• nickknack@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    the idea that sick days somehow impose a financial burden of the company is a blatant lie of criminal proportions. It is a justification for wage theft

    people should use all of their sick days

    • EinfachUnersetzlich@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Why do you even have an allocation of sick days? It’s not really a concept anywhere I’ve worked (in the UK).

      • Zerlyna@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I’m in the US and I get 3 paid sick days a year. Anything more and I don’t get paid PLUS I get a point. After 8 points I lose my job. We come to work sick unless we are in the hospital.

        • Fushuan [he/him]@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          I work in Spain, we don’t have sick days. If the doctor says we are not apt to work, we take a leave intil the doctor says so. Indefinitely. No maximum. As long as the doctor says.

          This limit thing is so weird. Yeah, you can use them as vacation of you are healthy but that’s an abuse and then when you need them you will be vulnerable without days. It’s better to have infinite days, to be used only when you are actually sick, as stated by your doctor.

          • jarfil@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Indefinitely. No maximum. As long as the doctor says

            I work in Spain, happen to be on sick leave/disability, and that’s not exactly correct:

            • The doctor can only authorize 365 days of paid sick leave
            • After that, you get back to your company’s health insurer (“mutua”) who has 180 days of paid sick leave to either:
              • Treat you until you’re healed (or claim you’re healed) and put you back to work (if you refuse, you get fired)
              • Grant you permanent disability

            If the insurer decides that you’re healed, you can’t go back onto a sick leave for the same reason for… I think it’s 6 months.

            • Fushuan [he/him]@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              Right right, if your leave is longer than a year the permanent inability (incapacidad permanente, diferente a una discapacidad) cards pop up, since chances are you will never be able to be able to return to the same work you did, like an ernia for a driver and so on.

              In any case, people taking a year long leave is kind of rare and it’s practically limitless compared to the 2-30 days the other mentioned countries get.

              Good luck with your situation.

        • braxy29@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          (edit - i live in the us) i can purchase extra insurance for short-term and for long-term sick leave.

          right now, i have ten days of paid time off for whatever reason per year (no explicit sick leave) and i pay about $650 a month for insurance which covers very little for myself and my kids until i have spent at least $6000 on any one of us or $15000 for all of us together. i make about $50k a year before tax and insurance.

          and our compensation package (paid time off and insurance) is considered pretty good for my area.

          i could buy better insurance and short and long term leave, but this would cost about half of what i make. unfortunately, half of what i make already goes to rent.

    • MudMan@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I’m always amazed by how Americans in particular (sorry if you’re not, I’m assuming) tend to go from one end of the spectrum to the other without any middle stops in common sense land. I once had a US friend go straight from “we have bad health care” to “we need a violent revolution” with no consideration to… you know, maybe good health care?

      I mean, from my perspective it seems pretty obvious that you should only take as many sick days as you need, but you should take all the ones you need, to an unlimited total amount.

      Like, that seems so simple. It’s how it’s always worked in the multiple countries I’ve lived in. You’re sick? You call in sick. You need to be off for multiple days? You ask your doctor to officially declare that you’re sick. The company is taking a hit? The government covers your wages during your long term sickness.

      This works. We know this works. It’s obvious this works.

      • Jomega@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        We don’t believe that the government will let us have good Healthcare without revolution at this point. One side violently opposes it and the other dangles it like a carrot on a stick for votes, with no intention of actually providing it because if they actually improved things somewhat they’d lose a precious bargaining chip. This song and dance has been going on for as long as I’ve been alive. We’re losing hope here.

        • MudMan@kbin.social
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          See? But that’s the thought process that I find baffling. Because I can’t find an American who doesn’t claim to be dissatisfied, so… how do you land in that mix of conformism, where you don’t think you can take political action of any sort to address it, but also extremism, where you think the logical endgame is full on armed conflict?

          How do you massage a whole continent-sized country’s psyche into just sitting there and taking it right up until the point where you start shooting people? I’m not even French and even I can see the glaring hole full of mass protesting right in the middle of that crap.

          And hey, not to spoil any big secrets, but the US is literally the only democracy that hasn’t rewritten its constitution fundamentally since its creation. You guys know that’s allowed, right? Go argue for a proportional system or a parliamentary system or something. I mean, you guys could try doing something at all before deciding that it’s full-on purge time.

          • ZzyzxRoad@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            Because if we try to change anything, we run the (very high) risk of losing our jobs, then our homes, and ending up on the streets. If you have a way to get over 300 million people all on the same page for a general strike, who are all willing to risk losing their income, please let me know.

            • SciRave
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              1 year ago

              I don’t think this really addresses the question. Revolution provides even more of an economic disruption?

              Keep in mind the OP is not an American. They don’t have the context.

            • MudMan@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              I mean… as the other guy says below, if you’re considering revolution surely a general strike is a notch below that level of commitment.

              But also, I’ve lived through multiple general strikes. I don’t know what to tell you, a party and a bunch of unions called for them, people followed them at will. Some changed stuff, others didn’t. Nobody lost their jobs or homes, among other things because it’s illegal to retalliate against a strike. Because, you know, we had strikes about that.

              We’re not even a particularly old democracy, we were an outright fascist country less than a century ago. My dad remembers running away from fascist police when he was in college. I don’t know what to tell you.

              • mrnotoriousman@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                Part of the problem for major reforms is that large areas of empty land have more power than the will of the people to get things through the Senate.

              • Emma_Gold_Man@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                1 year ago

                a party and a bunch of unions called for them

                In the US there are only two parties of any real significance. General strike is something neither of them would ever call for. Only about 10.1% of US workers have a union.

                Nobody lost their jobs or homes, among other things because it’s illegal to retalliate against a strike.

                In the US, strike retaliation, while technically illegal, is very rarely enforced. When it is, the penalty is … they have to undo the thing they did and were penalized for. No fine, no concession, no additional monitoring, and there was always the (very good) chance they’d get away with it.

                Sadly, in a country where guns are common and unions aren’t, armed revolt is just more imaginable than a general strike.

          • SciRave
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            1 year ago

            I’m American and it’s never made much sense to me, either.

            Afaik it’s fundementally 5 forces.

            • Severe distrust of the established institutions, including the democratic process.
            • Long-drawn, multi-generational unrest ever since late globalization and the decline of unions.
            • Anti-labor propaganda and institutional complacency.
            • Increased alienation and in-fighting among the population. Got much worse ever since the MAGA repubs cropped up. We’re fighting against 40-50% of the population for basic shit. (Have you seen our paralyzed congress?)

            Finally, this unwillingness to be the first to bite the bullet. Inevitably, the first people to start off these grassroots movements are going to get the shortest end of the stick. They are people sacrificing their free time and economic security for a movement that begs others to do the same.

            It’s a massive risk.

            • MudMan@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              FWIW, I do recognize all of those from the outside looking in.

              I also recognize that you have so few protections that action is riskier than it is here, where protesting can’t be legally retaliated against and there are actual labor protections in place that make effecting change easier. Which in turn is part of the expectation that the government should proactively help you when you need it.

              But still, it does seem like there should be a middle point somewhere where you get rid at least of point one and you tip over point three, right? That seems like it’d happen way before stuff gets really violent.

              But then, culturally you guys fantasize about violently confronting the government since day one, which I guess is what happens when your foundational myth is also a colonial-revolutionary myth.

              It is pretty messed up, though.

          • Jomega@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            We are protesting. So far we’ve been at best ignored, and at worst…

            You’ve probably seen what our police are like.

        • Ataraxia@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          Then we aren’t getting it because you no money deserve anything once you’re a terrorist. We need to do something constructive, not kill people.

          • Jomega@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Historically speaking, the most successful leaps forward have come about via methods that were branded as “terrorism” while they were happening. If we had restricted ourselves exclusively to what you call “constructive”, we would have never freed ourselves from the shackles of monarchy, or in the case of the American Civil War, the much more literal shackles of, well, shackles. Violence should be a last resort, but keeping off the table entirely is just naive.

            • MudMan@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              Now, this? This is a crucial difference. As I was saying before, the foundational revolultionary myth of the US is a lot, and it sure looks like it sets the stage.

              I mean, that statement is absurd on the face of it, seeing how… you know, the UK exists and it’s ostensibly a democracy (a social democracy, even, by some definitions) and so are all the other colonial powers and a lot of the independent colonies, major liberal revolution or not.

              It makes no sense, but you still said it as a fact. It’s still bipartisan enough that you didn’t picture it in your head as a bit of conservative historical fantasy mythmaking, you put it out there as a verifiable thing you can just say. The opposite notion is naive, even.

              That must leave a mark, right? The indoctrination and warped perspective of the relationship with government, progress and change that mindset must give you HAS to be a part of this.

              • braxy29@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                the american population, however, is deadlocked in their opposed visions of what progress looks like, and leadership is not strong enough to do much more than continue to consolidate and protect their own power and authority.

                again, change at the lower bars you have proposed is very difficult indeed, and requires shared vision that is very hard to come by here. it doesn’t help people to feel change can be obtained through current systems or non-violent strikes that a) financial constraints are so much harder to overcome than in previous decades (i.e. trying to strike could mean inability to feed or house yourself or to afford needed medical care) and b) what change we managed in recent decades has been rolled back (roe v. wade) or is under attack (civil rights).

                i hate that my comment is so negative and i don’t want to discourage any fellow americans from trying to create positive change. i’m just sharing my own voice and why it’s hard to imagine success short of revolution. i feel like advocacy and voting are all i can really do right now, and they are honestly not very effective.

      • notacat@mander.xyz
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        1 year ago

        Did you just say the government pays regular citizens?? Where I come from that’s communism. Governments are only supposed to pay corporations like the good lord intended.

        • MudMan@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Well, no, they do. They pay your boss to pay you. Or they pay you instead of your boss. Either way your boss gets stuff, so… yay capitalism?

    • Carighan Maconar@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Eh, doesn’t those depend on how often I get sick? That’s the idea, no? A doctor signs me off being unable to work?

      • ThunderWhiskers@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        No. If you have paid time off it is part of your compensation package. A better way to look at it is if you work 52 weeks a year and your employment includes a week of PTO, then you are effectively due 53 weeks of pay and any time you take off is subtracted from that number.

        • RBWells@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Where I work (not California) this time is “use it or lose it” so no. Our comp is 52 weeks a year and we can take up to 3 weeks (not consecutive) of that off for whatever if scheduled or unscheduled for sickness. 1 week if you are new.

          • ThunderWhiskers@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Still yes. The point is that PTO is part of your compensation package. If you don’t use it you are not receiving that compensation. Put it another way: if part of your compensation package is a company vehicle (just like everyone else in the company) but you work from home, are you going to consider that fair compensation?

    • FFbob@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I get 5% extra per year saved of sick leave on my pension, up to 2 years, adjusted to percent of the year left of sick leave. But my job is fun and people tend to want to work.

    • Che Banana
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      1 year ago

      I’d say work to your compensation, not the bare minimum. Bare minimum is what you do when you make bare minimum. But- do take all your compensation. Time or money, its yours, you earned it.

    • glimse@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I busted ass at my first two jobs and never got raises to match so I walked into my current one with a different mindset. I do only what’s asked of me and nothing more unless I think it’ll fun. When it’s not, I tell them to talk to my boss to get it on my calendar. It’s so much easier to avoid mistakes when you’re not stressed out from overwork.

      It’s incredible. I wish I would have thought to do this 15 years ago.

    • QuarterSwede@lemmy.world
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      The issue with the do the bare minimum attitude is it’ll end up hurting you more than them.

      Do good work, be reliable, and take the time you’ve accrued/are given. This type of person is above average these days. Only incompetent managers have an issue with that.

      Apparently the WSJ is incompetent.

  • Anonymousllama@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Take every single day you’re entitled to. The days of working yourself to death so you get a pat on the back by the boss is well over. You come first

    • YⓄ乙 @aussie.zone
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      1 year ago

      Bro there’s still so many idiots at my workplace working their life away for a stupid card that says “best performer of the month”. I got no problem with that but the issue that I have is they make life hard for guys like me. I know and they know that they can’t afford a shitty 4 bedroom house so why the fuck slave so hard. I really don’t get it

      • JigglySackles@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Assuming America it’s because there is a pervasive mentality that the poor here are just temporarily embarrassed millionaires and that through their hard work, they will be restored to their millionaire status. It’s fucking disgusting that companies take advantage of this naivety and sad to see people falling for it. These people grind themselves to dust for a pittance and the reality of the situation rarely hits them.

  • penquin@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    LOL! Then don’t offer it. Let’s see who will work for you. Fuckers want to enslave people.

  • niktemadur@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Wall street is the psychotic, insatiable, dehumanizing tail that wags the dog, one petulant tantrum-a-minute to the next, and the next, and the next… perpetually.
    God forbid anyone in a corporate position of power try and do anything that isn’t indecent and corrosively myopic, else the stampeding Dow Jones zombies go on a goddamned short-selling rampage.

    But then people have been saying this for ages now, and still here we are.

    EDIT: added “insatiable”

    • Adalast@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I remember a story about a CEO who decided to pay ALL of his employees well. As I remember, all of his middle management left in a huff because they no longer had their higher earnings to hold over their subordinates and feel superior, all of his friends ostracized him and he essentially became a pariah.

      Yeah, Dan Price, just went to look it up. Apparently, he had to resign after some allegations against him, which turned out to be false. Something smells off about a man paying employees fairly suddenly getting trumped-up charges that never got properly investigated before being referred to the prosecutor’s office literally the day after he announces the pay stuff.

      https://fortune.com/2023/04/19/gravity-payments-dan-price-assault-charges-are-dropped/

      • ArbiterXero@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        He resigned because someone that has part ownership in the company sued him.

        The lawsuit was basically “you’re not acting in a way that is best for the shareholders”

        Or in other words “you’re paying the employees more and me less, so I’m mad at you for treating them well”

    • Number1SummerJam@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The stock market should be abolished entirely. The driving force behind big business and government decisions should be humanity, not money.

    • Maeve@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Interestingly enough, I just put forth the argument in another thread that dismantling the stock market would address a lot of systemic problems. I’m glad it’s not just my own thinking.

  • AeonFelis@lemmy.world
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    I know this couple who contracted COVID during the pandemic but refused to report it and take sick days. He - because his workplace was offering bonuses for employees who weren’t taking sick days (don’t remember if it was monthly or annually) and he didn’t want to miss on that. She - because she already took all her sick days as PTO, without actually being sick.

    I can’t help but wonder if that’s really what sick days are supposed to be…

    • Powerpoint@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      Perhaps Americans need to learn to call them wellness days and not place some arbitrarily low limit for amount of days on them. Ten or twelve to start a year seems reasonable. Americans are bizarre.

      • Misconduct@startrek.website
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        1 year ago

        The Americans that are in power here. Sure. Why do you guys insist on pretending that we approve of it? Unless you’ve personally gone out and solved at least one injustice in your country then you really can’t talk. Shit is hard and a lot of us are trying.

        • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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          Unless you’ve personally gone out and solved at least one injustice in your country then you really can’t talk.

          Lol because that’s how injustices ever get solved: by one guy.

          Man, I’m an American but this “you need to be a guy who personally solved government” take is so American it’s rolling coal in a F-150 with a tattered flag flying from it while blasting rounds from two ar-15s.

          • Misconduct@startrek.website
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            I mean… Isn’t that literally what they’re doing when they generalize all of us as being ok with this bullshit? The person I replied to. Yeah, it is. So why come at me if that really bothers you? Kinda hypocritical

            • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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              Isn’t that literally what they’re doing when they generalize all of us as being ok with this bullshit?

              No, not really. You not understanding the difference is also pretty American.

              In some other countries, the people actually do address problems with the laws and make reforms. One of the main reasons we cannot is because our country is run by oligarchs and/or kleptocrats.

              Having industry write government policy isn’t a universal, and shouldn’t be expected knowledge about a country that brands itself as a “democracy”. In fact, many of our own citizens don’t even know the reality of how this country runs.

              So, people outside of the American system don’t know how difficult it is for “the people” (as a group) to actually wield power within it, especially if they have bought any of our propaganda about us being #1 at democracy or whatever.

              They likely weren’t calling for some “rugged individual” / Superman character to fix the government. Such notions are laughable within some other countries. Instead, a lot of countries have successful protest, voting, and labor groups that help shape policy. The US just hasn’t meaningfully worked that way in a long time (though I’ve been pretty happy with recent developments in labor organization).

              • Misconduct@startrek.website
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                1 year ago

                I appreciate the insult right at the top there. Lets me just save time and move on after two sentences so thanks for that at least.

                • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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                  I don’t know what’s insulting about that but I’m glad I saved you a brain wrinkle. 🫡

                  Edit: I’d like someone to explain to me the online phenomenon whereby people who roll around being gruff assholes are also permitted by the audience to be pearl clutchers who faint at the slightest perceived insult two posts later.

        • Serinus@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Yes, but also setting the norm where it should be is something. We should expect these things. If your business is screwed because one employee calls off with an hour notice, you don’t have enough redundancy. And this isn’t just menial positions either. If Elon gets horribly sick, they postpone or have someone stand in for him. That should apply all the way down the company.

          You can save on labor in the short term. You’ll pay for it another way long term, either by losing overly stressed staff or by having someone too critical call in sick at a bad time.

          • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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            1 year ago

            You can save on labor in the short term. You’ll pay for it another way long term, either by losing overly stressed staff or by having someone too critical call in sick at a bad time.

            Or anything else. Perhaps they’re involved in a car accident and cannot get into work even if they’re not injured, perhaps someone critical dies unexpectedly, or they get head-hunted by another company and leave without giving you warning since they obviously don’t need the reference.

            So many bad things can happen when you only have a single point of failure. Companies will pay for multiple internet lines but refuse to hire additional staff. One of those things is not like the other.

          • Misconduct@startrek.website
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            That’s true except a lot of managers have zero power over how many people they’re allowed to hire. So, again, setting norms isn’t something that we can just do. As individuals, we’re hobbled by the wealthy/corporations/government (which are all the same thing at this point of we’re being real) at just about every turn. If they don’t like something they just pay lobbyists and it goes away. To the detriment of the average US citizen yet we still manage to get dunked on constantly as if we’re not getting dragged through the wringer. As if we’re just ok with everything.

            • Serinus@lemmy.world
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              You’re taking this too personally. Setting norms isn’t something done by a manager and is absolutely just public perception. Happens in middle school constantly. Kids come in with a new, unusual haircut. First kid in earshot brands it as cool or lame. The norm is set.

              This isn’t much more than saying American PTO policies are shit. That’s not an attack on you. It’s an attack on people who are okay with the status quo.

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        What the he’ll are people doing that they get sick so often? I’ve used 3 in the last 8 years and one of those was a funeral. Granted I can work from home when I have a cold or whatever but I have coworkers who seem like they’re out every other week.

        • ellabee@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          congratulations, your immune system doesn’t suck.

          between migraines and colds, I’m down to just 1 sick day left. that’s despite wearing a mask, washing my hands, etc. the last cold just laid me out for a week. migraines (which at less than 3 a year are too rare for the Dr to give me meds) come with visual sparkles that make working on a computer pretty impossible. most cold meds also make me incredibly sleepy, so I can try to work through it - or I can sleep and get better faster. this was a bad year. last year I barely needed sick days, hopefully next year will be more like last year. Masks help. work from home, avoiding the public, helps. but my immune system is just kinda crap, so I just work through what I can, and call in sick when I can’t.

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      He - because his workplace was offering bonuses for employees who weren’t taking sick days

      Good god is that illegal in Europe. Employees are entitled to sick pay if they’re sick, if no reason other than to ensure they don’t come into the office and get everyone else ill as well. Also employees are actually required to take holiday pay, last year I got called into a meeting and got told I had to take more holidays because I wasn’t taking enough.

      She - because she already took all her sick days as PTO, without actually being sick.

      Again illegal in Europe, PTO and sick pay are independent of each other. There’s no limit on the number of sick days you can have, although if you go beyond a certain number you do require a doctor’s note, but as long as you have that you’re golden. In theory this is abusable, but because everyone gets PTO anyway, and actually get a decent number of days, there isn’t really the incentive to do that.

      It’s bizarre the way the United States operates.

      • hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Employees are entitled to sick pay if they’re sick, if no reason other than to ensure they don’t come into the office and get everyone else ill as well.

        Two jobs ago (in the States) my employer was extremely stingy with any paid time away from work.

        I got six days. Total. (Not counting holidays.)

        Six days for any and all purposes that one might need to not be in the office.

        They even had the gall to say they offered sick days, “because you can use your PTO to stay home when you’re sick”.

        Fuck that.

        I came to work no matter how sick I was. I knew exactly how much I made in a day, and as soon as my boss or anyone else would complain about how I shouldn’t be there, I’d ask them if they were willing to pay me my daily wage to go home. Because I only got six days, so fuck me if I was going to use any of them for anything other than my own enjoyment. If I was sick, I was miserable and less productive anyway, might as well get paid for that, and not burn any of my precious PTO.

        On one occasion, I was so sick my boss actually agreed to send me home and pay the rest of my day without taking PTO…but of course the stingy bastard couldn’t just give people more sick days.

      • uis@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Also employees are actually required to take holiday pay, last year I got called into a meeting and got told I had to take more holidays because I wasn’t taking enough.

        Huh. Similar thing in post-Soviet with vacations. If you are not taking vacations for too long, employer will get nervous, if you are not taking vacations for two years, employer required to send you to vacation no matter what.

        Also what is holiday pay? Quick search says that it is extra pay for working during holidays. Well, here holidays are non-working days, so working during them counts as overtime.

        • The_v@lemmy.world
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          Overtime is 1.5x the hourly wage in the U.S. This is federal law.

          Holiday pay is usually 2-2.5x the hourly wage if the company requires people to work on set holidays. If it’s a day off, then it’s paid as PTO. This is not required by federal law but some states have requirements.

          Shitty companies that view employees as costs, don’t pay Holiday pay. Around 20% of the workforce.

          Good companies that view employees as assets have policies to keep employees. Like my companies most recent e-mail about the holiday schedule.

          We will be closed from December 25th to January 1st. This is considered holiday pay and will not be deducted from your PTO.

          Fo some reason have zero issues with recruiting good staff and keeping them.

          • Gestrid@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            Huh. I always assumed holiday pay was also 1.5x. I haven’t had many chances to earn it. I’m pretty sure it was at my last job. I haven’t found out about my current job yet.

            • ultracritical@lemmy.world
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              In the US for every employer I’ve seen, holiday pay is usually 8 hours of straight time (assuming you have an 8 hour shift) plus 1.5x for the hours you worked. So if you worked your normal 8 hour shift you get 2.5x pay. But it’s not. If you worked less then 8 you get 8 hours straight plus 1.5x the hours you worked. It’s also common that if you worked 40 hours before the holiday that straight time becomes overtime. Usually only applies to Thanksgiving/black friday. And occasionally Christmas when it falls towards the end of the week.

              Needless to say this varies among employers. If you have a union you likely get double or even triple time for hours worked on a holiday, but likely still the same straight time pay for the day itself. Legally the company doesn’t have to pay anything extra for holidays for time not worked.

          • uis@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Here regular overtime is at least 1.5x for under 2 hours, 2x for over.

            Holiday time paid at least 2x or 1x if employee chooses to add day to PTO(which in practice I never heard anyone did).

            Both are in federal law too.

        • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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          1 year ago

          Also what is holiday pay?

          It’s literally you just being paid even though you’re not working. Employers are required to do it in Europe. The pay is the same rate as if you were working but it’s got a different name for tax purposes so companies can differentiate between employees being compensated for working and employees just being paid to be off.

          Also you have what are called “unsociable working hours compensation” Which means nights, and weekends. And “unsociable working dates compensation” which means national holidays.

          Unsociable working hours is usually 1.5x base rate, and unsocial working dates is 2x base rate. So a night shift over the Christmas period would be both so it would be 2.5x base rate. So in other words if you work for 1 hour, you get paid as if you’d worked 2 hours 30 minutes.

          The United States operates a different system and companies can get out of it sometimes which isn’t really possible in Europe.

      • Asafum@feddit.nl
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        My coworker refuses to “waste” any days he has unless they’re for a vacation… This selfish p.o.s has gotten me sick 3 times in the last year alone, one of the times I missed Christmas with my family because of him… So I have to waste my time so that he can have more paid vacations…

        • ForgottenWorkshop@lemmy.world
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          You should recontextualize that for them: “when you come in sick, you are reaching in to my wallet and taking the money I should be owed, and may need, for stuff like ‘oops my entire gallbladder needs to be taken out or else I’ll die’. All because you want to be teacher’s pet: you should be handing money out like its candy (through cashapp or venmo or whatever) when you come in sick, because that’s only fair, and paying the company money from all the productivity lost by making everyone else sick. If you don’t have that money to hand out, maybe you shouldn’t be coming in sick.”

          Or, y’know, if they’re so gung-ho about everyone having shared misery: maybe it’s time to advocate for a union.

          • Asafum@feddit.nl
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            That would work on someone who gave a shit. This guy cares only about #1. He laughs about the times he was thrown in prison in Guatemala for telling his superiors to fuck off when they asked him to do his job when he was in their military lol

            • ForgottenWorkshop@lemmy.world
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              Sounds like it’s time to form a union with everybody else to force him to stop endangering everybody else’s wallet then lol

  • BeautifulMind ♾️@lemmy.world
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    The whole reason sick days are a thing is that giving employees paid sick time costs you less when they don’t come in and make other employees sick. If enough people get sick in a given org, that has a way of really impacting everything about a workplace, it really is cheaper if they stay home until they’re not contagious.

    The worst part of this situation, to me: that anyone is pressing for sick leave to be tightly audited, or seeking to frame its use as a sort of graft or taking from the employer, or a pretext for preemptively firing employees deemed guilty of being too sick. This kind of talk creates pressure for employees to come to work sick in order to avoid being seen as slackers or thieves, and that in turn (especially in an environment full of flu and covid variants, doubly so on the heels of a fucking pandemic so we should all know better by now) defeats the point of having sick days in the first place.

    • ThǝLobotoʍi$T@lemmy.world
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      The whole reason sick days are a thing is that giving employees paid sick time costs you less when they don’t come in and make other employees sick.

      This only applies to infectious disease

      • SnowBunting
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        1 year ago

        Or a really bad day. Like unbearable pain, or a massive head ache. It’s better if people take the time off and recover because they work better and make fewer mistakes. Nothing sucks more then to redo work.

        • ThǝLobotoʍi$T@lemmy.world
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          I was talking about the fact that pain is not contagious … Of course pain is a valid reason to stay at home!

          My reasoning was that the risk of spreading the disease can’t be the only reason for companies to let you not go to work because it only applies to infectious diseases!

          I think the majority of people misunderstood my comment

  • nufanman21@lemmy.world
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    Typical “back in my day” garbage. Why would you even want people to come in and spread their sickness? Wouldn’t that cause even more lost production time?

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        Regardless of whether they are present or not, if their productivity is down the drain because they can’t focus or are in pain, inefficiency rises, output and profits fall.

  • Snapz@lemmy.world
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    Why do we even hold up the charade of calling WSJ by name when it’s obviously just fox news (in ownership and content) with the lightest of filters for outright insanity?

    • Serinus@lemmy.world
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      I’ve noticed anything labeled “business” or “finance” or “money” is just as ridiculous, if not more. They really are drinking each other’s piss and thinking it’s Kool-Aid.

      • Zeozulu@lemmy.world
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        The real fucked up part is to them it IS Kool-aid, and they know it tastes like piss to the rest of us. They don’t care.

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    I’m baffled that people are able to see their doctor quickly enough to get a note for proof that they were sick and need time off.

    Where are these easily accessible doctors?

    • Karyoplasma@discuss.tchncs.de
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      In Germany, you just go to any physician and tell the receptionist, you need a day off. The vast majority don’t ask questions. And if they do, you say you got a stomach bug.

      • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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        I’m pretty sure that’s not right, they cannot require a doctor’s note unless it’s over a certain number of days off. If it’s just the one day it’s unreasonable to require a note.

        As long as there is no consistent pattern of absences they should just accept that you are ill and leave it at that, (although if they’re feeling particularly petty, they can insist on a return to work interview). They are absolutely not supposed to ask for a doctor’s note for a single day off because it’s an enormous waste of everyone’s time, and of course if you are ill, you shouldn’t be moving around trying to get a doctor’s note.

        • matter@lemmy.world
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          It’s unreasonable to ask a doctor’s note for one day, and the cultural standard is not to, but it is legal in Germany to ask for one even for one day.

          • catsan@feddit.de
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            In pretty much all the lower paying jobs you have to, because they cultivate basically American standards of suspecting any worker is just lazy.

    • i_dont_want_to@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      I use urgent care for this, because my GP is impossible to get an appointment with quickly. I wait maybe an hour to get seen and get a note, and medication if necessary.

      In the United States.

    • datelmd5sum@lemmy.world
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      We have an app to our occupational health care provider and you just basically slide a DM to a doc if you need a note (3 days or more of sick leave iirc).

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    My work recently changed their policy, we get 48 hours sick time a year. If you use it it’s counted as an occurrence against you. Three occurrences in a rolling year and you’re put on disciplinary action.

    Here’s your new benefit …but you better not use it.

    You can’t make shit like that up.

    • Woht24@lemmy.world
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      Man, it makes me sad when I hear shit like this. Guessing you’re from the US?

      • ComradeWeebelo@lemm.ee
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        That’s probably not something they’d be willing to share with you until you’re hired, similar to salary I’m guessing.

        • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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          What? Are you saying that people aren’t informed of their salary or benefits package until they’re actually hired?

          A lot of jobs these days will actually list compensation packages on the job descriptions.

  • Eddie Trax@dmv.social
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    American here. Have unlimited PTO. It’s definitely not the norm but it does exist. I came from a company with only 2 weeks paid time off (total).

    • Princeali311@lemm.ee
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      Unlimited PTO is a curse. All it does is scare you into not* actually using it (especially in my line of work where you have a billable hour requirement and every day you take off is just one less day you have to hit your goal).

      • Eddie Trax@dmv.social
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        I hear you and everyone who has said the same thing. But that’s just not the case with me or anyone at my company. My boss just came back from a month long vacation. I’ve already taken 3 weeks and plan to take plenty more. We’re asked to deliver on our projects and we get stuff done. I’m not afraid of taking advantage of what’s promised to me which is outlined in the contract I signed. Again, your miles may vary.

        • Princeali311@lemm.ee
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          For us, if we’re on vacation we won’t get staffed on new matters so coming back from vacation, we’re essentially spending 2-3 days either trying to get back into the matters we had to let go to go on vacation or searching for new matters. Or alternatively, we work on vacation to not miss a beat. It’s not ideal haha.

    • 4lan@lemmy.world
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      You represent an extremely small portion of this country.

      Most people have to still go to work sick, spreading diseases and wearing their body down at the same time

      Your stock values depend on it.

    • hedgehog@ttrpg.network
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      How much PTO do you and your coworkers actually take? Most of my friends and former coworkers I’ve known with unlimited PTO end up taking less than I do.

      For comparison, I am also American and don’t have unlimited PTO, but this year I’ll be taking off a total of 7 weeks, not including sick time or holidays, though two of those weeks are company chosen. My sick time is in a separate bucket and is something like 15-25 days per year.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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      Yep. I have 2 weeks PTO and one of those 2 weeks has to be used all together so you have a week off. That’s the only way you can use one of those 2 weeks of PTO. 40 anytime hours and 40 hours you have to take all together. It’s fucking stupid.