Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t Feds max out at 26 days annual leave and 10 sick days?
26 days annual leave, and 13 days of sick leave. Max carryover of 240 hours.
Plus we accumulate up to 24 credit hours for any hours worked beyond 80 in a two week period. So you can use those credit hours as days off before you have to dip into the 26 days of leave, meaning you can actually take off far more than 26 days in a year.
Anonymous wrote:Freelance consulting. It only works because my DH has more reliable employment with benefits. However, he works for a state agency and gets 4+ weeks of vacation a year because he belongs to a union. It's hard for him to take sometimes, but as long as we get to take plenty of vacation, we don't sweat it because his hours roll over and can count towards his pension when he retires.
Looking closely at benefits information when you apply for jobs, and sometimes being willing to negotiate for more vacation time, is really worth it. In my old job, when I was hiring my replacement, he negotiated for an extra week of vacation leave a year and I 100% backed him up because my experience is that people who negotiate for leave are thinking critically about what they need to be happy in a job longterm. Everyone wants more money, but someone who says "listen, my family goes to the beach for 2 weeks every June and I need to be able to accommodate that" is actually doing you a favor.
Some employers will not negotiate benefits because of lockstep benefits packages. But if their package is bad, more people should try to negotiate it up! Too many young people just accept terrible benefits and it's bad for everyone. Fight for quality of life! It will benefit your employer in the long run.
Anonymous wrote:Federal Government.
But this benefit may vary by agency, position and time in job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t Feds max out at 26 days annual leave and 10 sick days?
26 days annual leave, and 13 days of sick leave. Max carryover of 240 hours.