For the better part of the last decade, nearly every waking hour of San Francisco Deputy Sheriff Barry Bloom’s life was spent on the clock.

Bloom, a public safety monitor at San Francisco City Hall, was on duty an average of 95 hours a week since 2016, and more than 100 hours a week over the last two fiscal years, according to city data. His workload of late leaves roughly 10 hours a day remaining for sleeping, eating and just about anything else not tied to his job as a sheriff’s deputy.

  • @NounsAndWords
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    411 year ago

    There is an enormous difference between “clocking” hours and “working” those hours. I’ve known some of those types with ridiculous amounts of overtime hours for municipalities and I don’t believe for a second they aren’t just stealing from tax payers.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      191 year ago

      It’s absolutely just stealing from tax payers at that level. 7 years of 95-100 hour weeks would kill you if you actually worked those hours, even as a cop.

      • @andrewta
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        -111 year ago

        There’s one three comments read the one from the Paramedic and then get back to me about stealing from tax payers

        • @Astroturfed
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          91 year ago

          So, the cop writing tickets or sleeping in his car on OT pay is the same as a paramedic?

        • @TenderfootGungi
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          61 year ago

          Paramedics are on call those long hours, not necessarily actually working. In some places they can even sleep on the clock.