Government Wants to Fix Your Waiter's 'Unpredictable' Work Schedule
Part-time workers are sick of the unpredictability of their work schedules and the government wants to fix that. That is the premise behind the oh-so-cleverly titled "Schedules that Work Act," legislation introduced this week that says it will "require employers to provide more predictable and stable schedules for employees" who work part time or hourly.
How will our elected officials do this? By forcing bosses and employees to talk it out:
[Employers] shall engage in a timely, good faith interactive process with the employee that includes a discussion of potential schedule changes that would meet the employers needs.
Groundbreaking.
According to The New York Times, laws like this are a part of a "growing national movement" to curb practices like "requiring employees to work unpredictable hours that wreak havoc with everyday routines like college and child care." Vermont and San Francisco have already "adopted laws giving workers the right to request flexible or predictable schedules to take care of children or aging parents."
But employers don't have to grant schedule requests if they have a "bona fide business reason" for not doing so. The only thing proposals like these do is show the ignorance of the lawmakers pushing for their passage.
The industries that the Schedues That Work Act is aimed at—hospitality, retail, food service—use flexible schedules because to stay profitable they must adjust their labor supply to meet a demand that fluctuates widely from day to day. For example, the amount of customers that visit a restaurant can change rapidly depending on hard-to-predict factors such as whether it rained that day or whether regular patrons decided to try out a new restaurant around the block.
It's true that a lot of part-time workers are unhappy with their employment conditions. The number of part-time workers who would prefer to work full time has nearly doubled since 2007, to 7.5 million, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Almost half of part-time, hourly workers receive a week or less of advance notice about their schedule.
Unpredictable scheduling practices can be frustrating for workers, but the government can't fix that. Workers, however, can. The New York Times article gives a great examples of this:
Sharlene Santos says her part-time schedule at a Zara clothing store in Manhattan—ranging from 16 to 24 hours a week—is not enough. "Making $220 a week, that's not enough to live on—it's not realistic," she said.
After Ms. Santos and four other Zara workers recently wrote to the company, protesting that they were given too few hours and received just two days' notice for their schedule, the company promised to start giving them two weeks' advance notice.
Not all companies will be so receptive, and that's okay because they will lose out on retaining good employees. Eventually, those workers frustrated with inefficient management will leave for positions that better suit their scheduling needs, or they will gain more skills and be able to move to a position of higher skill, better pay and, yes, a schedule that fits their needs.
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Is there no aspect of life the government can't fix? Its abilities are truly wondrous.
Did you know I was not allowed to talk to management about scheduling when I worked in retail through high school? It was illegal. Thankfully, it appears that Vermont has righted this horrible wrong since I left the state.
No one wants to hear about your time working at the sex toys shop, Auric.
But that's how I met your mom!
Come on, she's bought sex toys from every sex shop in New England. You think you're special? You're just one of the...uh...thousands? Tens of thousands? Of her conquests.
Poor, naive Auric.
At last, justice for all those wait staff that for years have been forced at gunpoint to work at restaurants.
I think I need the government to require my wife to be more predictable about when she has gum in her purse. Sometimes she has it, sometimes she doesn't. It's not fair when I want gum and she doesn't have it. She should be forced to either have gum at all times, or tell me 3 days in advance of when she won't have it.
Listen Brittany, the article's great and all, but you're going to have to step up your alt-text game if you want to build a loyal following here.
Getting a leather jacket or wading into the comments helps too.
Speak for yourself. I appreciate the wabi sabi Zen-like simplicity of Ms. Morrisey's alt-text.
She'll do well to not wade into the comments. She's too young and innocent.
It's like Obama and the Democrats want to burn the candle at both ends.
First, ObamaCare makes your boss cut your hours to less than 30 hours per week, so he or she doesn't have to buy you health insurance...
http://thehill.com/blogs/floor.....r-workweek
...now, if you have to pick up a second job to make ends meet, they want to make employers even more reluctant to give you whatever flex hours they have available?
You're going to pick up a second job when both your jobs require you to have free significantly more hours than you'll work how, exactly?
Is that Walter White?
Not all companies will be so receptive, and that's okay because they will lose out on retaining good employees. Eventually, those workers frustrated with inefficient management will leave for positions that better suit their scheduling needs, or they will gain more skills and be able to move to a position of higher skill, better pay and, yes, a schedule that fits their needs.
But we need action NOW! Which can only come from government bureaucracy slowing everything down to a snail's pace.
It was my experience, back in the day, that the better the worker, the better the schedule. Employees who regularly showed up on time, worked their entire shift and did their 'side work' without complaint or prompting got more hours and the more coveted shifts. Restuarants in particular have a lot of workers who really don't want to be there so while a worker might not start out with a cushy schedule one usually would come available in pretty short order.
Rewarding good work ethic? That's crazy talk, woman!
Knowing a couple of successful restauranteurs, the other side of this it rewarding those who will break into their schedule to cover when someone's out or bizz requires it.
(oh, and they talk about it even if the law doesn't require it!)
This. If an employer wants good labor, they'll do out of their way to attract good employees. One of my favorite breweries in town has a staff meeting in the kitchen before they get hit with the dinner crowd - it might be more like a huddle.
The service is awesome. I get free beer samples. When they make a mistake on a order, they'll give extra food away for free to the people waiting on the bar. They only take cash. And I almost always leave a larger than normal tip.
Popeye's chicken on the other hand...
"One of my favorite breweries in town has a staff meeting in the kitchen before they get hit with the dinner crowd - it might be more like a huddle."
A place we frequent has every staffer taste the specials (and some of the menu items).
And there have been times a menu item is 86'd in the meeting if the staff isn't enthused.
There's a Popeye's in Arvada, CO that's really good, fast, fresh and really good service. Then there's one down in Denver that is... not so much.
I don't get Popeye's slogan "Louisiana fast"; when I think 'fast', I think "New York" as in "a New York minute". When I think "Louisiana", the term "languid" comes to mind. And Po'boys. Delicious shrimp or oyster po'boys.
It doesn't make sense the other way, either. Why would a restaurant suggest a fast?
a timely, good faith interactive process
That's supposed to be a legal requirement? One that, if you fail to meet it, you are subject to penalties?
Any competent court would throw it out as "void for vagueness". How the fuck is anyone supposed to know what counts as a "timely" and "interactive" process that will avoid penalties?
Dude that makes no sense at all man.
http://www.AnonToolz.tk
Jeeze, RJM, I didn't know you'd been reading lan lan.
Well, there's goes the troll...
I'm assuming it actually was 'Murican--he must just have an IP address that's kill-on-sight, because I don't know of anybody else who gets that treatment. He was dancing around the race issue but hadn't really shown his hand yet. Oh, well.
It's still hilarious watching him get slapped down every time he rears his head. Why the hell does he keep coming back?
I think Mary's on the kill-on-sight list as well, but I haven't seen her show up for a while...she seems to have given up trying to beat registration and has settled for trolling commenter's blogs and posting wacky youtube videos.
Because he/she is mentally ill?
"Making $220 a week, that's not enough to live on?it's not realistic,"
If you don't feel valued it's because you're not. It's amazing that some people go their entire lives without realizing that they don't have a valuable skill-set. They confuse work with productivity.
From the "Schedules that Work" link:
Providing that retail, food service, and cleaning employees receive work schedules at least two weeks in advance. Though schedules may later be changed, one hour's worth of extra pay is required for schedules changed with less than 24 hours' notice.
The legislation neuters itself by effectively turning its two week advanced notice into a one day notice which essentially changes nothing. The rest of the bill looks almost as ineffective. It's fluff legislation that neither substantially helps employees nor substantially burdens employers because it's either too vague to enforce and is filled with loopholes. It piles on more rules, regulations and compliance paperwork that cramp business opportunity so a politician can say they're "strengthening America's middle class" while, at best, marginally weakening it.
"It's fluff legislation that neither substantially helps employees nor substantially burdens employers because it's either too vague to enforce and is filled with loopholes."
The SF version of this crap is pretty much the same, but the danger is that it gives an employee an opportunity to sue, making firing more difficult.
Make me wonder who's pushing the legislation. Is it simply a politician pandering for votes; a trial lawyers association; unions?
As opposed to just dicking with the help, as Congress seems to think motivates them. Cong. Mario Biaggi told me, "Employers are sharks." Apparently they think employers have everyone by the balls and aren't in it so much to make money as to make trouble.
Can't afford to live in New York City. Imagine that. So sue Zara. Sounds like a corporationy place to work.
It's too bad no one gives a shit what you support.
"I support such solutions."
Lefty ignoramuses tend to.
Because we have such a surplus of jobs out there.
For what it's worth, people of your political persuasion can't simultaneously claim "Woe is me!" because the job market sucks and "What recession? The economy is recovering!"
And some would say that the job market sucks the government keeps on meddling in it, and that this "solution" you support is just going to make things worse.
Here's an idea: If you want to boost the labor market, why don't we stop taxing it to death and eliminate the payroll tax?
RECOVER SUMMER FTW!
suggest some commonsense solutions
Hmm.. smells like sockpuppet in here.
Government fucks up the job market. Lan_Lan claims that because the job market is fucked up, the government has to step in to "fix" it. Repeat ad nauseum.
Imagine my surprise that a prog supports paying people for work they haven't done.
Lan_Lan|7.25.14 @ 5:10PM|#
"Hey, you're the one with the fringe ideology."
Hey, you're the one with the stunted morality and the single-digit IQ.
Well, those things WILL not happen.
I suppose the fact that there is not actually anybody, anywhere, who is saying the things you claim they are saying does not matter much to you?
It's too bad no one gives a shit what you think about ideologies.
I can't tell if that was a lame insult about his marriage or just a lame non sequitur shat out from the confused mind of a frothing-at-the-mouth lunatic.
Dammit, recovery.
If you have to completely misrepresent another person's words in order to make your point, perhaps the problem is that you didn't have a very good point in the first place, dolt.
Lan_Lan|7.25.14 @ 5:20PM|#
"Except the author of this article."
Hey, folks, it's HARD to read when you're as stupid as this!
Sorry about your food service job, dude. But your poor life choices aren't the Jews' fault.
Currently employers are required to pay overtime for workers who work more than 40 hours a week. I could imagine libertarians at the first time that was done.... Bbbbut government can't FIX things, it CANT!
Well, you always have company when you spend your time arguing with imaginary people.
Eliminate choice; declare victory. The progressive mantra.
I think "lame" covers it regardless.
New lefty troll thinks we fell off the turnip truck yesterday.
Lan_Lan|7.25.14 @ 5:34PM|#
"I must have missed the part where the author suggests an actual solution."
Yeah, missing things seems to be your skill. Thinking? Missed. Reading? Missed. Adulthood? Missed. Morality? Missed.
Fuck off.
Lan_Lan|7.25.14 @ 5:33PM|#
"How are we going to pay for social security and medicare(among other things)?"
Getting the point? Missed.
Rule #1 for government: You have a budget, presumably limited by the amount of tax revenue generated. If you consistently pass budgets surpassing what you can collect in taxes, then don't be surprised when the people paying the taxes say "No thanks, I don't want to pay anymore." at some point.
This would be one of those points.
Labor is a good just like milk or bread. The government taxes cigarettes to discourage consumption of cigarettes by artificially driving up the price. If you put a tax on labor, that's also going to discourage the consumption of labor.
And for the current work force, having a job NOW is way more important than (maybe) collecting social security 20-30 years down the road.
Surprise, surprise, decades of inculcating the handout mentality does tend to wreak that effect.
Oh, 'Murican, you just had to throw race in there and expose yourself for the moronic obsessed racist piece of shit you are.
No, I insinuated that you made poor life choices. It's quite sad that you are incapable of thinking outside of collectivist terms.
Just what is "my race", pray tell?
Oh, and HA HA, YOU'RE AN EBT/SNAP PARASITE!
Lan_Lan|7.25.14 @ 5:36PM|#
"Look through the regulations"
Yeah, moral cripples like you need daddy looking out for you.
Lan_Lan|7.25.14 @ 5:39PM|#
"What choice does the 40 hour workweek eliminate?"
Quite possibly the 'choice' of having a job, you slimy piece of shit.
Choosing to work 41, or 45, or 50 or more hours per week? An option which, due to time-and-a-half provisions, isn't accessible to the people who most need to income but whose limited skillsets least justify the expense. So those who might prefer sacrificing expensive leisure time for lucrative hours working find themselves seeking a second job, with everything that entails. Which is, in part, a concern this article addresses.
But by all means, take your victory lap. Your intellectual forebears ensured the skilled middle-class can avail themselves of overtime pay.
Lan_Lan|7.25.14 @ 5:44PM|#
"The thing is, even if everyone behaved like "Heroic Mullato," society would still need people to work shitty jobs
Yes, slime ball. Most of us had to work 'shitty jobs' at one time in our lives and sometimes more often if things didn't work out right.
Fuck off.
Lan_Lan|7.25.14 @ 5:45PM|#
" I don't need to explain HOW it does it just does dammit!"
You're too dumb to know.
Oh, this is TOO good...
OK, who did that? I know I wasn't hallucinating that question.
Fucking 'merkin again?
Lefty racist; right on target.
Aw f'rchrissake, I was just getting warmed up. Why'd the mods have to ruin our fun?
[insert Inception 'bwong' here]
Trouser-Pod|7.25.14 @ 5:50PM|#
"OK, who did that? I know I wasn't hallucinating that question."
I don't know how long you've been here, but there's a slimy racist who originally used the handle "American". Not many get the ban hammer here, but his/her brand of racism was enough to win the award.
S/h's returned many times under new handles and the faithful Mike usually catches on pretty quickly; BAM!
Ah...Yeah, I've seen original "American" posts back in the day, and once the mask slipped (and others started calling him on it), I caught on.
At first, I didn't see that it was all the posts, just his Black question, which actually had me in tears. I was just waiting for HM to bury him, then BAM!-nothig.
Sadly, I didn't refresh quick enough to see it.
Dammit Reason, now we all look insane.
Okay, perhaps it wasn't the best attempt at sarcasm. The article was on the government attepmting to legislate somethign absurd, so I went for something full-on absurd.
I suppose I should have closed with a "/derp"
er, "attempting," and "something." Apparently I can't type, either.
They weren't responding to you; they were responding to a comment that has since been deleted which insulted you.