blahbleebloo
Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? CA
Hello friendly people! I haven't posted in a while, but I had a question in the employment law arena, and thought I'd pose it to you fine people.
Here's the skinny: I have a job, and with that job came a boss and company policies all laid out in a handy employee handbook. My boss frequently likes to make his own rules, and says that as long as they don't contradict the employee handbook then they are gospel. Fair enough, I can get behind that. I'm a team player.
The problem however, is when the rules seem to change with his mood, or when applied to different people. For instance, the employee handbook has nothing outlined about make up time. There are overtime laws that apply to "making up time" on different days, of course, but when done on the same day, as long as it's still regular time and the company policy doesn't forbid it, all should be good right?
Wrong. At least sometimes...it's hard to tell when, but sometimes my boss is good with it and sometimes not. And when he either approves or denies it, he always "quotes" this seemingly non-existant policy that no one has ever seen that it's either allowed or disallowed. And we're talking make up time in lieu of using PTO or taking the time unpaid. The "time off" itself has already been approved, so it's not a coverage issue.
This is just an example of the inconsistancy of course, but ultimately the question is this: Is a policy that is not written/documented enforcable? I mean, I know in CA you can legally get fired for any reason not protected by law, but in terms of being written up/fired for cause as defined by California law.
Anyway, I appreciate your time, and please let me know if my ramblings don't make sense.
~A
Hello friendly people! I haven't posted in a while, but I had a question in the employment law arena, and thought I'd pose it to you fine people.
Here's the skinny: I have a job, and with that job came a boss and company policies all laid out in a handy employee handbook. My boss frequently likes to make his own rules, and says that as long as they don't contradict the employee handbook then they are gospel. Fair enough, I can get behind that. I'm a team player.
The problem however, is when the rules seem to change with his mood, or when applied to different people. For instance, the employee handbook has nothing outlined about make up time. There are overtime laws that apply to "making up time" on different days, of course, but when done on the same day, as long as it's still regular time and the company policy doesn't forbid it, all should be good right?
Wrong. At least sometimes...it's hard to tell when, but sometimes my boss is good with it and sometimes not. And when he either approves or denies it, he always "quotes" this seemingly non-existant policy that no one has ever seen that it's either allowed or disallowed. And we're talking make up time in lieu of using PTO or taking the time unpaid. The "time off" itself has already been approved, so it's not a coverage issue.
This is just an example of the inconsistancy of course, but ultimately the question is this: Is a policy that is not written/documented enforcable? I mean, I know in CA you can legally get fired for any reason not protected by law, but in terms of being written up/fired for cause as defined by California law.
Anyway, I appreciate your time, and please let me know if my ramblings don't make sense.
~A