Granting time off without pay
sanrog
1 Post
I've noticed a trend of supervisors giving employees time off without pay. The reasons for the requests are not medical in nature (I want to visit my dad, I want to go camping, etc.). All of these employees have vacation time which they have exhausted. We do have an attendance policy and attendance is one category on our annual evaluation. If our common practice is to not follow the attendance policy, can we really use it as a reason to dismiss employees who have poor attendance?
Comments
I think when you consider attendance on an evaluation you are looking at approved scheduled leave as opposed to all leave. If I allow an employee time off for a specific event which leaves us plenty of coverage I don't see that as a ding against the employee. For instance, if work is slow such an employee taking time off would only be a positive thing. I will not be as happy with an employee who calls in sick every time we are bogged down with work, , even if the leave they used was paid. An example would be an employee who never actually takes a vacation but who may call in sick as soon as they have time on the books, even if they don't really need to be gone and you are short handed.
I will note, however, that generally speaking employers offer enough leave that employees should not still want time off when it has run out. Also, many employers have point systems. Such systems help guard against leave abuse by employees, but limit the employer in allowing unpaid time off. Usually the key in a point system is whether the leave was pre-approved or not.
What it really comes down to is your company's culture, needs and policies.
Sorry to be so long winded. It has been a long week.
Good Luck!
Your first post! Welcome to the Forum. :welcome:
Sharon
Good Luck![/quote]
Your first post! So glad you joined the Forum. :welcome:
Sharon