God what I wouldn't do to work 28 hours less than I do now with no loss of pay
Or at least get paid overtime fuck. I'm hourly but it's not illegal in my industry to not pay overtime. 60 hours just straight time.
We're trying to reduce the numbers of hours a person has to work.
We talk about the end of paid work being mandatory for survival.
Partnerships:
/join #antiwork
)God what I wouldn't do to work 28 hours less than I do now with no loss of pay
Or at least get paid overtime fuck. I'm hourly but it's not illegal in my industry to not pay overtime. 60 hours just straight time.
I’m salaried and have no pay after 40 hours 😢. Luckily I rarely work overtime.
Hello fellow truck driver. There are companies out there that pay OT in our industry.
Yeah, this account gets me home every night though.
Probably going to find something else in a year or so.
Yeah my last company was home every night and OT after 40. Current company does it depending on the job and I got bumped to salary with "OT" after 45 hrs and a separate OT for the hours that code as OT depending on the job. It's a cluster fuck but pays well and I'm home every night unless the job is out of town or something. Would say I sleep in my own bed 98% of the time.
Unsere If this would translate 1:1 in the real world, but U would at least have more time to buy locally, cook stuff myself, and repair things. Which would really be a great Thing.
Don't these plants run 24/7? Even if each worker worked on 32 hours a week, they'd hire more workers so that the plant would be staffed 24/7, right? In that case, I don't see how that would lead to environmental benefit.
Depends if that makes financial sense. Hiring an additional crew doesn't just mean paying the labor, each employee will need an insurance and benefits package as well. If the deal says those packages can't be significantly reduced and the company can't find another way to cut costs they may be less inclined to stick to a 24/7 schedule. For example... Of course there's a lot more to it than just that.
There's a lot of time and money involved in shutting down plants of this size. I wouldn't be at all surprised if they just added more people to keep the plant running. Which like the other person said would probably turn out to be a net negative environmentally since it would be a whole shift basically of extra people driving to and from work every week.