So we all know Peloton gave its 2800 laid off employees a year of Peloton membership as part of their severance, but does anyone know what the complete package contained?
Should I stay or should I go?
Been at this company five years. Lead the department I am in an make $18/hr. Started at $14. Working as a painter using automotive paints, but it doesn't have anything to do with cars, just plain old manufacturing. The thing with painting is that there are many compatibility issues with various products, which means what works at this place isn't necessarily going to work at other places. As it stands now, I am the only employee who knows all the ins and outs of our process. Even bringing in another skilled painter would mean they would need training on a number of things. The good: Flexible with hours, just need to put in the minimum of 32 hours. As long as you get your workload done you're good to go. They are very safety conscious, buy the best of the best in order to diminish the health risks, though you…
Pushy recruiters?
Anyone else work in a field were the recruiters are pushy as all hell, and think you’re automatically going to work for them just because you listened to their pitch? Had one today, first interview & they were trying to schedule my preemployment drug test. Like, bud, I just heard you out to see what you’re offering. I didn’t agree to anything. I do like more money, but for fucks sake, I have no urge to work there if you just assume I’m going to take the job. For reference: I’m an experienced truck driver, and these companies still think it’s a privilege to work for them. This is an industry where I can quit one carrier, and be on the road with another in under 5 days. I can be selective as all hell. Plus, the recruiter today thought $0.49/mile was great money (I make $0.65/mile with a $0.10/mile…
Saw a post just now about this Have any of you considered that maybe… just maybe… if our doctors weren't worked to the bone then it could be reasonable? Likewise with any high paying job, it could be split among more people who are paid a reasonable sum. Stop justifying economic exploitation with forced overworking
Am I the a** hole antiwork edition?
So, I currently work for a school district and have been there for about 5 months. Unfortunately, I contracted Covid last month and had to be out of the office. On January 19 I got tested and it turned out positive so I followed protocol and let my boss know. They sent it up the chain and because I started showing symptoms on January 16 they did the 5 day quarantine rule from the day symptoms started vs when I was diagnosed and informed me that I was to report to work on January 24. My son also goes to the same school district I work in and he also had Covid. (lucky us) However for the kids the quarantine time is longer and they mandated he stay home until January 27. As you can already tell this makes absolutely no sense. Any who my boss was like you can…
Starting on the 15th the workload will decrease along with my hours until the account they're losing is gone for good first week of March. I feel like my time would be better spent throwing it into a job search rather than all the wasted time commuting, etc.
Reporting your shitty boss and poor working conditions is probably not going to work unless your case is going to make a lawyer money. It might even be a waste of time. If any of the protection or regulation agencies cared they would be looking to make contact with people to go after these shitty employers. A strike will be the only tool to make any difference. Dont sign write ups, get everything in writing, discuss your wages, call out abusive behavior, help each other find better jobs, and organize.
What does this mean? What do I do?
I got a job offer at $20/hr ($21 after 90 days) and I told the guy that I had another offer for $50k annually and I needed some time to think. He said to “give him a chance” before I make any decisions, kinda like let him see what he can do. What tf does he mean by that? Like he could maybe pay more? How do I leverage this?
My job is emotionally and physically draining. It’s seriously affecting my quality of life. I’m constantly on call.. answering my phone and going into the office after hours (even days I’m not supposed to be on call). I’ve been wanting to quit for months but had no luck finding a replacement. I finally reached my breaking point I need to quit now for the sake of my health. I have epilepsy and stress/lack of sleep can trigger seizures. Also, being pregnant.. Not only is the stress bad for the baby but I’ve been doing heavy lifting due to picking up slack from staff shortages. Well considering I’m due in August, I’m scared no one will hire me and even if I did get a new job I won’t get paid maternity leave. I can’t afford 6-8 weeks without income. I’ve never felt so stuck. I don’t know if my body…
No security? Fine, I’ll leave
I work in a bowling alley. Our last manager, for some reason, decided to get rid of the security guards. Sure, it was only one person a week (on Sundays), but at least it was something. And I'm sure they could always contact the company if they need security on another day of the week (preferably every day, but that's just my opinion). Recently, we've had a group of maybe 10-15 late teens/early 20s misbehaving. They keep taking the basketballs from one of the games, and lobbing them around (and at each other). A few days ago, they were playing dodgeball with them in the main reception area. They did something similar today, but much less extreme. It still sent me into a panic attack. Our current manager says he's working on getting a security guard. I'll be completely honest: I don't feel safe. Although I drive home, I still…