, I'm not ENTIRELY without internet, I have my phone. But that is a poor substitute. Especially when my work has just called me for the second time for help.
Why would you answer a Texas phone number when you are on vacation?Well, I'm not ENTIRELY without internet, I have my phone. But that is a poor substitute. Especially when my work has just called me for the second time for help.
Has your substitute gone in to early labor yet?Well, I'm not ENTIRELY without internet, I have my phone. But that is a poor substitute. Especially when my work has just called me for the second time for help.
She certainly seems to have suffered an attack of the Dumb.Has your substitute gone in to early labor yet?
Because if I don't deal with it now, it will be 10x the headache when I get back.Why would you answer a Texas phone number when you are on vacation?
Then you should tell them you expect to be paid extra for having to deal with it while you're out.She certainly seems to have suffered an attack of the Dumb.
Because if I don't deal with it now, it will be 10x the headache when I get back.
I find it hard to burn all the PTO I earn at my job because of this exact thing. I'll put in 40 hours of vacation time, and only end up taking 18-20 of it (or less!) because of all the calls and stuff I take while I'm out.Then you should tell them you expect to be paid extra for having to deal with it while you're out.
At least you have a legitimate reason why you can't help them.Well, I'm not ENTIRELY without internet, I have my phone. But that is a poor substitute. Especially when my work has just called me for the second time for help.
I just have a bad case of presenteeism.I find it hard to burn all the PTO I earn at my job because of this exact thing.
Like many companies, mine has a cap on PTO, so I try to spend it as often as I can. It just doesn't always work outAt least you have a legitimate reason why you can't help them.
I just have a bad case of presenteeism.
I currently have something like 270hrs sick time and 200hrs vac.
But I'm saving them because I might need them some day.
--Patrick
I've had mine since before the cap. There's a cap now, but they can't take away my extra until I use enough to go below the cap. I just can't accumulate more (or else I'd be approaching 400hrs sick time)Like many companies, mine has a cap on PTO, so I try to spend it as often as I can. It just doesn't always work out
I have an obscene amount of sick time, especially when you consider I took roughly 3 months off a few years back. I don't take much vacation time because we have state holidays where if you work a holiday, you can take that time whenever you want. At a certain point my vacation will roll over into sick time.I've had mine since before the cap. There's a cap now, but they can't take away my extra until I use enough to go below the cap. I just can't accumulate more (or else I'd be approaching 400hrs sick time)
--Patrick
It's not that, it's how many days you can be paid without working. Remember that in America, the idea of paying someone who doesn't actually do any work for it is considered "unfair" to people who are working.I still don't get the concept of "sick days". How the heck do you tell someone they're "allowed" to be sick a specific number of days a year? It makes no sense. [...] Silly 'mericans.
"the right to legally employ people".As for sick days, I could counter with why should I pay you if you're not working? It's a valid question. What do I get out of it as an employer?*
So how do you go about skipping a day just because you don't want to go in?I have 0 sick days. If I can't/don't want to work because I'm sick, I get a doctor's note - doctor, dentist, emergency, whatever - stating I'm sick or incapacitated, and for how long. If a doctor says I can work, I have to go work.
I expect requirements vary from employer to employer - some would only expect a note for a 3+ day illness, while others might require a doctors note immediately. Since healthcare is subsidized the cost to obtain such a note isn't high. There are limits to the maximum amount of time one can be sick with "minor" illnesses per year, but they are mandated by the government and the same across all employers. The employer pays the cost of minor illnesses, while the government steps in to pay the paycheck for major illnesses after a certain period of time (think cancer and other similar situations).How do you get a doctor's note if you're only sick for a day or two?
You go the first day you're sick, of course. Most employers ask a doctor's note within 24 hours of the start of absence, anyway.How do you get a doctor's note if you're only sick for a day or two?
if you have the flu often enough that that would be a hassle, there's a good chance there's an underlying issue (which could just be "you're a kindergarten teacher and get covered in germs 10 times a day", sure, but can be something as simple as a dietary problem resulting in too little or too much of something, or some weird auto-immune disease that only manifests with regular flu-like symptoms that would never get diagnosed if you didn't have a doctor to remark on the amount of flus you have).If I had to go to the doctor because I had the flu or something, I would go insane.
And a lot of people do that, spreading the illnesses further...[DOUBLEPOST=1459525017,1459524828][/DOUBLEPOST]I just basically hate going to the doctor to begin with, if I had to go every time I wanted to take a sick day, it would go to work on death door instead.
...of course this also happens in the US where you have to use a precious vacation/PTO/etc day.And a lot of people do that, spreading the illnesses further...
But there's a whole different system in place for those, completely unrelated to your own sickness and absence. Social leave is a separate set of off days you can use for such cases...though you need to supply a reason, and if it's for a sick kid, yup, a doctor's noteI also know people who will never use their sick time for themselves, because they need to be able to use them when their kids are sick.
So you still haven't answered my question. How do you go about skipping a day when you wake up one day and feel like going for a hike instead of working?
Yeah see, if my kid has a fever, he can't go to school. I really don't see the need to run my kid to the doctor for a cold, just so I can get paid at work. That is a god damn hassle.But there's a whole different system in place for those, completely unrelated to your own sickness and absence. Social leave is a separate set of off days you can use for such cases...though you need to supply a reason, and if it's for a sick kid, yup, a doctor's note
Is skipping work to go hiking just a Canadian thing?
BenderOhWaitYouAreSeriousLetMeLaughHarder.gif
Skipping work to go hiking/skiing/etc totally happens in Colorado. Gas is just jaded because he took 1 week off of work for the first time in forever and now his workplace is going to burn down.Is skipping work to go hiking just a Canadian thing?
Well how about skipping work to play video games? That sounds more American.
It's not like he didn't know it was going to happen.Skipping work to go hiking/skiing/etc totally happens in Colorado. Gas is just jaded because he took 1 week off of work for the first time in forever and now his workplace is going to burn down.
Wow. I can't imagine getting an appointment that quickly. I call my doctor (or the kids' doctor) and I can guarantee for something minor or self-resolving it will be at least a 2 day wait to be seen. We might get seen same day if it is something that could require medication and there are appointments available. Otherwise you go sit in the ER (A&E) for 7 hours just to get told you have a virus that will clear up on it's own.You go the first day you're sick, of course. Most employers ask a doctor's note within 24 hours of the start of absence, anyway.
In countries with universal-styled healthcare, access to that sort of low-hanging-fruit service is (in my limited experience) much more commonplace. I'm sure there's a decent write-up someone else can find, but the Wikipedia article on Health Centers is a good start.Wow. I can't imagine getting an appointment that quickly. I call my doctor (or the kids' doctor) and I can guarantee for something minor or self-resolving it will be at least a 2 day wait to be seen. We might get seen same day if it is something that could require medication and there are appointments available. Otherwise you go sit in the ER (A&E) for 7 hours just to get told you have a virus that will clear up on it's own.