Does anyone have this at their work place? Yesterday we were informed we were going from PTO to FTO. Thoughts?
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How does it work?Does anyone have this at their work place? Yesterday we were informed we were going from PTO to FTO. Thoughts?
That probably means different things to different organizations. Where I work that means you are working more hours today so you can leave early tomorrow. If that's what that means for you than that really sucks. Note that I get sick time and vacation in addition to the ability to flex time off.
This new rule makes things much clearer: If a worker makes less than $47,476, they are eligible for extra compensation if they work more than 40 hours a week, regardless of their job title or description. The EPI estimates that there are more than 8 million people who will now be more easily classified as eligible for the extra compensation, since they were considered exempt before due to their job descriptions.
Employers have a variety of ways to comply: They can raise these workers’ salaries to make them exempt from the overtime threshold, pay the mandated time-and-a-half overtime for those who do work more, or simply make sure employees aren’t working overtime.
I'll chime in here a little bit since I assume you also work at PFG.
The new FTO plan only covers exempt employees. Hourly employees still get PTO.
My personal opinion on it is that it will vary widely from department to department and pretty much ***** on people that have a lot of years with the company. On the other hand I understand why they didn't want employees banking 300+ hours of PTO.
So why not just limit your roll over like every other company?
So what's the difference between PTO and FTO?
I'll chime in here a little bit since I assume you also work at PFG.
PTO is vacation time that you get basically just for being there.
FTO how PFG is treating it is basically the same but it sounds like you have to put in the time (probably OT) in order to get that same time off.
So it's basically dependent on how agreeable your supervisor is?That's not correct. It has nothing to do with overtime or putting in time. In summary, if your work doesn't suffer and we have coverage, take time off.
So it's basically dependent on how agreeable your supervisor is?
What if my workrate is already so poor that it can't possibly get worse? Loophole!That's what I got out of it along with workload.