Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sick days are easier to deal with often, because there will be large blocks of time where the sick child is resting, allowing me to work. Snow days, not so much. In both cases, I let them know what's going on, that I'll be working but possibly not at 100%, and either work late, or work extra hours on other days to makeup the rest. No one at work cares about the # of hours worked, as long as the job gets done.
depending on the age of the child it is illegal to care and work at the same time. You take time off or pto.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you and/or your spouse can telework, how do you handle sick days or snow days? Do you take the day off or work from home? And if you work from home, what are your strategies for keeping child(ren) occupied? Unlimited screen time? I know that the federal gov't says you have to have child care when you're working from home (I'm not a Fed), but do people actually do that for sick days/snow days, or do you "work from home" while also keeping half an eye on a kid who is occupied with a craft/screen/whatever?
I'm a teacher (so, obviously I don't have your problem). I've had other parents trade with me, so I watch their kid on snow days, and they watch mine, or have the babysitter they're hiring to watch theirs watch mine, on professional development days. It's a win/win, because they much prefer to take off when they can plan ahead, and I really can't take PD days off.
Anonymous wrote:If you and/or your spouse can telework, how do you handle sick days or snow days? Do you take the day off or work from home? And if you work from home, what are your strategies for keeping child(ren) occupied? Unlimited screen time? I know that the federal gov't says you have to have child care when you're working from home (I'm not a Fed), but do people actually do that for sick days/snow days, or do you "work from home" while also keeping half an eye on a kid who is occupied with a craft/screen/whatever?
Anonymous wrote:If you and/or your spouse can telework, how do you handle sick days or snow days? Do you take the day off or work from home? And if you work from home, what are your strategies for keeping child(ren) occupied? Unlimited screen time? I know that the federal gov't says you have to have child care when you're working from home (I'm not a Fed), but do people actually do that for sick days/snow days, or do you "work from home" while also keeping half an eye on a kid who is occupied with a craft/screen/whatever?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sick days are easier to deal with often, because there will be large blocks of time where the sick child is resting, allowing me to work. Snow days, not so much. In both cases, I let them know what's going on, that I'll be working but possibly not at 100%, and either work late, or work extra hours on other days to makeup the rest. No one at work cares about the # of hours worked, as long as the job gets done.
depending on the age of the child it is illegal to care and work at the same time. You take time off or pto.
Illegal? No. Against an employer's policy? Depends on the employer.
Correct. Many employers do not bat an eye at “work from home” on sick/snow days. Sounds like PP just hasn’t worked for one.
Anonymous wrote:Amazes me that people have all these high powered jobs with great salary and benefits and can take weeks and weeks of vacation all around the world, and yet they can't take a day off to take care of a sick kid.
Here's how we handle it:
"Sorry, my kid's sick. I won't be in today."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sick days are easier to deal with often, because there will be large blocks of time where the sick child is resting, allowing me to work. Snow days, not so much. In both cases, I let them know what's going on, that I'll be working but possibly not at 100%, and either work late, or work extra hours on other days to makeup the rest. No one at work cares about the # of hours worked, as long as the job gets done.
depending on the age of the child it is illegal to care and work at the same time. You take time off or pto.
Illegal? No. Against an employer's policy? Depends on the employer.
Correct. Many employers do not bat an eye at “work from home” on sick/snow days. Sounds like PP just hasn’t worked for one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sick days are easier to deal with often, because there will be large blocks of time where the sick child is resting, allowing me to work. Snow days, not so much. In both cases, I let them know what's going on, that I'll be working but possibly not at 100%, and either work late, or work extra hours on other days to makeup the rest. No one at work cares about the # of hours worked, as long as the job gets done.
depending on the age of the child it is illegal to care and work at the same time. You take time off or pto.
Illegal? No. Against an employer's policy? Depends on the employer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It, depending on agency policy, you can use admin time since you are deemed unable to work because of children - like you would if you lost power in the storm - and therefore you don't need to use leave.
No. While it is true that agencies have some discretion in this area, no one is going to give you admin leave to take care of your kid.
https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/pay-leave/leave-administration/fact-sheets/administrative-leave/
Anonymous wrote:It, depending on agency policy, you can use admin time since you are deemed unable to work because of children - like you would if you lost power in the storm - and therefore you don't need to use leave.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sick days are easier to deal with often, because there will be large blocks of time where the sick child is resting, allowing me to work. Snow days, not so much. In both cases, I let them know what's going on, that I'll be working but possibly not at 100%, and either work late, or work extra hours on other days to makeup the rest. No one at work cares about the # of hours worked, as long as the job gets done.
depending on the age of the child it is illegal to care and work at the same time. You take time off or pto.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sick days are easier to deal with often, because there will be large blocks of time where the sick child is resting, allowing me to work. Snow days, not so much. In both cases, I let them know what's going on, that I'll be working but possibly not at 100%, and either work late, or work extra hours on other days to makeup the rest. No one at work cares about the # of hours worked, as long as the job gets done.
depending on the age of the child it is illegal to care and work at the same time. You take time off or pto.