Hours and the Law

by Julie Kirst 12/14/2010 12:33:00 PM

In our recent compensation survey, soon available on our Web site, many respondents noted they have been asked to work extra hours—going quite beyond the occasional overtime scenario.

One survey respondent, a field service engineer, had this to say:

Typically, if the job requires more than 40 hours a week to fulfill on a continual basis, there should be more employees to do the job. That is the basis for state and federal job laws regarding job hours. Occasional overtime is expected, but not each week—as that indicates either a staffing issue or related problem. Skill could be an issue in some cases, but that would lead back to related issues and a management problem.


This field service engineer makes a solid point. Have you noticed this at your facility? If you're a manager, have you used this to make a case for more help? How would you suggest this employee approach this, without threatening his employment?

 

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Comments

Posted by vsarmiento, 12/21/2010 5:39:57 AM

Although kind of late when one realizes that they're being overwhelmed or overworked, it is still not something that's beyond help! It's never too late for any dept. heads to conduct a real time and motion studies on all the different aspects of the day-to-day dept. operations. This will help them visualized where the bottlenecks are, required manpower for proper job implementation, tap /assign matching available technical expertise, streamline workflows / work assignments, justify additional budgetary fundings, etc.  

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