Anonymous wrote:My CEO hates WFH with a passion.
His policy is now.
100 percent in office.
No Flex Time to hours worked.
No laptops
No email on phone.
Swipe out at lunch and back in if leave building
Runs weekly reports on time in office he reviews and will write you up
Doctors appointments or stuff need to take off.
He then to my shock decided code 99 percent of employees as hourly with a 40 hour work week. Work 7 hours 45 minutes you get docked 15 minutes pay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine has been just as strict since fall 2021.
100% in person
Set hours, no flexibility to leave early/stay late
If you’re more than 5 minutes late you get docked leave (can only take in one hour increments)
One coworker took her lunch at a different time than assigned and got docked an hour of leave
All leave requests must have doctors note
No overtime
So in the situation where the coworker was docked an hour of leave for lunch, but she still worked her 8 hours, how was that treated if there’s no overtime? She worked an hour she just didn’t get paid for? That’s not how this works under the law.
Anonymous wrote:Exemp be no exempt isn’t something that is “just decided.” There are rules governing whether an employee is classed as hourly or not. Anyway, sounds miserable. What keeps you there?
Anonymous wrote:My CEO hates WFH with a passion.
His policy is now.
100 percent in office.
No Flex Time to hours worked.
No laptops
No email on phone.
Swipe out at lunch and back in if leave building
Runs weekly reports on time in office he reviews and will write you up
Doctors appointments or stuff need to take off.
He then to my shock decided code 99 percent of employees as hourly with a 40 hour work week. Work 7 hours 45 minutes you get docked 15 minutes pay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine has been just as strict since fall 2021.
100% in person
Set hours, no flexibility to leave early/stay late
If you’re more than 5 minutes late you get docked leave (can only take in one hour increments)
One coworker took her lunch at a different time than assigned and got docked an hour of leave
All leave requests must have doctors note
No overtime
So in the situation where the coworker was docked an hour of leave for lunch, but she still worked her 8 hours, how was that treated if there’s no overtime? She worked an hour she just didn’t get paid for? That’s not how this works under the law.
Anonymous wrote:Mine has been just as strict since fall 2021.
100% in person
Set hours, no flexibility to leave early/stay late
If you’re more than 5 minutes late you get docked leave (can only take in one hour increments)
One coworker took her lunch at a different time than assigned and got docked an hour of leave
All leave requests must have doctors note
No overtime