T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
50.1 | | BZERKR::THOMPSON | | Thu Aug 08 1985 11:28 | 10 |
| This is a very common practice. I know that when I worked as a temporary
employee (Consolidated Edison of NY) I never got paid for public holidays.
I don't know of any company that pays temporary people for public holidays.
I can understand why temporary employees would want that benifit but, frankly,
I don't see why it would make sense TO DEC to do it. It is not needed to
make us competitive with other users of temporary employees. Part of the
logic behind using temps is to save money anyway.
Alfred
|
50.2 | | MILES::CHABOT | | Thu Aug 08 1985 14:10 | 18 |
| When I was a temporary employee for the government (NASA; also civilian
personnel at Edwards AFB) I got paid for holidays. When I worked at MIT
in a temporary position I got paid for holidays (iff I worked all the other
days in that week).
[And anyway, being competitive as an employer of temporary employees isn't
limited to only offering the same things as most others do, it could involve
offering *more*.]
When I've worked as a temporary employee or had family work as temporary
employees at various places, the object was not to save money, the object
was to hire someone to do a necessary job despite a hiring freeze for permanent
employees--I knew folks who had been temps for years in the same job.
Admittedly these places were not DEC. And "necessary" means the people
who hired the temp knew they needed someone to do the job, but funding
problems or higher level management blindness to the actual operation of
the office wouldn't allow a permanent position to be created and filled.
|
50.3 | | EXIT26::PERRY | | Mon Aug 12 1985 12:25 | 9 |
| I have heard that temporary and contract employees are to be phased out.
Would anyone like to comment on this "rumour"?
Also, would someone explain to me the difference between temporary and
contract employees? (I'm just an ignorant foreigner :-)). Also,
do temps get more money than permanent employees to compensate for their
lack of comparable benefits?
|
50.4 | | HUMAN::SZETO | | Mon Aug 12 1985 12:53 | 12 |
| re .3
We are currently trying to reduce spending. That's why consultants will
not be hired, and current consulting contracts will not be renewed.
Exceptions will always be made with sufficient justification.
Consultants work under contract to us, and are considered employees for
various purposes, for example, their usage of network accounts. (Non-
employees are not supposed to have network accounts.) I'm not sure what
is the definition of a temporary employee.
--Simon
|
50.5 | | MILRAT::SEGAL | | Wed Aug 14 1985 09:56 | 27 |
| Re: .4
Simon, a "temporary" Employee is usually the term used for a DEC "TAG",
a DEC Employee who is hired on a "6-month", renewable contract with
DEC, but who works WITHOUT any DEC benefits (except DCU, pension, and
unemployment insurance).
TAG's are issued DEC Badges, work for the Temporary Personnel Group,
and are paid (on the same pay scale/job code) as a permanent DEC
Employee. Before a manager hires an external agency temporary
(contract) person, they should try to get a DEC TAG. DEC TAG's are
generally familiar with the DEC way of doing business, trained on DEC
equipment, and typically are cheaper than external personnel ($/hr X
130% or so for externals, I am not sure what the Internal cc charges for
personnel, but since they also hire the contract personnel, the
additional charge may be the same for both categories).
The Maynard Area TAG program consists strictly of clerical/secretarial
personnel. Programmers and manufacturing personnel are hired through
outside agencies (by the same personnel group who administers the TAG
program). Many TAG's are trying to land permanent jobs at DEC, and the
vast majority are related to or good friends of a DEC Employee. Some
TAG's are mothers who take summers and school vacations off, while
earning a decent income the rest of the year.
I hope this explains the term. My wife has been a DEC TAG for almost
two years and is still looking to go permanent.
|
50.6 | | STAR::TOPAZ | | Wed Aug 14 1985 10:34 | 7 |
| re .4:
I would guess that summer (college) hires, in the days when
we used to have summer hires, would have been considered to
be temporary employees.
--Don
|
50.7 | | ELMO::LEIGH | | Thu Aug 15 1985 02:54 | 6 |
| I am a TAG who works for ZK OPERATIONS. Not all TAG contracts are 6 month.
I was told I wouldn't be needed past the end of August and started in the
middle of May. (Anyone out there need a TAG for Sept and Oct? Will do most
anything). This is my second summer. I am a college student.
Chad
|
50.8 | | HYSTER::HITCHCOCK | | Thu Aug 15 1985 11:44 | 4 |
| Re: .5
Are you saying that although contractors do not get benefits they
have access to the Digital Credit Union and can receive pension
and unemployment benefits? That's a new one on me.
|
50.9 | | HUMAN::SZETO | | Thu Aug 15 1985 14:25 | 7 |
| There are consultants, and there are temporary employees. Both work under
contracts. Are partial benefits available to both kinds of contractors?
I can sort of see temporary employees getting partial benefits, but for
consultants who are self-employed or are employees of other firms to get
such benefits would be surprising, at least to me.
--Simon
|
50.10 | | MILRAT::SEGAL | | Thu Aug 15 1985 16:51 | 28 |
| RE: .8 & .9
Sorry if I muddied the water instead of clarified it!
DEC TAG's are considered DEC Employees for those things which are
mandated by law (such as unemployment compensation and perhaps {?}
pension benefits), plus certain other benefits which DEC sees fit to
allow them (e.g. yes they are eligible for DCU membership, EPP, and
stock purchase plan, turkeys, Canobie Lake, etc.). When it comes to
hiring a DEC TAG as a Permanent Full-Time DEC Employee, they fall
somewhere between an "off-the-street" applicant and a "Permanent DEC
Employee".
EXTERNAL CONTRACT personnel (temporary personnel hired through an
external agency, or self-employed) are NOT eligible for ANY DEC
benefits, as they are NOT (in any way, shape, or form) employed by DEC.
Their Employer (agency/contract house) MUST pay into the State
Unemployment fund. I do not know about pension funds through their
agency/contract houses. Self-employed people are NEVER eligible for
unemployment benefits, since they can never be "laid off" (as
governments define the term).
Therefore, when DEC cancels all its external contract personnel's
contracts, it is NOT a DEC lay-off (since they were never DEC
Employees). However, if any DEC TAG's are terminated, then it IS a DEC
lay-off, since their paychecks bear the DEC logo!
I hope this helps clear up any confusion between the two groups.
|
50.11 | | CADLAC::GOUN | | Thu Aug 15 1985 17:51 | 17 |
| In re .6:
> I would guess that summer (college) hires, in the days when
> we used to have summer hires, would have been considered to
> be temporary employees.
I was a coop (cooperative work/study) student working summers for Digital
before I was hired full-time. As a coop student, I was a Wage Class 4
employee, with full benefits. When I went back to school, and worked
part-time (10-15 hours per week), I was a temporary employee, Wage Class 2,
with no benefits.
By the way, we still have summer hires. Compared to consultants, they are
comparatively inexpensive. There are also many intangible benefits in our
continuing to hire them, despite the current downturn in our business.
-- Roger
|
50.12 | | ELMO::LEIGH | | Fri Aug 16 1985 03:33 | 16 |
| RE: .10
Unfortunately, TAGS do not receive things such as Stock Purchase plan etc.
The contract I signed in '84 (I didn't sign one this summer) stated that
the employment was one of mutual benefits to both DEC and the TAG and
that they had no benefits as perm. employees do. I do receive EPP stuff
in the mail but I doubt they would let me order from it. I never have had
the benefit of the Stock Purchase plan and I doubt things like Canobie and
the Turkeys would be available if I were to still be here when they came
around.
Chad
Are there any Personnel people reading this who can state the facts when
it comes to TAGs. I would really like to *know* instead of what I remember
from the contract and from what you *hear* in different places.
|
50.13 | | MILRAT::SEGAL | | Fri Aug 16 1985 12:54 | 53 |
| RE: .12
First of all, most folks in personnel hardly use their terminals (if
they have them) for anything but MAIL. It would be extremely rare for a
personnel person to use NOTES. On the same basis, the MYO (Maynard
Area) TAG office has refused to document any of the new
policies/changes in policy, therefore, they would not be willing to
contribute anything to this discussion.
I have sat down personally with Gail Martis, who heads up the MYO TAG
office and discussed some of the new policies with her. I have a vested
interest, since my wife is a TAG and we are looking to build a house in
the MYO area. If my wife is laid-off when we look for a mortgage,
forget it, there is no way that we will qualify! [Also, Gail is
upstairs from me and my wife works at VRO which is ~14 miles from here.]
FACTS:
In the two years that my wife has been a TAG, she has received a coupon
for the turkey each Xmas, and yes they gave her the bird. :-)
Also, she has received tickets to Canobie Lake each year.
She received the enrollment package for the DEC Stock Purchase plan
after being a DEC TAG for 6+ months. Money is taken out of each
paycheck and she IS a shareholder in the plan.
In order to have her paycheck automatically deposited to our joint DCU
account, she HAD to (they told us that it was some federal law) open an
account under HER badge number.
We do receive EPP stuff in the mail, but have not bought anything. I
spoke with George Girard (Mgr of EPP) about eligibility and was advised
that TAG's and Coops are indeed eligible. Basically, if the person
shows up in ELF as a US-based Employee, they are eligible (from our
discussion, George implied that he uses the same underlying database
that ELF is generated from).
End of FACTS:
Due to some of the policy changes that have occurred in the DEC (MYO)
TAG program, it appears that the Stock Purchase plan may become a "has
been" for DEC TAG's. They are requiring each TAG to sign a termination
agreement, turn in their badge and leave for a minimum of 4 weeks (as
part of the 12 weeks/year that they are requiring each TAG to take
off). If (as I suspect, but have not tried to confirm yet) this is
treated as a discontinuity of employment, and the TAG must re-sign up
for Stock Purchase plan all over again, after another 6 month's
employment, they will again be out on the next year's 4 week+ lay-off
before the purchase date. Ergo, they will never again (until another
policy change) be eligible for the Stock Purchase plan. [I was told by
one of the affected TAG's that after you "terminate" for 4 weeks, all
money set aside to buy stock is returned to you (without interest!).]
|
50.14 | | USWR01::HENSLEY | | Fri Aug 16 1985 14:15 | 16 |
| ok folks -- guess i have to confess outright. some personnel types DO use
terminals. we even read NOTES. but....i personally have refrained from
participating in NOTES because i realize some people might not expect
'personnel types' to be in here.
with regard to .13:
While I work in the FIELD and thus have more limited exposure to TAGs (I think
the current term is TE, Temporary Employee..) I do know they do not receive
benefits such as medical/dental/life ins. however, they may join DCU and the
stock purchase program. The glitch with stock is that you must participate all\6 months. per SEC compliance. you MUST be an active employee on the date of
purchase.
fyi, I am a PA (also known as a PSA elsewhere) in Santa Clara, California.
/rene
|
50.15 | | MILRAT::SEGAL | | Fri Aug 16 1985 22:05 | 33 |
| Rene,
Please do participate in this discussion! It is encouraging to hear that
not all the personnel people ignore our electronic resources. It
appears that those in the Maynard area do not utilize the system to
everyone's benefit.
The true purpose of this Notesfile is for people to be able to ask
questions or raise issues and for those who know the answers to
respond. Unfortunately, it just hasn't been working out that way,
however you are more than welcome to change that.
This entire topic happens to be a "hot spot" for me for two reasons:
- The DEC temps were promised a permanent position (admittedly
on an experimental basis), however the experiment was
terminated with NO notice or explanation within 2 months of
start-up (and only ~5 people were in the program at that
time). They refused to discuss the reasons, hold a meeting
about the change in policy, or even document it.
- Now there is a total turn-about in policy and once more they
refuse to document it. There have been allegations (I have no
knowledge that they are true) that they have threatened those
affected that if they try to collect unemployment, they will
never work as a DEC TAG again. If this is true, DEC could be
in a mess of legal trouble. I certainly hope that it is false.
All that I know for certain is that there are some things going on in
this program which definitely don't appear to be the "DEC way" of doing
things. I don't think it is too much to ask for the DEC TAG management
to document any policies and subsequent changes, so that everyone
affected knows exactly where they stand.
|
50.16 | | USWR01::HENSLEY | | Mon Aug 19 1985 12:33 | 31 |
| ADDENDUM/CORRECTION TO .14 (line noise strikes again)
re: stock purchase -- you must be a participant all 6 months of the period
and thus must be on active status on the purchase date, per our plan
as approved by the SEC.
re .15
thank you for the welcome. believe me, it took alot to overcome the hesitations
i am sorry tp hear that things may not [appear] to be done "the DEC way".
here in the field the use of a TE/TAG is rare and not as formal a program,
i.e. depending on funding and the nature of the assignment, both parties
should have the expectation that the assignment will end with a reasonable
period of notice, thus enabling the TE to identify any 'real jobs' which
might be open to them.
on the flip side, as you all are probably aware, no other geography others
(correct that - offers) quite the same opportunities as Mass/NH just
because the numbers of employees/organizations/opportunities are
astronomically higher than out in the field. still, i should hope
that DEC management/staff/personnel still operates under the same
expecation everywhere to do the right thing. and if not, that the
issue WILL be elevated. the one part that might be addressed is that
the expectations should not be misleading. that if business needs change
the expectation will be that it be handled in a civilized manner and
with as much information as possible in a timely manner.
please also realize it is very hard to nail down the entire story and
even those right in the middle of a situation may not have all the pieces.
'rene
|
50.17 | | SIMON::SZETO | | Wed Aug 21 1985 19:26 | 20 |
| From the Personnel Policies and Procedures, section 2.02:
"Temporary assignments should not exceed six months. In those rare
instances when a temporary assignment exceeds six months, supervisors
should reaffirm the temporary nature of the assignment with the employee
and establish a definite ending date for the assignment.
"... Temporary employees are not entitled to participate in employee
benefit plans with the exception of the pension and stock purchase plans.
"Criteria - Employees are considered temporary when they meet any one or
more of the following criteria:
o Does not work a fixed and continuous schedule.
o Does not work during certain periods of the year, such as school
vacations and/or summers.
o Only works a prearranged period of time, such as during school vacations
and/or summers.
|
50.18 | | ELMO::LEIGH | | Thu Aug 22 1985 03:01 | 8 |
| RE: -.1
Thanks, that clears up a little bit now. I was told that the TAG program
at ZK was on hold (think that was how it was put). Does anybody know
what DEC is doing company-wide now (TAGs) with its new austerity measures.
Chad
|
50.19 | | SHEILA::HAGARTY | | Tue Nov 19 1985 17:59 | 10 |
| Ahh Gi'day...
Don't take those benefits for granted. In Aussie, I work with about 500
people within 200 yards of each other. We have no canteen, no DCU, no
Stock option plan, Superannuation is not available till 25 years old,
then it's compulsory, a VERY informal employee purchase plan (Even
though I'm an "old hand", I wouldn't know who to contact, or what the
discounts were)
- Dennis.
|
50.20 | | SAUTER::SAUTER | | Thu Nov 21 1985 10:43 | 2 |
| What is Supperannuation?
John Sauter
|
50.21 | | 2CHARS::SZETO | | Thu Nov 21 1985 11:45 | 4 |
| superannuated, adj. 1. Retired or discharged because of age or infirmity.
2. Obsolete; antiquated.
[from the Latin, meaning "to be too old"]
|
50.22 | | 2CHARS::SZETO | | Thu Nov 21 1985 11:47 | 4 |
| re .20 [re .19]
I guess from context that "Superannuation" refers to participation in
the retirement plan.
|
50.23 | | SHEILA::HAGARTY | | Fri Nov 29 1985 22:34 | 5 |
| Ahh Gi'day...
Correctooo...
{dennis{{{ --
|
50.24 | How 'bout this holiday? | CRFS80::RILEY | Bob Riley @DDO Chicago Central Area | Mon Jan 12 1987 20:03 | 8 |
|
I'm sitting at home and don't have a DEC directory or holiday calendar
handy - but I do have the question:
Do we have Dr. Martin Luther King Jr's birthday off (3rd Monday
in Jan), or is it one of those government-only type holidays?
"jackin' the house", Bob
|
50.25 | Nope. | GLORY::HULL | Cogito ergo spud | Mon Jan 12 1987 20:18 | 9 |
| There are no DEC-approved holidays coming up until Easter in April.
If your religious/moral beliefs are such that Martin Luthor King Day is
like any other approved holiday to you, you could probably take
it off as your personal holiday, or a vacation day (my opinion only).
New Years to Easter is always a long stretch.
/al
|
50.26 | hang in there! | CAMLOT::DAVIS | path of the storm | Mon Jan 12 1987 20:31 | 6 |
| Easter is not a DEC holiday... with the exception of certain
site-specific holidays, the next general DEC holiday in the
U.S. is Memorial Day.
grins,
Marge
|
50.27 | These are site specific | REGENT::GETTYS | Bob Gettys N1BRM | Mon Jan 12 1987 20:41 | 7 |
| For those lucky enough to work in the Boston plant,
Monday the 19th is a holiday. If things go as I remember the
calendar, those of us in the rest of eastern Mass will get the
20th of April (don't quote me on the date, check it somewhere!)
which is Patriot's Day around here.
/s/ Bob
|
50.28 | | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Mon Jan 12 1987 23:24 | 15 |
| These are the DEC-U.S. Holidays. There are always exactly ten of them.
New Years Day Memorial Day Independence Day Labor Day
Thanksgiving Thursday Thanksgiving Friday Christmas Day
Plus one day called "Company Holiday" which is set nationwide, usually next to
Christmas Day, New Years Day, or 4 July to create a long weekend.
Plus the "Personal Holiday" -- a day you take any day you want.
Finally, there is the "Location Choice" Holiday. Some locations will choose to
make it an employee choice day, like the Personal Holiday, some will set it to
be Martin Luther King's Birthday or Patriot's Day or some other local holiday.
/john
|
50.29 | | CAMLOT::DAVIS | path of the storm | Tue Jan 13 1987 08:05 | 5 |
| So I take it the Company Holiday in '87 was January second?
thanks,
Marge
|
50.30 | | HYDRA::ECKERT | de gustibus non est disputandum | Tue Jan 13 1987 08:36 | 3 |
| re: .29
Yep.
|
50.31 | Two in a row | SKYLAB::FISHER | Burns Fisher 381-1466, ZKO1-1/D42 | Tue Jan 13 1987 09:51 | 4 |
| And the 1986 company holiday was Dec 26.
Burns
|
50.32 | | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Tue Jan 13 1987 12:20 | 10 |
| I was going to speculate on what it might be in '88, but it's not so easy.
1 Jan is a Friday
4 Jul is a Monday
25 Dec is Sunday, so the Monday becomes the holiday.
Since the company was not in business in any other leap year when 1 Jan was a
Friday, I don't have a clue.
/john
|
50.33 | Perhaps not the right topic | NEWVAX::ADKINS | So much larger than Life | Wed Jan 14 1987 00:33 | 36 |
| For a number of the DC offices, Monday is the site holiday. Since
most of our customers will be shut down anyway, it makes sense.
Plus due to the large black population here, it is good taste to
observe King's Birthday. (Why did it take the govt to get around
to it?)
NOW, for something completely different. I speak or our wonderful
"Personal Holiday". I went to KY to see my parents over the holidays
and told my not-so-trusty secretary to burn my personal day while
I was gone. I got my stub some time later (I work off-site) and
low and behold, 3 Vacation days, no personal holiday. Therefore,
my personal day for the year was dusted. I complained to both the
secretary and Personnel and the party line was "too bad". That
REALLY gripes my cookies. Well, it's academic now. It looks like
this will only make a difference in the size of my severance check.
(This is not the only problem that I've had lately). I was just
suprised at the mindless reaction that I encountered. The logic
was "It's now 1987. Payroll will not change lasts years stuff".
What, exactly, is so magical about crediting someone with 8 hours
of vacation time? I mean, there's going by the book and there's
the theatre of the absurd.
Also, having maxed out on my vacation time, my last secretary
(another serious winner) billed my vacation time a month after
I took the vacation. Therefore, the vacation time to be accrued
during the period also got tossed. Personnel did agree to credit
that one. I told her "I'll be on Vacation in Canada for the next
2 weeks". It seems like she would have billed it then. Oh well,
another major DEC problem. They almost never fire anyone. So DEC
tends to collect deadwood (a.k.a. the infamous hall-walkers of
Landover).
Flame off. Flame out. Bye.
Jim
|
50.34 | | CAMLOT::DAVIS | path of the storm | Wed Jan 14 1987 06:07 | 7 |
| On the other side of the coin, I tried to use the '87
personal day on week/ending 1/3/87 and our secretary
caught it as illegal... I would have been docked.
:^)
Marge
|
50.35 | Use your vacation cards | EUCLID::WHITE | Bob White | Wed Jan 14 1987 07:59 | 11 |
|
Re: .33 (Losing Personal Holiday and Vacation)
Not to be a hardass, but why didn't you simply fill out your job tickets
and vacation cards in advance and give them to the secretary before you
left? In my experience here, secretaries are far too busy with their
own work to be babysitting anyone (even the managers) by filling out
timecards other than their own.
Bob
|
50.36 | | BPOV09::MIOLA | Phantom | Wed Jan 14 1987 08:22 | 14 |
| re .33
Not sure if I completely understand what you said.
If you are saying that a personal day wasn't taken when it should
have been, that has happened here several times, and a simple letter
to your payroll group by your manager should take care of the problem.
We have had various problems of vacation days used in place of PH
and visa versa. Even when it happened during a the New Year switch
a letter to payroll always corrected the error.
By the way it happened to me and two of my people last New Years
|
50.37 | | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Wed Jan 14 1987 08:26 | 12 |
| There's a simple solution, if you have a reasonable manager.
Next time you take vacation, take one more day than what you fill out on
the time cards.
BTW, Grins, this year it would have been legit to take the personal holiday
during week ending 3-Jan-87 since both the 1st and 2nd were holidays anyway.
Your secretary was apparently remembering last year's rule, where it had to
be taken by the previous week, since there were actual work days in 87 in
the week. Each year is different.
/john
|
50.39 | | EXODUS::SEGER | this space intentionally left blank | Wed Jan 14 1987 08:56 | 7 |
| I started for DEC 11 years ago the week of Thanksgiving. We got 2 days
for Thanksgiving, 3 days for X-mas and 2 more for New Years for a total
of 7 days off in around 5 weeks! I haven't seen anything close to that
since then. what haopened?
-mark
|
50.40 | | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Wed Jan 14 1987 08:59 | 10 |
| >We got 2 days for Thanksgiving, 3 days for X-mas and 2 more for New Years
>for a total of 7 days off in around 5 weeks! I haven't seen anything close
>to that since then. what haopened?
This year was very close to that, just one day less.
If I remember correctly, that was the year they gave us an extra day off
and said that it was a one-time bonus day.
/john
|
50.41 | Was there supposed to be training about this? | NEWVAX::ADKINS | So much larger than Life | Wed Jan 14 1987 16:56 | 30 |
| Re .35 & .38:
Both notes tend to imply that I'm either a) lazy or b) stupid. I think that
I fall more under c) uninformed. I am a wage class 4 kind of guy and as a
general rule don't fill out time cards at all. In the 2 and a half years that
I've been at DEC I think I have filled out 1 and signed a few. The usage or
place of the timecard is somewhat vague and foreign to me. My first secretary
was excellent and always did that kind of thing for me. I assumed that was how
things were done. Considering I have spent less than 1% of my time in the
office spending my time at customer sites, (Yes, some of us do spend our time
generating revenue not collecting overhead.) how can you fill out time cards
in advance if you don't know that time cards are due at all. I usually fill
in CLARS instead for my time reporting. I guess that ingorance of the law is
no excuse as they say, but the whole thing has been pretty rude.
Also, the line about "you don't know how to take vacation?", seeing
that I'd maxed out on vacation time tells you how often I've taken it.
Re .38:
You suggest having personnel send a letter to payroll. A personnel staff
member was the one of the folks that said "too bad". This was the same person
who said she could fix the problem of the late time card submission. I just
thought it weird that two situations that look pretty similar to me could
evoke such different reactions from the establishment. Maybe she thought I
was just trying to pull a fast one and really had forgotten to ask that the
personal day be burnt and I was just trying to save on vacation.
Jim
|
50.42 | Wage Class 4 fills out timecards | TSG::GOLDSTEIN | | Wed Jan 14 1987 17:56 | 23 |
| Regarding time cards:
As explained to me, we're all responsible (including Wage Class
4) for filling out our time when we:
Take vacation
Take a personal day
Are out sick
Usually the routine is to fill out the card 1 (or is that 2 ?) weeks
before you anticipate taking time off (naturally this doesn't apply
to sick time !) And if you want advance holiday pay, you also need
to fill out timecards. You can ask your secretary when she/he needs
to have your timecard and you also get the timecards from your
secretary.
Hope this helps !
Joan G.
Since you need to sign the time card (as does your manager), I can
see why a secretary might not fill the card out for you. But, then
again, I guess some do.
|
50.43 | | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Wed Jan 14 1987 18:10 | 13 |
| We're not talking about timecards, anyway, in the case of WC 4 employees.
These are vacation cards.
You might point out to payroll that unless they can find a vacation card
with your signature on it for the three days of vacation you supposedly
took, that you want all three days back!
But I still think that the best way to handle it is to tell your manager
that it's his problem and that an easy way to handle it would be to forget
a day of vacation next time you're gone.
/john
|
50.44 | Thanks for the advice | NEWVAX::ADKINS | So much larger than Life | Wed Jan 14 1987 20:09 | 19 |
| Good idea. I don't think I've done the timecard for the week with
the personal holiday on it. I just told the sect'y I was taking
off, but I don't remember signing anything. I did sign the ones
that were late.
As far as forgetting a vacation day next time I'm gone, there is
a problem. The next time I'm gone, I'm GONE. AMF. The resume is
on the streets and I have talked to personnel, but I don't think
I'm really interested looking within the company anymore. As my
first note stated, this deals with the size of the severance check.
I'm just too disillusioned to stay. Yes, I'll miss the E-net and
a large number of my net friends, but that is just not enough
to offset the ill feelings in other areas.
Thanks for the ideas. I think I'll attack it with "Show me the
signature".
Jim
|
50.46 | | VCQUAL::THOMPSON | Noter of the LoST ARK | Thu Jan 15 1987 09:26 | 23 |
| Personally I think that having people fill out there own time
cards is a totally stupid idea. It's a managers responsibility
to know what their people are doing and to make sure they get
the compensation they are entitled to.
Here we make the process more inefficient by making wage class 4
people do their vacation cards. Now tell me a person who fills
out 1 or two of these stupid things in a year (or less) can do
it faster and more efficiently then a secretary who does them
weekly. And the secretaries time cost less too! Sure there are
overworked secretaries but I've been in a groups where the secretaries
spend more time finding things to keep busy then actually being
busy.
The manager I worked for in the last company had an interesting
answer. He was told that all his people had to fill out time
sheets weekly. Every quarter he mailed us (his 20 some odd reports
worked in 5 different states) a quarters worth of time sheets. We
signed them and mailed them back. Every week his secretary would
fill them in based on our weekly reports and submit them. This
never seemed to be a burden to her.
Alfred
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50.47 | | NEWVAX::ADKINS | So much larger than Life | Thu Jan 15 1987 10:27 | 7 |
| I agree with .-1 and .-2. Since WC 4 people don't as a rule
do timecards why the differnce? I almost never go to my office
since it is about an hour from my home (up to 3 hours on bad
days). But then it's DEC's car and gas. If they want to pay me
to drive over and back, it's their waste.
Jim
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50.48 | no WC4 sicktime | HARPO::B_HENRY | Bill Henry | Thu Jan 15 1987 10:39 | 13 |
| re 42. WC 4 people do not fill out cards for sick time. If a
unsuspecting WC 4 person were to send in a card for sick time
and it was not caught by the group secretary or manager, then
payroll would keypunch in x hours of sick time, the payroll
computer would do exactly as it was programed to do, subtract
x hours from that employees sick time account, and pay him
accordingly. Since WC 4 employees do not have sick time allocations,
thier sick time account would read 0, and they would loose a days
pay. I have seen too many new people do this. I wish they would
reprogram the payroll system to check wage class.
No, I have never done it myself.
Bill
|
50.49 | If you're WC4, don't send in sick days!! | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Jan 15 1987 13:49 | 17 |
| .48 is right about what happens when a WC4 person puts in a time
card for sick days. I never tried this one (thank goodness!), but
a friend who works in MRO did this once. He had the flu for four
days, and being a good do-bee, filled out the card. Now, he has
his mortgage through the DCU (or did then; I think he may have
refinanced since). Since the wondrous payroll system docked him
four days pay, there wasn't enough left to withhold the mortgage
payment from. This screwed up the DCU!
Needless to say, once he recuperated from his flu, and unsnarled
this mess, he told all of us not to ever do this!
The obvious solution seems to me that the payroll system ought to
just ignore cards for sick days from WC4 people; the current mess
you get into (unless they've fixed this in the last couple of years;
I haven't worked in MRO for a year and a half, so this happened
at least that long ago) seems pretty easy to avoid. A SMOP!
|
50.50 | relax | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Fri Jan 16 1987 17:47 | 27 |
| re .41 (and preceding and subsequent entries on the same topic):
.41>Both notes <.35 & .38> tend to imply that I'm either a) lazy or b) stupid.
Actually, my impression was more of an attitude problem. Your entries
here seem more to gripe than to try to resolve the problem of
vacation/holiday time allotment - or at least the repeated declarations
of intent to hit the street give that impression. So go, I for
one have much better things to do than to waste time and network
bandwidth on pure griping. (I suggest you send resumes to Wang,
HoneyBull, and Unisys, maybe you'll be happier with a job that may
not last long enough to give you a chance to take vacation.)
On the other hand, if you are just blowing off steam and really want to
fix the problem, follow the advice already given - go talk to your
management, arrange to take an extra day off sometime without
submitting the vacation card for it. From what's been said before it
looks to me that this is a simple paperwork screwup, why blow it out of
proportion and quit over it? I routinely notify our group secretary if
I'll be working weekends that I'm also taking a day or two off sometime
to balance it out - sometimes I'll take the time first then make it up
over the next week or two or submit a card if necessary to square
accounts. Why is this such a problem for you? I doubt that it's a
problem for your organization, if it is it's the first part of the
company that I've seen have trouble with it in my 7-plus years as an
employee...
|
50.51 | Hey, excuse me for living | NEWVAX::ADKINS | So much larger than Life | Fri Jan 16 1987 22:13 | 92 |
| Re .50:
> So go, I for
> one have much better things to do than to waste time and network
> bandwidth on pure griping. (I suggest you send resumes to Wang,
> HoneyBull, and Unisys, maybe you'll be happier with a job that may
> not last long enough to give you a chance to take vacation.)
With your great wealth of human compassion, perhaps you should
fill in with the Employee Assistance program. On the other hand,
you could be one of the insulated employees who resents hearing
the possibility that DEC is anything less than perfect.
> From what's been said before it
> looks to me that this is a simple paperwork screwup, why blow it out of
> proportion and quit over it?
I'm not considering leaving DEC over this. If you re-read the notes
you will see that there are circumstances bseides this one case.
The vacation thing is more like salt in an open wound. You tend
(once again) to imply that if I'm dissatified (i.e. not a pollyanna)
that the wieght of blame falls on me ("attitude problem"). Have
you ever spent time in the field? If you are not around the office,
it's sometimes difficult to figure out how things exactly work.
I thought I was doing the right thing by going to personnel to see
if I could get it cleraed up (they are the payroll folks, right?)
I was shocked at the "too bad" attitude that they presented. On
the phone they said they could clear up the time-card delay problem
so I assumed that could handle the other with no big problem. I'm
used to my secretary being surly, I think her bed only has one side
to get out of, the wrong one. (I really miss my first secretary.
She was not only competant, she actually cared).
> sometimes I'll take the time first then make it up
> over the next week or two or submit a card if necessary to square
> accounts. Why is this such a problem for you? I doubt that it's a
> problem for your organization, if it is it's the first part of the
> company that I've seen have trouble with it in my 7-plus years as an
> employee...
It seems that you don't work in the field. How do you "make up"
time when you have to fit into the customer's hours? Can't do it
on weekend, since we aren't yet cleared to be left unescorted. Taking
time off means loss of revenue for the unit. The UM once asked to
unit to forecast their sick days for the quarter. Is this totally
Outer Limits or what?
> On the other hand, if you are just blowing off steam and really want to
> fix the problem, follow the advice already given - go talk to your
> management.
Well, today I did. I pre-resigned. I told them that the resume is
out and if DEC wants me to stick around it's time to change things.
The problem I've run into has been:
Me: excuse me (problem) Mgr: I'll talk to you. (talk never occurs)
Me: Excuse me (same problem) Mgr: I'll talk to you. (talk never occurs)
Me: EXCUSE ME (same problem) Mgr: I'll talk to you. (talk never occurs)
Me: (Take 2X4 - hit manager between the eyes - go to personnel)
READ MY LIPS Mgr: Oh, is there a problem?
This has built over a several month period in which I've been in
two very ugly customer situations. I'm crawling the walls and getting
no support from the Big Guy. Unfortunately, this is not the first
manager that I've been through this with. It comes across that the
management is more concerned with check from the customer than the
well-being of their employees. (Not the party line, I'm told). So,
I AM trying to work it out. As a matter of fact the vacation stuff
did not come up in my talk with the UM or the District Manager.
There are bigger fish to fry first. I'd have preferred to fix the
vacation stuff with payroll and leave my manager working on the
bigger problems. It may or may not get resolved.
WHEW!! I apologize to the members of the conference for the length
of this diatribe and I'm sorry if I ate up anyone's network bandwidth
or anything. I realize that it's a major stray from the topic,
but I felt that I had two character assination efforts from the
author of .50 and felt that letting it go unanswered would let the
author, with the He-doesn't-think-DEC-is-perfect-Off-with-his-head attitude,
know that things are more complex than they seem at first glance.
As far as personal advice to .50, please steer clear of any involvement
as a Suicide Crisis Center volunteer. When someone is already
frustrated and depresed and trying to figure out some way to get
things going again somehow, I'd don't think you have the right touch
for the job.
Think about it, if I had just an "attitude problem" would I even
have posted my first note asking for help?.
Jim
|
50.52 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Paul S. Winalski | Sat Jan 17 1987 15:18 | 10 |
| RE: .46
I think it is completely reasonable, and the right thing to do, for WC 4 people
to fill out their own time cards when there are exceptions (i.e., vacation,
sick time, holidays, leave time) to the normal "worked 40 hours this week"
routine. Requiring the employee's signature prevents the possibility of
fraud perpetrated by the manager. It's for our own protection and I, for one,
appreciate it.
--PSW
|
50.53 | Fly now, pay later | SWATT::POLIKOFF | My apple trees have no peers. | Thu Feb 12 1987 15:50 | 9 |
| Before I started working for DEC I had made vacation plans,
bought airline tickets etc. During the interview I mentioned this
to my future supervisor. He let me take the paid vacation and each
month as I earned a day I made out a vacation card and paid him
back. Since we are paid a week after we work there was no fear of
my leaving without paying the company back because they could always
take it out of my last weeks pay. Anyway I am still here and now
have 3 weeks accumulated.
|
50.54 | | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis (the Menace) Ahern 223-5882 | Fri Feb 13 1987 12:47 | 12 |
| Several years ago, at another high-tech firm, three contract employees
were told by their job shop that they would not be paid for Christmas
and New Years Day because they did not work "the full day before,
and the full day after" each holiday. This would have been impossible,
because the company in question was closed for a one-week shutdown
between the holidays. When the department manager heard this he
called purchasing and made it clear that if the contract employees
did not receive the holiday pay they would all be let go the following
week, and immediately re-hired through a different agency. They
got paid.
|
50.55 | A Happy Ending | NEWVAX::ADKINS | At One with the Infinite Is | Sat Jun 20 1987 13:25 | 37 |
| I'm coming back here to post an update on my situation. In the .47-
.51 range, I had quite a run-in with a couple of folks and it was
suggested that I had an 'attitude problem' and should look for employment
elsewhere.
Well, I did. My resume hit the street. I mentioned this to a number
of folks around the net. My mail box got a quick fill-up by notes
to stop, cool down, and think it over again.
After a serious weekend, I decided that the problems I had were local
problems (the issues never did get resolved) and not corporate
problems. Soooo, to make a long story short, I have now accepted
a transfer to the office in Phoenix, AZ. I'll be headed that way
in mid-July to hang out with the cacti. (I wish this had all
happened this winter when there were 4-foot drifts in my front
yard. It would have made the decision a lot easier)
A number of my 'attitudes' have not changed. DEC is a big company
with lots of problems. I didn't have a lot of success here in trying
to make things better, but that doesn't mean that I can't do better
elsewhere. DEC's main philosophies are sound. Some of the implementations
are a little weak, but things can change with time.
I think my next incarnation will be CANYON::ADKINS. So accept no
substitutions. I'll be back after the move. (I can hear the crowd
now, "Is that a promise or a threat?" ;-) )
Later,
Jim
PS - On a side testimonial for NOTES - I arranged the job via
COOKIE::JOBS. It came out being much more usefull than my dealings
with Personnel. Sometimes I think that DEC runs on it's grapevines.
But then again, the people *do* make the company. (And most of the
people *are* pretty good)
|
50.56 | | CANYON::MOELLER | | Tue Jun 23 1987 16:53 | 8 |
| I would like to announce
- that Jim Adkins has accepted a position with the Phoenix Software
Services Delivery Unit, not Presales, Delivery
- that he has accepted my apology for posting an erroneous public note
karl moeller sws
|
50.57 | "All software units look alike, anyway...:-)" | BUBBLY::LEIGH | Relocation's a full-time job | Tue Jun 23 1987 18:37 | 1 |
|
|
50.58 | | NEWVAX::ADKINS | At One with the Infinite Is | Tue Jun 23 1987 21:05 | 11 |
| Re: .-1:
Yikes! I sure hope they don't. ;-)
Jim
PS - Now that I *am* moving to Phoenix, anybody care to buy some
nice wool slacks? Only worn once. (That's what I get for updating
the wardrobe in the Spring sales . One never knows that the future
will bring)
|
50.59 | New ice age? | GOOGLY::KERRELL | Inspired to creative action | Wed Jun 24 1987 08:23 | 9 |
| re. 58:
> One never knows that the future will bring
In that case, hold on to the slacks :-)
Good luck in your new job.
Dave.
|
50.60 | Reposted: HOLIDAY PAY FOR TEMPS | DR::BLINN | Put a REAL pinhead in the Oval Office! | Fri Jun 10 1988 16:54 | 21 |
| ================================================================================
Note 50.60 holidays and temp emplyees 60 of 60
WWF::POTTER 0 lines 10-JUN-1988 08:15
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-< HOLIDAY PAY FOR TEMPS >-
I can see what all you are saying about temps getting no holiday
pay and you would at a well known company like this one. I don't
get holiday pay and thought I would since last summer I worked at
a construction firm woirking outside doing labor and got holiday
pay. That is a little strange for a temp to not get holiday at
a good company and recieve it at a lower job(construction labor).
I think that the company is a very good one, to it full timers,
but temps wouldn't be here if they didn't think they were going
to stay and if they didn't it is or was probably because they were
disappointed with the policy' s for temps. Whether it be the holiday
policy ior any other one. They wouldn't have worked her if they
didn't plan on staying. It sounds cheep of the company.
concerned
mp
|
50.61 | HOLIDAYS vs TEMPS | WFOV12::LAUDE | | Fri Jun 10 1988 18:55 | 9 |
| At many other companies you have to finish your 90 day probationary
period before you are eligible for holiday benefits.
As for all temps planning on staying with DEC I have my doubts,
we have quite a few temps that work only for the summer while not
in school. I have talked with a few of them and some would like
to stay with the company and others have other plans. Why doesn't
the company that placed them here pick up thier benifits?
al
|
50.62 | | ARTRED::LAVOIE | You want two hundred dollars for what? | Fri Jun 17 1988 12:25 | 11 |
| Back to this one again eh?
At one point in my career as a temp in WMO we were told that DEC
in appreciation for all of our hours and hard work with no benefits
would give every employee who put in 400 hours a day off paid.
When you worked o.t. like I did it added up fairly quickly. My
point is that DEC did try and do something worthwhile for the tag
employees but most of them don't stay around long enough to see
what is done.
Debbi
|
50.63 | My 2� worth of my views and Digital's | SLDA::KIRICHOK | My God, it's full of stars! | Thu Jun 23 1988 13:04 | 15 |
| My turn:
Being a Northeastern University Co-op student, I work here at Digital
for 3 or sometimes 6 months at a time. In our group we presently
have two graduated NU students working full time. It is known that
while being a co-op student they were earning vacation
time, but could not use it. When they came on full time they had
already earned about 2 weeks worth of vacation time that they could
now use however they felt. In our group, and with Digital as a
whole, it is a policy to attract coop students to come to Digital
and to stay with Digital after graduating from college.
(look in the Personnel Policies and Procedures manual, It's in section 2.
The Cooperative Education Program (Coop) is described in section 2.09
and Temporary Employment is in section 2.02).
|