Anonymous wrote:One of the primary tenets of children is that they always get sick on Friday, usually after the pediatrician’s sick slots are filled. (Stop side-eyeing your coworker, OP.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I worked in HR, we kept track of everyone who called in sick on a day before or after a three-day weekend.
That list was used when we had reductions in force.
You are an idiot if you think that was a good idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So I'll be judged if I'm sick on a Friday. Or a Monday.
At my job we can't take a personal day to extend a holiday weekend.
My job is important to me, and I'm reliable and smart and hardworking. But why do they micromanage every minute of my life?? Why do you care what day someone takes off if they stick with what's allowed to them and get the job done?
That's terrible! Is that even legal?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, unless there is a pattern to the behavior.
4x a year?
Kind of crazy and weird that you're tracking this, tbh. I find that more fishy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had an intern who did this. “Sick” every Friday for the whole summer. Needless to say we didn’t think of hiring her when she later applied.
Why not?
Anonymous wrote:I had an intern who did this. “Sick” every Friday for the whole summer. Needless to say we didn’t think of hiring her when she later applied.
Anonymous wrote:I had no idea illness doesn't strike on Fridays! Great news.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, unless there is a pattern to the behavior.
4x a year?
That's not worthy of raising it as an issue.
Anonymous wrote:When I worked in HR, we kept track of everyone who called in sick on a day before or after a three-day weekend.
That list was used when we had reductions in force.
Anonymous wrote:Are they getting their work done? As a manager that is the only thing that should really concern you. My work has a lot of sick leave and I occasionally take a day as a mental break (not necessarily on Friday). However, I only do it when I do not have any imminent deadlines, no one is waiting for any inputs from me, and no one has to pick up whatever I dropped. And then sometimes when I am actually sick but there is stuff I do not want to drop on others I just suck it up. So it all evens out. And as they do not really affect anything no one cares about my sick days. So maybe instead of focusing on why the person always falls sick on a Friday, try to think about how they are performing and how their work ethic affects the rest of the team.
Anonymous wrote:Are they getting their work done? As a manager that is the only thing that should really concern you. My work has a lot of sick leave and I occasionally take a day as a mental break (not necessarily on Friday). However, I only do it when I do not have any imminent deadlines, no one is waiting for any inputs from me, and no one has to pick up whatever I dropped. And then sometimes when I am actually sick but there is stuff I do not want to drop on others I just suck it up. So it all evens out. And as they do not really affect anything no one cares about my sick days. So maybe instead of focusing on why the person always falls sick on a Friday, try to think about how they are performing and how their work ethic affects the rest of the team.