winterbadger (
winterbadger) wrote2010-03-30 11:38 am
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bloody hell
This situation truly warrants the "pants" icon.
I had calculated to a nicety how far negative I could go in leave to take my trip next week.
As you can imagine, that didn't involve me taking nearly a week off sick (I can't recall the last time I did this that wasn't recovery from an operation).
So, I have the choice of taking my vacation as planned but taking the time off without pay (which would cost me a very large sum, let's call it X) or cancelling my trip (which would cost me, with nonrecoverable plane fare &c., about 2/3 of X).
This will be at least the third time in the past four years that I've had to cancel an overseas trip at the last minute. Of course, the last time I *took* an overseas trip it wasn't a 100% happy experience either.
*sigh*
I had calculated to a nicety how far negative I could go in leave to take my trip next week.
As you can imagine, that didn't involve me taking nearly a week off sick (I can't recall the last time I did this that wasn't recovery from an operation).
So, I have the choice of taking my vacation as planned but taking the time off without pay (which would cost me a very large sum, let's call it X) or cancelling my trip (which would cost me, with nonrecoverable plane fare &c., about 2/3 of X).
This will be at least the third time in the past four years that I've had to cancel an overseas trip at the last minute. Of course, the last time I *took* an overseas trip it wasn't a 100% happy experience either.
*sigh*
no subject
I wished you'd emigrated years ago... The US is ridiculous for sick/holiday leave, unless you're high up in a government job. (A friend worked at NCAR for years. She had so many sick/vacation days it was silly -- and they accumulated from year to year. Nobody there went through all of their days each year unless something quite horrible happened as, after a few years, you'd have hundreds of days in the bank.)
no subject
I wished you'd emigrated years ago...
You and me both, sister! :-\
no subject
I used to get 12 leave days when I taught in Boulder that could be used for sickness or personal. I could carry over only one day a year, but before that rule went into place, I had a bank of about 60 sick days (I used to get 9 sick days and three personal days a year). They were frozen and could be used only for illness once I'd gone through the twelve days per year.
New employees without a bank of sick days were stuck when they ran out of sick leave, so us oldtimers each gave a day out of our banks to create a bank for them.
And then we had the usual school holidays on top of it all.
no subject