The government said the Fair Wages Commission was also working on the third and final part of its mandate — to examine the gap between living wages and the minimum wage in B.C. They are going to increase the minimum wage and are looking at tying it to inflation. Which is sort of bullshit since who cares if not enough money is tied to inflation but still isn't enough?
s this even legal? Here's the email they sent me (with PII redacted): https://postimg.cc/PNBKpzqc This company has always yanked me around, so this almost doesn't surprise me. For context: my final day with them was Sept. 15, 2021. I filled in my online timesheets perfectly accurately, but I continued to get emails from them requesting that I fill in my timesheets. Even though I had logged every last hour I worked (no more, no less), they insisted I fill in the dates that made up the remainder of that pay period as unpaid time off. OK, fine—I logged back into my timesheet, and filled in the rest of that week as time away. Since zero hours were logged for those days, there's no way I can imagine them paying me for them. Does this company have any legal recourse? If I respond (in order to avoid implicitly agreeing with this…
I feel like the number of people who want to be content creators has risen dramatically over the past 5-10 years. Particularly for Gen Z and Younger Milennials born around 1995 or later. I wonder what impact this will have on how Gen Z and what they decide to do with their lives. It definitely feels like more and more people are definitely trying to escape from the Corporate 9-5 Grind though in any way they can.
In the past, I've always found another job first and then given my 2 week notice, but at my current job – I have a great relationship with my boss. She really tries to tell me how much she appreciates me and my work as often as she can, but I need to find something that pays more and is a little more fast paced. I'm in the very early stages of applying elsewhere and am not in a huge rush to leave this company until the right role comes around, but I also feel like should I even let my boss know I'm looking elsewhere? I fear she might feel betrayed/blindsided if I just put my notice in.
My work definitely corners me when it comes to coverage. In fairness I sometimes need coverage too but I always find myself covering beginnings / endings of shifts that end up being 10 hours, instead of my boss calling in a sub. I cover for my boss who is a manager and gets paid a manager’s wage but I don’t get paid more for that shift when I cover for it (with subs covering for me so it’s usually kind of a shit show). I’m always the first one they ask and it feels like they ask because they assume I’m just able to do whatever, whenever. For personal reasons I cannot leave this job right now and so I want to ask for a raise. In March it’ll have been a year and they know I’ll be with them for another year at least – what’s an appropriate/commanding way…
Doing too much
It’s wild to me how so many employers expect you to do things outside your job description. Like another person’s full time job. I’m the second newest employee at my company and I’m being trained on someone’s position in addition to my own so I can cover them when Theyre out. (Yet nobody could cover me when I was out months ago for a couple of doc appts and I got a talking to about missing work). I understand the employer wants to get more bang for his buck but at the same time, my job description and contract don’t cover that. Shouldn’t employers pony up more money to have us do more work than what was agreed upon? Is that a wild thought in todays world?!
Need help for my meeting tomorrow
I’m 22f in California So, I’ve been with my company since the end of august. When I was hired, I was offered $18/hr (later learned that was the lowest end of our pay scale for my position) and I was the only full time team member in my position. I live really far from work and my commute is easily 50+ miles one way. We get paid miles as well as hourly on our drive time. Because of this, I was doing alright because I was able to accrue some decent OT with my commute. My job is similar to a traveling salesperson in that I travel to different locations where my companies product is sold and promote it for a couple hours. It’s been known that my commute was a point of contention for our director and payroll dept. they’ve been pestering me asking when I’ll be able to…
Apologies if this doesn’t belong in this sub! In my contract it states all the public holidays that I get to have off from work and Presidents Day is one of them, but my boss just told me I have to work Monday anyway. Can I show them the contract and tell them I’ll be taking the day off or is it ridiculous for me to even bring up at all?
I’m aware of lots of the red flags that would make me turn and run from a company. If they don’t post salary, interview is basically gauging how subservient you are etc… What are some things I should look for that would indicate a company is actually worth me giving my time to?
Hello! So I asked a similar question in another sub but I feel like I need various perspectives. The thing is that the place I'm at, I agreed to do an internship (required for graduation) and I made a deal with them to work there for 3 months, with the hopes to be officially hired after, but right now they are telling me that I agreed for 4 months, and so I would have to work for another month with the same low pay, and I don't know what to do. I didn't sign any contract and so there's no evidence of the number of months I agreed to. I don't know what to do now since I feel like I'm being taken advantage of, since a friend who started months before had been offered 3 months in the same deal. Another thing to mention is that it seems that…