Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. It is for the regular hours and not overtime or comptime. The employee is either arriving late, leaving early or not present at his desk in case someone come looking for him. Surprisingly, his timesheet is always all regular working hours with no LA or LV.
Is the employee getting their work done? And if people come looking for the employee and he/she is not there, how about an email: "I came looking for you, but you weren't at your desk. Please call when you get this so I can give you the next assignment."
You're making this more complicated than it needs to be. If there's a performance issue, address that. Otherwise, stop keeping track of other people's hours and worry about yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. It is for the regular hours and not overtime or comptime. The employee is either arriving late, leaving early or not present at his desk in case someone come looking for him. Surprisingly, his timesheet is always all regular working hours with no LA or LV.
Is the employee getting their work done? And if people come looking for the employee and he/she is not there, how about an email: "I came looking for you, but you weren't at your desk. Please call when you get this so I can give you the next assignment."
You're making this more complicated than it needs to be. If there's a performance issue, address that. Otherwise, stop keeping track of other people's hours and worry about yourself.
This is literally something that Fed supervisors are required to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. It is for the regular hours and not overtime or comptime. The employee is either arriving late, leaving early or not present at his desk in case someone come looking for him. Surprisingly, his timesheet is always all regular working hours with no LA or LV.
Is the employee getting their work done? And if people come looking for the employee and he/she is not there, how about an email: "I came looking for you, but you weren't at your desk. Please call when you get this so I can give you the next assignment."
You're making this more complicated than it needs to be. If there's a performance issue, address that. Otherwise, stop keeping track of other people's hours and worry about yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. It is for the regular hours and not overtime or comptime. The employee is either arriving late, leaving early or not present at his desk in case someone come looking for him. Surprisingly, his timesheet is always all regular working hours with no LA or LV.
Is the employee getting their work done? And if people come looking for the employee and he/she is not there, how about an email: "I came looking for you, but you weren't at your desk. Please call when you get this so I can give you the next assignment."
You're making this more complicated than it needs to be. If there's a performance issue, address that. Otherwise, stop keeping track of other people's hours and worry about yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. It is for the regular hours and not overtime or comptime. The employee is either arriving late, leaving early or not present at his desk in case someone come looking for him. Surprisingly, his timesheet is always all regular working hours with no LA or LV.
Anonymous wrote:I have an employee at my agency that is adding extra hours that he works. Before I reach out to HR, is there a limit on the number of days we can go back to audit his timesheet?