• kamen
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    5626 days ago

    I wanna see them pay for office hours AND commute hours. In a big city you easily have 1+ hour a day irrevocably lost to commuting.

      • @Cryophilia
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        826 days ago

        So glad I live in California. A faulty security gate once prevented me from leaving my job on time. Which pushed me past 12 hours on shift, which automatically meant I was earning twice my hourly wage while I waited. Plus it required a mandatory additional meal break, which I couldn’t take. Since I couldn’t take it, I was automatically given an additional full hour’s wage, as required by state law.

        • @[email protected]
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          326 days ago

          I’m glad I don’t work for a company that forces me to go through a security gate, and I’m glad we don’t track hours. I get paid salary, and I rarely work more than 8 hours in a given day, and my average hours worked per week is usually under 40.

          It’s nice you had some protections, but those protections really shouldn’t be necessary.

          • @[email protected]
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            426 days ago

            You’re lucky. Many people on salary end up working overtime with no pay increase.

            Once again, there are good managers & (far too frequently) bad (Elon loving cockwomble) managers

          • @[email protected]
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            226 days ago

            Being salaried doesn’t remove you from those protections, at least in Europe. You get overtime, which is either 1.5x pay or you accumulate PTO.

            • @Cryophilia
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              226 days ago

              In the US most salaried positions are not eligible for overtime. Unfortunately, California has yet to close that loophole.

              The next job above me is salaried. If I were to get a promotion, I’d be making about 2/3 of my current income because I would lose all of the hourly protections I have. Despite a higher base pay.

      • kamen
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        726 days ago

        Wow. Now I don’t want to go to the US even harder than before.

      • @BradleyUffner
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        26 days ago

        If I’m reading that right, the decision was reversed by the 9th circuit.

        The District Court originally dismissed the case, ruling that the security checks were made after the regular work shift and therefore not “an integral and indispensable part” of the job. The Ninth Circuit disagreed, ruling that the checks were necessary to the principal work of the job.[2][3]

        • @[email protected]
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          225 days ago

          The US Supreme Court then reversed the Ninth Circuit ruling. You’re quoting the background that gives context to the case in the lixned article.