this post was submitted on 21 Aug 2023
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Either you're lucky that your field is pretty flexible, or I was unlucky that all the jobs I had, my current one being an exception, were the opposite Β―\_(γ)_/Β―
Honestly, in my experience it's a crapshoot and wildly varies from company to company, or even manager by manager basis. But some industries have it really rough. I used to work retail, the exploitation over there is insane. This thread you're linking pretty much lines up with what I know about service too - OP being angry at his colleague for falling sick rather than his employer for guilt tripping him is pretty much par for the course too.
Isnβt it inscribed in law that if you have a perfectly good reason to call in sick, even exceeding five days a year, that it will be granted to you? Even grade school allows something like at least fifteen days a year, as that I think is the maximum time someone can be temporarily suspended. Someone can correct me on that.
I mean... Yeah, sure. The law also says I can't sit on non-chair public infrastructure around here, but is it really being enforced? Retaliation from your employer is hard to prove. Fighting back takes energy and time, a thing your average middle-class and lower don't have in large quantities once they're done working.
There's a world of difference between what's in law and what actually happens.