This whole “companies not paying their employees enough to give a shit” is really starting to piss me the fuck off. I currently live in an apartment complex, and I need to renew my lease by April 6th to avoid going month to month. If I go month to month my rent will go from 1750 to 2400. I have been going back and forth with management about it for the last 3 ish weeks now. The issue I'm having is that the head property manager recently quit because she wasn't being treated well by the company. Like, I'd go in to her office for assistance such as maintenance or whatever and there's was an instance where she was literally working with pneumonia, because they wouldn't let her take the day off. She was making $18/hr as a property manager. Etc. She was being treated BAD. I'm proud of her…
Month: March 2023
My resignation is not approved
My resignation is not approved by our bosses (not HR), because I was told my resignation has to be approved before passing it to the HR. I have felt burnt out and have been hospitalized because of work for only $400 a month (I'm in a 3rd world country), it is so difficult to find a job but I'd rather be jobless than cost my mental health. Any advice?
That’s how it’s done
https://preview.redd.it/qqciezilnooa1.png?width=1242&format=png&auto=webp&v=enabled&s=a8408d87129d828d552b505160a936addac79cbb
This can be generalized to the food industry as a whole, possibly: circumstantial evidence but there's a meme divided between “front of the house” and “back in the kitchen” and it shows the front as vaping and drinking stylish coffee drinks while the kitchen smokes cigarettes and pounds Monsters/et. al. Anyway, this is my reasoning: Especially on the lower end of the spectrum, people can handle being social just enough to do a job like McD's, where malicious noncompliance is not necessarily disciplined, and where nonmalicious noncompliance is common anyway on all levels. But still, they will be shunted into the kitchen, perhaps in a supervisory role. There used to be more of a stigma associated with McD's employment, like there was something wrong with you if you worked there (at best, if you were a student, it was just a curious time of your life working for the Empire,…
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Politicians be like
can my manager ask me to do this?
This is in the UK, England. I work a retail job and I have 93 hours of PTO/holiday that I can use between April 2023 – March 2024. I put in all my requests for that time period and the manager rejected two days I requested off (November 24th and November 25th) because she says I need to keep some holiday for after Christmas, so the time between January – March. But I don't want to do that. I'm fine with not having any PTO/holiday for those three months. Should I tell her I definitely want those days off and I don't mind having no holiday for the rest of the months? Or is there some rule saying that employees in the UK can't go a certain time without having holiday/PTO?