Required to use vacation time during shut down?
HRratrace
49 Posts
I recently began working for an automotive manufacturing company (non-union). This is my first experience in this type of industry (automotive). Every year at the 4th of July they shut down operations for one week.
Can we require EE's to use vacation to cover this time off during shut down? Our vacation policy does NOT address this issue at all. My thought is in abence of a policy that addresses this and in absence of any other formal EE communication advising EE's of this requirement, then no...we can not force them to use vacation. We can recommend and strongly encourage them to, but we can not actually force them to.
I've been wrong before (more times than I care to admit), so I am looking for some wise HR input.
Help???
Can we require EE's to use vacation to cover this time off during shut down? Our vacation policy does NOT address this issue at all. My thought is in abence of a policy that addresses this and in absence of any other formal EE communication advising EE's of this requirement, then no...we can not force them to use vacation. We can recommend and strongly encourage them to, but we can not actually force them to.
I've been wrong before (more times than I care to admit), so I am looking for some wise HR input.
Help???
Comments
If this is something the company wants to incorporate then a policy must be drafted to the effect that during company shut downs all those with vacation not previously scheduled or taken will be required to take it during this time.
Lisa
It may also be that your boss thinks vacation pay will rule them ineligible for UI during that week. But, that's entirely another discussion.
Thank you very much for your help.
I am not familiar with Tennessee law, but there is NOTHING in federal law that I am aware of that says an employer may NOT use an employees accrued vacation or PTO time to cover the time the company is shutdown for an entire week.
If yo mean by "force" that even if the emplyee is illng to take the week as unpaid, the comapny will still pay him or her by using any vacation bank hours the emplyee has, that's okay even though it is in my mind despicable. If the employee is giving the option to use the vacation ban or go without pay, that is more reasonable.
Remember, in many states, whether to offer vacation time is strictly an employer's choice and/or under the employers control (such as with charging time banks for partial days' absences for salaried, exempts). So, the emplyer could mandate its use during the shutdown.
The issue, as I see it, doesn't fall apart simply because your company vacation policy doesn't address it. If the company's continuing practice is to do it and the company gives sufficient notice to the employees that the mandated use of vacation time will occur on the July 4th week when the comapny is shut down, then I don't see a particular problem.
As I said, I'd think it would be better if the employer gives the option but there is nothing that I am aware of in federal law that prevents the employer from paying the employee for that week using the availabe vacation time on the employee's time accounts even over the employee's objections.
This would include using the vacation time banks for salaried exempts. Since the exempt will NOT perform any work during the week, even with the company voluntarily shutdown, there is NO requirement under FLSA that the employee be paid a salary at all for that week. Thus, this opens up the use of the vacation time bank.
This is precisely my point, hatchet. As I've said, if it's written policy or the company's standard practice, there would be no problem. Otherwise, you're gonna have a morale problem at best and a union organizing effort at worst. And it's not just "some" states that allow an employer to offer or not offer vacation and tailor his policy as he sees fit. The total is 50.
I am not only concerned about the legal implications, but as Don D pointed out, the moral issues that could arise. Our EE's earn a very low wage and work very hard for what benefits they get. I see it as being a huge blow to morale if we suddenly up and try to burn up their vacation time on them w/o their request or permission to do so. While I now understand it may be within our right as the employer to do so, I still do not think it is prudent to without a written policy in place advising EE's of this from the get-go.
I could find no Federal or TN State law prohibiting us from doing so, however, I still feel that the company should do the morally "right" thing in this situation. In my opinion, this would be leaving the use of vacation time to the EE's discression.
The exempt salary situation is not an issue...there are only 5 of us and we will all be in here that week trying our best to get caught back up while things are quiet.
:0) Thanks for your input.
For a manufacturer, if you offer shutdowns once or twice during the year and let employees take it without pay, it became almost impossible to deal with workloads later in the year when employees took additional timeoff. So, for production reasons, management changed their tactics (yes for all the years prior we never required employees to use vacation), and started requiring it.
Ultimately we didn't have too many morale issues because we found that most employees already had applied their available time off during shutdowns when they weren't required to do so. And having a week off was always nice.
Then you have EEs coming to you saying "JOE BLOW got to take the time off without pay, why do I have use my vacation? If I can afford to take the time off without pay, why should I have to burn my vacation?"
The way I see it is like this:
Vacation is a benefit.
If you only earn 2 weeks of vacation per year and we shut down 2 weeks per year (4th of July and Christmas), then how can you possibly mandate that they use their vacation for shut downs? How is it a benefit then? They'd never get a personal day off!
Maybe I just have too big of a heart. But I still think vacation is for personal and family time, rest and relaxation...and an EE should be able to decide when, where and how they use this time off.
Good luck!
Recommend you mine your supervisors and other staff for historical reasons as to policy development, and determine if the employees have expectations of drawing UI while on layoff.
If your company must require vacation, meet with employees and explain the rationale, as far in advance as possible so they can plan their lives.
That schedule would be terrible for me personally but the longtimers at Sea Ray love it, they have excellent other benefits and pay well for the area.
It's actions like this that may very well result in your next post describing your company as one with a collective bargaining agreement rather than non-union.
There's the legal test and the newspaper test. I would submit that if you do this and it bacame the subject of a front page article in your local paper...you'd lose in the court of public opinion.