• @ChonkyOwlbear
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    109 days ago

    The trick is how to make this work with 24/7 businesses. Now we have a set of 5 day workers that have full benefits and 2 day workers that have partial benefits. If the full benefit workers only work 4 days and the partial benefits workers now work 3, they will be pushing for full benefits as well. That means more cost to the business.

    • HubertManne
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      fedilink
      59 days ago

      its the only real path to 24/7. As it stands now you can run 24/7 but you won’t. weekends will never run like weekdays and its not for a lack of demand on the weekends. 4 day work week is primed for a two shift solution with one day where the shifts can collaborate.

      • @ChonkyOwlbear
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        8 days ago

        In my case it’s a security job, so it’s not like you need twice as many people one day. But I can see how that would work for certain industries.

    • @PriorityMotif
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      9 days ago

      4 12s one week, 3 12s the other, 4 shifts. I used to have that at an old job and it was kind of nice having 2 days off in the middle of the week and every other weekend having three days off. It would be Tuesday,Wednesday, Then Saturday, Sunday, Monday. Then Thursday, Friday.

      I suppose you could do this on 8 hours and have 6 shifts instead of only 4. So only a 28 hour work week on average 24/32.

    • @thejoker954
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      18 days ago

      Maybe dont tie healthcare to jobs? That is the most expensive ‘benefit’ they offer.

      • @ChonkyOwlbear
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        18 days ago

        Agreed, but that makes it a MUCH harder problem to solve.