So, I hope this isn't too off topic for the sub, but you guys seem to know a lot about labor laws and employee empowerment so I thought I'd ask here. I'm a landscape designer, basically all I do is draw on my iPad and create nice little illustrations that depict the species and arrangement, etc. to help close the deal on a landscaping job. I do a lot of work from home to try and meet deadlines. I am very new, and so the first week I really wasn't going to push it about getting every single hour, as I didn't wanna risk pissing my boss off and most of it was experimentation and playing around on the iPad, figuring out the process. But now, I find I'm still doing a lot of work from home (about 5 hours most weeks). I got COVID a while back and worked…
throw away account bc my boss is on reddit. turns into kind of a rant at the end. i just needed to vent because i haven't been having a good year so far. Whenever this conversation comes up at work or anywhere really, people always say “it's only 8 hours” or “just stay another hour, its more money” Let me explain something to everyone. I wake up and i spend 35 minutes to get ready for work. I clear the snow off my car and warm it up for 5 minutes. I spend 35 minutes to go to work and sit in the parking lot for 10 minutes so im not late or too early. I clock in, and start working for 9 hours, but i punch out for my 30 minute break so really 9 hours and 30 minutes. i finish and let me car warm up for 5…
It's the root to so many of our problems, especially work conditions. Our labor laws have quietly and successfully been completely altered to the working classes disadvantage. This is of course amongst the legislative fields and in the courtrooms and firms that practice law. Monetary incentives are a discourse that lead to laws that work to societies disadvantage.
You get what you pay for
I work as a banker in a branch. In November my drawer was short close to $1000 and my manager said he has to call HR and 3 days later he had me sign performance improvement plan for failing to scan some documents probably which was true but didn't say anything about me giving out $1000 extra on the teller line and those improper scanning happened long time ago, but no one said anything to me until that day. He knew that I was scheduled for a medical leave in 2 weeks, so I left, came back and today (in February) he asked me to sign a final performance improvement plan for being short on the teller line. I said it doesn't look right and I need to think before signing it. Because it seems very odd that he waited 3 months to give me another warning, he could've done…
I used to work as a Deliver Driver/Installer for an AV company. Many times I had to do over time to complete jobs. As a verbal agreement with my boss she said “We don't pay overtime but you can have time in lieu and use it whenever you want as long there are no jobs on”. I agree, I didn't have a problem with it. About 3-4 months later, I had put in place for me to have 3 days over (We'd, Thur and Fri) because I had roughly 30 plus hours of time i lieu and there was no work. When the boss found out she immediacy pulled me in her office and said I couldn't have the time off. I said “well it's my time In lieu”. She turned and said “You don't get to choose when you take the time off”. I replied “Fine, I won't take…
Loyalty will get you nowhere
For over 24 years I have always been told from my plant manager as a company, would rather promote from within, yet they consistently continue hire outside the company. Also having been personally told “we don’t just hand out positions. Everyone has to apply and go through the application process”, which was also not true on many occasions in the last 5 years alone. The hardest decision I have ever had to respect is the fact that I was personally groomed over 2 years for a supervisor role, which was not only handed to someone else but then having me personally transition said replacement into that role and now one year later someone who has zero no knowledge of the department has been selected as his replacement when he takes time off. All of this has made it increasingly difficult to feel I’m contributing enough or my input is even…
Is it ethical to lie on your resume?
I see some people here saying to do it, but doesn’t that just edge out the honest people?
1 less chain in the wheel
I’m telling my employer tomorrow that I will not be returning to work for them. Or for anyone else for that matter. Be the change you wish to see in the world! That is all! Wooooooooooooo