Employee arriving too early
Forrister7
36 Posts
I have resolved this issue already but I'm curious if anyone else has had this problem and how it was handled. We are a small business with few policies. One employee started showing up half an hour before he's scheduled to begin work. He knows he will not be paid for this time. Then he started showing up 45 minutes early, then an hour, and finally an hour and a half early, at a time when I am the only other employee here. I decided this was inappropriate and told him so, and that there is no reason for him to be here so early, and that telling him this is for his own protection also. He doesn't do much during the pre-work hours he's here - uses the bathroom, sits around, etc. Has anyone else had to address the issue of an employee being on the premises too early? Am I overreacting by telling him not to be here until he's supposed to be working? I'd be interested in your thoughts.
Comments
Disclaimer: This message is not intended to offend or attack. It is posted as personal opinion and with the gentlest of intentions.
Now, key is the classification of this employee as EXEMPT or NON-EXEMPT. A EXEMPT can be there and do work if he/she chooses or wait for the normal starting time for his/her position. The non-exempt is where there should be concern. Any work done by this individual on behalf of the company from answering the phone, sweeping, cleaning, organizing the work site, or whatever could mean that the "work time has started" and the individual must be paid of those times. If the company allows him to stick around or just hang out, that might be sufficient to defeat the company defense that the employee should not be paid for he was not authorized to be there and he/she was told several times but he just wanted to waste his time at the work site! I would not allow a non-exempt employee to "hang around"!
PORK
I've probably posted this before, but in a prior life, we had an hourly employee who showed up a couple of hours early, and stayed a couple hours late. He puttered around as a group leader, getting his assembly line in the best possible order. (He also punched in and out at the 'normal' times) He had no life other than work. We got into a disagreement with our union, and they reported us to wage and hour, and we ended up paying the guy 4 hours of OT per day for a couple of years. That put a quick end to employees being allowed to show up early for work!!
Disclaimer: This message is not intended to offend or attack. It is posted as personal opinion. If you find yourself offended or uncomfortable, email me and let me know why.
If the guy is an early riser and does not like to sit at the house, he should go get breakfast somewhere, have a cup of coffee, and read the paper. Not come to work and just "hang out." Truth be told, if you ever made him upset, he would all and report you to the DOL. I bet he knows if he ever performed work off the clock!
In a place I worked several years ago we had a non-exempt employee with a key who would come in to do some extra "work" on the weekend. Then one weekend I showed up to do some extra work. She was on the phone for hours with family and friends, read magazines, made copies, etc. We did not have a timeclock, but reported hours on the "honor" system. I reported her to management and that stopped.
About the same time we were burglarized - we thought by a former employee, but could never prove it.
We changed the locks and issued new keys on a restricted basis. Too much liability.
If he is "creepy" all the better to keep him out of the office. You don't know what he's doing before the rest of you get there. (I sure wouldn't drink the coffee if he made it!).
You know, back in the day when showing up early meant you were eager to work and wanted the people you worked for to see that you could be counted on. This used to be a sign that showed you thought the job important.
It was one of those things you did when you were trying to get ahead, when you were showing a strong work ethic. That above and beyond the call of duty was normal for you.
As Bob said, "...the times they are a changing."
Disclaimer: This message is not intended to offend or attack. It is posted as personal opinion. If you find yourself offended or uncomfortable, email me and let me know why.
Almost every other day there is an Amber alert, a family murdered in their sleep, the Aruba situation getting fuzzier and fuzzier, and of course, terrorism is alive and well all over the world.
Enough lament!
Keep breathing, stay focused, effect what you can in the best ways possible, that's my mantra for the day.
Disclaimer: This message is not intended to offend or attack. It is posted as personal opinion. If you find yourself offended or uncomfortable, email me and let me know why.
It states that ees shall be off the premisies within 30 minutes prior and after working hours.
Many reasons for this was they would punch in 1 hr early then go and sit in their car until their scheduled work time or they would stay after work with their buddies. Anyone who is here when they are not scheduled fall under our disciplinary action.
Disclaimer: This message is not intended to offend or attack. It is posted as personal opinion. If you find yourself offended or uncomfortable, email me and let me know why.
If it were an office setting, I'd vote for allowing the workforce in as early as 30 minutes, but conditioned on their going to the breakroom, not the work area.
Disclaimer: This message is not intended to offend or attack. It is posted as personal opinion. If you find yourself offended or uncomfortable, email me and let me know why.
Now, hypothetically, if this employee was injured here in the office prior to having officially started work some morning, would he be eligible for Worker's Comp? Could this be another reason for an off-the-clock employee to not be allowed on the premises before starting his shift?
Everyone have a beautiful Blessed day. The Lord answered our prayers in protecting the people in the path of "Dennis". Dennis was a fast mover and that help to limit the danger and damage.
PORK
However, check with your state comp commission since each is state specific and could vary.
Disclaimer: This message is not intended to offend or attack. It is posted as personal opinion. If you find yourself offended or uncomfortable, email me and let me know why.
As I get it, coverage begins on the company's property line in the act of coming to work and ends on the property line in the act of leaving work.
I don't think the WC aspect of this situation should play into it. Following that logic will lead you into a beaurocratic hell trying to parse the moments between work and not-work and the proximity of the time-clock(s).
I would be concerned for the liability and potential damages with it not on W/C. The company is certainly better off under W/C, it is the best course of action, just to be able to limit the potential damages for an accident/injury.
PORK
Whether the ee is wasting time before or after their shift I suppose could be argued; but, in this case, she worked ten hours, punched out, left the building, went down some concrete steps and slipped on a wet step crushing her ankle. I've had to learn something new about MS comp with this one.
Disclaimer: This message is not intended to offend or attack. It is posted as personal opinion. If you find yourself offended or uncomfortable, email me and let me know why.
It could be complicated for us because so many of our program delivery staff have very flexible schedules based on client needs and certain program requirements.
Lots of self-starters are needed to do most of our programs - their main supervisor also has a varied schedule and performs lots of direct services off site. In some cases, it could be several days before they actually lay eyes on one another. Relying instead on email and cell phone to communicate and solve problems.
So if Mary Lou was in early, just hanging around, logged onto the internet to check the news, it would be likely that no-one, besides her immediate supervisor, would know of her circumstance.
That sort of situation is what I had in mind about setting up the kind of system necessary to effectively monitor the situation. Seems like it would be creating beaurocracy that I certainly don't have time to police, and it would likely devolve to me.
Plus, being in an office environment - with 7 remote offices, some of which are single EE offices, the monitoring and logistics around same seem to be excessive cost/time for little benefit.
I say little benefit, because the liabilities around accidents are very small in our office environments. There are more issues with slip and fall in the parking lots, and those are ice and snow related more than anything else, and are themselves rare.
All of that is probably more than anyone wanted to know, but that was my thought process.x:-8