T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
145.1 | don't think so | EXIT26::FREDRIKSEN | | Tue Jun 24 1986 18:21 | 2 |
| I believe that any such restrictions only apply to WC II. Check
with Personnel.
|
145.2 | Working 5am-9pm, right?... | POTARU::QUODLING | Technocrats of the world... Unite! | Tue Jun 24 1986 21:30 | 6 |
| Lunch??? Usually out for 5-10 minutes to grab a sandwich and
then back to my desk. ANd that is usually at about 3pm (Worst
case, to date was lunch at 5pm)
q
|
145.3 | | PAPPAS::JIM | Jim Pappas | Wed Jun 25 1986 00:29 | 22 |
| RE: .0
> Question?
>
> Is there a federal law restricting people from working through lunch?
>
> I'm curious because my department frequently sets up staff meetings
> and other job tasks such as demos, presentations, development, etc
> during lunch hour.
>
> Pete
>
> PS we don't get compensated for it with time off or money.
Excuse me, but I thought that this file was restricted to DEC employees.
You obviously work for a different company than I do. Let's see,
I remember on several occasions getting breakfast in the cafeteria
on my way out after working "a little late".
Jim Pappas
|
145.5 | | VENTUR::PREVIDI | Glory Jee to Besus | Wed Jun 25 1986 16:18 | 11 |
| RE: .0 thru .4
Only grunts and very insecure people put up with that crap.
A professional knows when to say NO.
I have no sympathy for any of you. After all it's only a job and
under the conditions you allude to, not much of one at that.
Contrary to management propaganda, DEC is not Gods gift to the
working person.
Jack Previdi
Principal Quality Engineer
WOO/D80
|
145.6 | MANAGEMENT PROPOGANDA, PRIDE & INSULTS | JAWS::AUSTIN | Tom Austin @UPO - Channels Marketing | Wed Jun 25 1986 17:10 | 49 |
| Well, atleast now we know why some customers complain about the quality
of our products! I have pride in my work. Whether it takes me 20
minutes or 20 weeks to deal with a project or an issue.
If you don't have pride in your work, you probably shouldn't take
pride in your work.
My hat's off to the people who are willing to extend themselves
so BOTH they and the company can be proud -- but not arrogant. At
the same time, working 20 hours a day, day in and day out, is unhealthy
and, in the long term, unproductive.
There has to be a balance between working to live and living to
work. And it lies in the area of personal pride.
If you can be proud referring to people who SOME OF THE TIME
work all night to finish a project, meet a customer deadline or
whatever -- as grunts and very insecure people, then it's clear
atleast two of us have very different standards.
This company stands in for its employees. It IS management propoganda
that we don't lay people off at the first sign of a downturn in
earnings. It IS management propoganda that we have never had a layoff.
It IS management propoganda that this company retrains rather than
fires persons with no-longer needed skills. It IS management propoganda
that we have grown more than 10 fold in as many years -- allowing the
hardest working, most talented to rise with the growth of the company.
It IS management 'propoganda' because it's true.
Maybe you haven't been here long enough to see the facts behind
the propoganda.
NO COMPANY IS GOD'S GIFT to the working stiff. Or to the middle
manager, for that matter. God's gift to man is the ability to work,
the ability to struggle, the ability to 'vote with their feet',
the ability to go to work for someone else who will pay 30% more
and may be out of business in 2 years -- or lay you off 'cause they
can't manage their business properly.
A professional knows what the real world is like....
80 hour weeks should clearly be the exception, not the rule.
People work nights and days on projects, sometimes 'cause it's needed
and sometimes because the Digital culture allows people to do a
variety of things...
Do you take pride in your work? Do you ever work weekends? Evenings?
Come in mornings? Work through lunch? Does that make you a grunt
or an insecure person?
|
145.7 | Watch my lips | VENTUR::PREVIDI | Glory Jee to Besus | Wed Jun 25 1986 21:25 | 7 |
| RE .6
Re-read .0
There is a big difference between putting in extra effort to get
a job done right, and being constantly sh!t on.
But then maybe marketing types are scatophiles.
|
145.8 | | PAPPAS::JIM | Jim Pappas | Wed Jun 25 1986 23:13 | 42 |
|
RE: .5
> I have no sympathy for any of you. After all it's only a job and
> under the conditions you allude to, not much of one at that.
> Contrary to management propaganda, DEC is not Gods gift to the
> working person.
Actually, I feel sorry for you.
I remember hearing once (long before I joined DEC) that you know you
are in the right job if on Friday, you are glad the week is over and
also, if by Monday, you can't wait for the week to start. I remember
thinking to myself "hogwash, nobody looks forward to Monday. I have
since realized that the "right jobs" do exist. Anyone who has the
attitude of (.5) must share my original belief. I would stronly
urge you to find the right job. You would be amazed at the difference
it makes.
One time I left work and noticed a long line of cars leaving. I
thought that there was an accident or something. Then I looked
at the clock and noticed it was 5:00. I couldn't believe it, I
had been working at DEC for several years and this was the first
time I left at precisely 5:00. I had worked late and left early
but I never went home at precisely 5. I could not stop thinking of all
the people who sit and watch the clock for the correct time to leave.
Doesn't everyone work when they are most creative?
I do not consider myself a grunt or insecure. Rather, I totally enjoy
my job and give it my all. It is an important part of my life that I
would not do without. While the money is important, it is hardly the
most important part of working here. There are times that I have been
frustrated but these have been the exception not the rule. Maybe
Hudson MA. is the exception, but most people I work with share the same
enthusiasm as myself. Maybe this is the recipe to our success.
By the way, in refernce to your comment about being constantly sh!t
on (re .7), I have never had anyone tell me what time to work.
It wasn't until that day in the parking lot that I realized anyone
else had.
Jim Pappas
|
145.9 | GOD's gift to the working man | JAWS::AUSTIN | Tom Austin @UPO - Channels Marketing | Thu Jun 26 1986 01:14 | 33 |
| Read your own lips:
> Only grunts and very insecure people put up with that crap.
Working late on a project or to meet a deadline or to win a piece
of business or to ensure that our products have the best quality
engineering in them is crap?
Asking or suggesting to employees that they come to a demo or
discussion during lunch is crap?
Management propaganda? I think that neither Ken nor any of our officers
or directors would claim that Digital is God's gift to either mankind
or the working person. What myths are you referring to? Or do you
just like to take shots at Digital's unnamed (and imperfect but,
in the long haul, impressive) management?
Healthy criticism is fine. But the "Management Propaganda" statement
doesn't fall in that category. It's the type of argument that doesn't
help anything and provokes inappropriate sentiments on all sides.
Digital and its management has its flaws and its positive attributes.
Claiming that Digital is God's gift to mankind is as unreflective
as claiming that management "propaganda" purporting the same is
incorrect.
Flame on. But argument by invective or innuendo (or ad hominem attack)
is stupid...and provokes more of the same.
.5 is a less professional comment than .0!
|
145.10 | Boys will be boys. | CSTVAX::MCLURE | Vaxnote your way to ubiquity | Thu Jun 26 1986 02:21 | 23 |
| re. !@#$%^
Ok, so somebody got upset and was honest about their feelings, that's
not a signal for everyone to freak-out. I agree with (145.8), sometimes a
a new job is a good solution. I'm about to switch jobs myself; luckily,
I have that option. Unfortunately, recent restrictions enforce the 2-
year commitment on individual contributers (managers too?), and this
rule may limit one's options.
Don't worry (145.5), things will work out. To quote George Paquin
(again without permission - until later) regarding job dissatisfaction,
"...there's something to be said for sticking around and slugging it out."
This is, of course, assuming that George's first bit of quoted advice
(re. note 88.15) has been followed beforehand.
I can attest to the fact that a good job can (and does) make all
the difference; my first two years here went extremely well. I was also
extremely shocked by the 5:00 street party. The great computer gods
had their way with me recently however, I have been on the DEC morale
skid row for several months now, but seem to be coming out of it quite
well. I'm looking forward to an excellent next two years!
-DAV0
|
145.12 | Shocked too! | TBD::ZAHAREE | I hate Notes | Thu Jun 26 1986 12:53 | 9 |
| re (8?)
And I though I was the only one suprised at that....
Even when I'm not particularly happy with what I'm doing in my job,
I've always found the cars lining up at 5pm amusing. I had no idea
that so many people sat watching their watches/clocks.
- M
|
145.13 | Why people go home at 5:00 | PABLO::SLOANE | REPLY TO TOPDOC::SLOANE | Thu Jun 26 1986 17:33 | 19 |
| People leave at the stroke of 5:00 because:
1. They are in a car pool or vanpool
2. They have to pick up the kids.
3. They have to pick up their wife/husband/girl-/boy-/friend.
4. They have to go to the grocery store, the doctor, or the dentist.
5. They have to let the dog out before it messes on the floor.
6. They've been at work since 6:30 am and feel tired.
7. Their customers, work partners, supervisors, etc. all go home
at 5:00 and they can't do productive work after that.
-bs
|
145.14 | no flextime at one Digital admin site! | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Distributed Systems Ideology | Thu Jun 26 1986 19:09 | 28 |
| Wanna know why some employees leave promptly at 5:00?
Because their Group Manager insists on clockwatching! This is
the text of a memo distributed last summer to a certain building's
inhabitants, somewhere near Maynard:
<begin forwarded memo>
Please communicate this message to each of your employees at
your next one on one meeting. Thank you.
It has been strongly pointed out to me that the working hours for this
particular facility are from 08:15 to 17:00 with 45 minutes for lunch.
Now, we all know that their are many dedicated people here who work
much more then the required 40 hours per week. We also know that many
of the "less dedicated "ones arrive around 9 and depart early to make
up for it. I request that you all cause that to cease and desist.
I took a short look at the parking lot at 08:15 this morning and found
it to be 2/3rds empty or 1/3rd full depending on how you want to look
at it. The corporate officers who often use the board room, look at it
as the former, not the latter.
In particular, I am requesting that all managers be here on time and
work their full hours. That people who are abusing the system be
warned to knock it off, informally at first then formally, if
required. This will never work unless we and our direct reports set
the example. Please help me to cure the problem, or additional actions
will have to be taken that we will all dislike. I simply don't intend
to be chastized about this again, particurally by those who use the
board room.
Thanks in advance, Haskell.
|
145.15 | | BEECH::ECKERT | Jerry Eckert | Thu Jun 26 1986 20:28 | 7 |
| re: .14
Fred, would you mind identifying the site? I want to make darn
sure I don't waste my time looking for a job there!
- Jerry
|
145.16 | BOD Boardroom + Haskell = VRO? | HIGHFI::MICKOL | Erie, PA. | Thu Jun 26 1986 23:56 | 3 |
| Sounds like VRO to me.
|
145.17 | CLARIFICATION | JAWS::AUSTIN | Tom Austin @UPO - Channels Marketing | Fri Jun 27 1986 00:42 | 10 |
| Re: .11 <Unprofessional my A!!>
.11> In regards to .9...
.11> Is it unprofessional to ask questions?
Absolutely not!
The .9 professionalism comment was meant as a perjorative to
non-specific innuendos about Digital and its employees. Please don't
read in any criticism of criticism, criticism of questions or other
positions taken in the file.
|
145.18 | | ZEPPO::MAHLER | Michael | Fri Jun 27 1986 11:05 | 6 |
|
To answer your question:
Yes, there is a Federal law about lunch breaks for
F/T workers.
|
145.19 | | CSSE32::PHILPOTT | CSSE/Lang. & Tools, ZK02-1/N71 | Fri Jun 27 1986 12:28 | 1 |
| Now I'm curious: what does it say?
|
145.21 | Call the Feds yourself? | LSTARK::THOMPSON | Noter of the LoST ARK | Fri Jun 27 1986 14:26 | 10 |
| I called the state (Mass I forget which Dept). There is a federal
law that says the employees who work 6 or more hours in a day have
to have a half hour for lunch. It does not say when in the day and
it can be longer, paid or unpaid. I don't think it applies to exempt
employees. This was a few weeks ago so I don't remeber all the details.
Alfred
BTW, unless you are using a VT50 you should be able to type lowercase
letters. Please try it.
|
145.22 | Here ys go ... | ZEPPO::MAHLER | Michael | Fri Jun 27 1986 14:40 | 30 |
|
Personnel Policies and Procedures
Section 6.40 Page 1 of 2
12 Aug 83
Policy:
======
Work Schedules are established by appropriate managment
at each Digital facility.
Practice
========
Regular Work Week
-----------------
In the US the following guidelines apply:
o 5 days, 40 hr/week
o 1/2 or 3/4 hour UNPAID lunch period, EXCLUSIVE of the
40 hours above.
o a 10 minute PAID break during the first half of the shift,
another 10 minute paid break in the second half of the shift.
In addition, ( I Do not have the law handy but remember it from
my high school days when looking for work) Federal law requires
that here be a lunch break for F/T employees of ANY company.
|
145.23 | He could be on a VT05 | ODIXIE::VICKERS | Don Vickers, Notes DIG member | Fri Jun 27 1986 19:57 | 9 |
|
Re: .21
Alfred,
Don't forget the really streamlined video terminal that was rugged,
too.
Don (^;
|
145.24 | schedule? what schedule? | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | Hot Stuff, or just a Flamer? | Thu Jul 10 1986 04:42 | 39 |
| I would interpret .0 ("we don't get compensated for it with time
off...") to imply that the department involved is violating Federal
law.
I have been in situations where that practice occured occasionally, and
had no problem with it. But if it does occur frequently then that is a
sign that the department management is doing their job poorly: they
are either abusing their employees (perhaps in hope of better
productivity) by increasing the workload or they are unable to
accomplish the normal workload within normal working hours. My own
response would be first to address the problem with "frequently"
being expected to give up lunch, and then to boycott regular lunchhour
activities.
But beware! If you can manage your own schedule then you really aren't
losing your lunch break. Since I am in a job where I can pretty much
come and go as I deem appropriate for the job, the concept of 8 to 5
with a routine lunchbreak is totally alien to me. If you are in a
similar situation, lunchtime presentations or demos (when people are
likely to be free of other scheduled meetings, etc.) might be
appropriate, you should then be expected to manage your own schedule
so that you do now end up booked totally solid from 8 am to whenever
(or if you do that's your choice).
The real issue is how much control you have over your own schedule.
If you have lots of flexibility other times and it's just that things
get scheduled for what's usually considered lunchtime, then I don't
think you've got anything to complain about. On the other hand,
if you've got that guy mentioned above sending memos about 1/3 empty
parking lots, then maybe it's time to vote with your feet. Or at
least ask to have your working schedule judged based on your job
performance not on the clock (consider that there are some special
cases where jobs require schedules fixed by the clock, it's a matter
of being reasonable).
Wow, I just looked at the clock for the first time in awhile! Time
to amble off to visit my bed, to rest up before returning for the
next installment of this adventure that's my job.
what schedule?
|
145.25 | Answer is in "DIGITAL and YOU" (EB-29051-86) | FURILO::BLINN | Dr. Tom @MRO | Sun Aug 10 1986 18:13 | 24 |
| I recently received a fresh copy of "Digital and YOU", which I
suspect was mailed to all U. S. employees. It summarizes many
personnel policies and procedures. In particular, it states the
"Lunch Periods" policy, as well as the "Breaks" policy. The two
policies are exactly as stated in an earlier reply -- 30 or 45
minutes for lunch, and two paid 10-minute breaks.
If you did not get a copy of this in the mail, you should ask your
PSA (Personnel Services Administrator) to get a copy for you. It
is literature order number EB-29051-86 (June 1986).
As for working through lunch, I do it some days, and take a longer
lunch other days. I often come in early, or work late. I like the
work I do, and feel I get pretty fair pay in return (but I'm
always willing to take more, and have never found that I get paid
more than I can spend). If you find that your boss schedules
meetings during what should be the lunch hour, complain to him or
her, and cite the Personnel Policies and Procedures. If your boss
doesn't have a copy, or isn't familiar with the relevant policy,
you've got a local problem that needs to be resolved. You can
resolve the problem for yourself by finding a new job, but that
won't fix the problem, just avoid it. Do the right thing.
Tom
|
145.26 | | GNUVAX::TUCKER | | Mon Aug 11 1986 17:22 | 4 |
| re .13:
and they have to pick up the car from the repair shop before it
closes.
|