Like the title says, I work for a tiny business in Denver, Colorado. Can’t name&shame cause I currently need this job and it’s small enough they’d know exactly who posted this immediately. Anyway, my boss consistently makes antisemitic remarks at work (ex. calling a Jewish colleague a hypocrite for enforcing mask mandates, comparing mask mandates to the Holocaust, accusing a client of lying about being in dire financial straits because “he’s a Jewish guy in New York, he’s got money,” etc). I’m not personally Jewish, but it still bothers me a lot and I’m not sure what options I may have to do something about it. It’s a family business so HR is a joke, and going to higher management also wouldn’t work because they’ve known each other since before they started the company together. Should I just quit? His attitude bothers me so much.
Is this a unicorn boss?
So i joined a new company not long ago, fairly small and in the tech industry. My boss’s hard rules + what he has done recently. No working more than 8 hours Don’t email customers after hours If you need a break go take a break All mileage for cars if visiting client is paid for no questions asked Went to bat for our team when client was being rude, told them if he ever got in anyone’s face ever again, not only won’t the project be done but there will be consequences. Approves all vacation days 0 micromanagement I have been sick a few times, always says “your health is your number 1 priority, don’t need to ask anyone, if you need rest, you need rest.” 15% salary increase right after probation finished If i even actively try to work more than needed or occasional weekend from my own…
After speaking to a number of current and former Bank of America employees I’ve pieced together the following: Employees who quit over a year ago were automatically paid for their unused vacation time. Employees who left within the last 6+ months were not paid for unused vacation or sick time. BofA’s HR department says they do not withhold your unused vacation and sick pay, but you must file specific requests to get paid for those unused hours. They appear to have taken the stance that if you don’t specifically request YOUR MONEY you must not want it so it’s ok for them to just keep it. What’s worse is a lot of the current managers do not know this! They don’t know so they don’t communicate this requirement to employees who are leaving. No doubt the bank is keeping thousands upon thousands of dollars that their former employees are entitled…
As the title says we should create that to shine light on the gaps in pay and reveal the crappy things businesses do.
I'm from Hungary, so it may not apply to all countries. I'm 31, I have learned software development. Yet, I barely worked in the field. In my country there's also a supposed lack of workforce in that field. How could this all be possible? Even weirder that the IT coop did take me in almost immediately. Currently it's more of a time sink with occasional money, but it's pretty much the only way I can get a decent income and get out of Hungary's own poorhouse program of communal work (which means I do minimum wage job below minimum wage, because “it's so easy”). Then I remembered that when I got to a job interview I failed when I needed to speak. I'm on an infamously bad medicine (Convulex, sold under the name Depakene in the US), and it causes me to stutter and have to think for words from…
Oddly concerned and need some advice
So, I have been working at a company for almost 4 months. They offered me well above my requested starting salary. Now, after several raises I'm making nearly twice what I wanted as a starting salary. I looked online at national averages and I'm making higher than those, not by an excessive amount, but by about 10%. I'm mostly happy about my work. Yes there are a few things that annoy me,but that's true for anything. Nothing is perfect, and the things I don't like aren't nearly as big as the things I love. They keep giving me different small bonuses as well, such as gift cards to restaurants and AMEX gift cards. They really give great work/life balance as well. Like, I'm really happy at my job. Is something wrong here? Every job I've ever worked at before this has been a total dumpster fire of a company. I…
South Dakota is projected to have the seventh-highest nurse shortage in the U.S. by 2030. Nurses say better wages, education and Medicaid expansion can help solve the problem. https://t.co/LY8R3UbMZf pic.twitter.com/qz66ToTauh— ArgusLeader911 (@Argus911) February 17, 2022