Seniority gives you the right to work

trickpony1

Well-Known Member
If seniority gives you the right to work and you choose not to work then what do you do?

Given: A and B;
Not A;
Therefore B.

I know it's confusing.
 

GenericUsername

Well-Known Member
Nobody is going home right now.
They want you to work your off days too...

We have at least 6 going home every day right now on a volunteer basis. The guy at the top works 2 days a week - 1 to keep benefits and the other to have spending money for when he goes out on his motorcycle the other 5 days of the week. He has enough extra income from rental properties/etc that he doesn't really even need to be here... he just refuses to pay out of his own pocket for insurance. He literally works all of peak up until it gets warm (Florida) then starts taking days off left and right.
 
We have at least 6 going home every day right now on a volunteer basis. The guy at the top works 2 days a week - 1 to keep benefits and the other to have spending money for when he goes out on his motorcycle the other 5 days of the week. He has enough extra income from rental properties/etc that he doesn't really even need to be here... he just refuses to pay out of his own pocket for insurance. He literally works all of peak up until it gets warm (Florida) then starts taking days off left and right.
They are asking people to work their vacations here
 

MrBates

Well-Known Member
Not the right to go home.

Simple as that.

There's so many ways to translate this. Over here, senority dictates right to work extra overtime so they have to ask first starting with the top senior driver. He/she can defer that right to more work to the next guy down the list. If everyone defers, then the bottom b!7ch has to do it. Of course once in a while we will get a new supervisor that wants to prove himself so he directs the first driver he has a hard on to do the extra work...then grievances follow until the supe is put in his place.
 
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