Generation Never-Called-in-Sick

(businessinsider.com)

14 points | by agubelu 17 hours ago ago

11 comments

  • 14 hours ago ago
    [deleted]
  • jmclnx 12 hours ago ago

    When most boomers started out, Companies would have your back in many cases and hardly anyone left to work elsewhere.

    Starting in I guess the 80s/90s it all changed. I remember getting paid for unused sick-time in the 80s, that became history towards the end of that decade.

    So yes, these days, use your sick time.

    • darklion 12 hours ago ago

      Meanwhile, my company halved our sick time a couple of years ago, and just last week announced that they were eliminating dedicated sick time entirely starting the first of next year. Want to take a sick day? Spend your “paid time off” (a.k.a., vacation days) to do it.

      Insert a, “I’d love to use my sick time, IF I HAD ANY” meme here.

      • JohnFen 11 hours ago ago

        Every company I've worked for in the last 20 years or so have combined sick time and vacation time into a single "paid time off" bucket.

        I strongly prefer that, honestly. It means that I don't have to categorize the reasons why I'm taking the time off because it doesn't matter. It's all just time off.

        The key to remember is that it means that PTO is not "vacation time". It's a paid time off allowance that can certainly be used for vacation, but can also be used for other things.

        • kcplate 6 hours ago ago

          > I strongly prefer that, honestly

          Same, but I have only used 2.5 PTO days as sick time in probably the last 20ish years. Two of those were due to Covid in January.

          So for me, it just means more vacation time. If it was categorized separately I’d lose (historically speaking).

        • AndrewDucker 7 hours ago ago

          Last place I worked (in the UK) - 30ish days of holiday per year. Sick pay was full pay for up to 6 months with doctor's documentation.

          • agubelu 7 hours ago ago

            I think "sick time" or "sick days" is a very US-centric thing. In good chunks of the EU, medical leaves (approved by a doctor) are a legally protected concept.

  • benterix 14 hours ago ago

    No archive.ph link necessary, just disable JS (one click in uBlock Origin).