I am not going to name names, even if you have wild horses drag me, or tickle the bottom of my feet, but I am wondering if others have run into similar unusual employment practices as the following.
This is from an employer of seasonal, full-time employees.
First, at the end of the employment season, employees are required to be available for 7 more days even though they are not scheduled to work. Several employees were reprimanded this year for not being available, even though they told one or more of their supervisors that they would not be available one or some of the days, and were excused, the Supervisors saying it was no problem.
Each year each employee has a rehire interview. At the interview, held on a day the employee is not scheduled to work and does not get paid, they are to request the days they want off for the entire upcoming year. If there are days they want off, they have to sign an agreement that they are not guaranteed those days off, that their acceptance of employment is not conditioned on getting those days off. They will not know the final decision as to whether they get the days off as late as the day before the first day requested off.
The assumption is that if an employee requires days off as a condition of employment, that they will not be rehired. So, the only way they will be rehired is by agreeing that there is no guarantee they will get days off.
Is it not clear if an employee will get a day off if the reason is to attend their own funeral.
This is from an employer of seasonal, full-time employees.
First, at the end of the employment season, employees are required to be available for 7 more days even though they are not scheduled to work. Several employees were reprimanded this year for not being available, even though they told one or more of their supervisors that they would not be available one or some of the days, and were excused, the Supervisors saying it was no problem.
Each year each employee has a rehire interview. At the interview, held on a day the employee is not scheduled to work and does not get paid, they are to request the days they want off for the entire upcoming year. If there are days they want off, they have to sign an agreement that they are not guaranteed those days off, that their acceptance of employment is not conditioned on getting those days off. They will not know the final decision as to whether they get the days off as late as the day before the first day requested off.
The assumption is that if an employee requires days off as a condition of employment, that they will not be rehired. So, the only way they will be rehired is by agreeing that there is no guarantee they will get days off.
Is it not clear if an employee will get a day off if the reason is to attend their own funeral.
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