Asking for vacation

Sick and Vacation Policy FINAL DRAFT

=References=

This policy was proposed by a subcommittee of Geiner, Kathie, and Richard, posted the staff email list, and then discussed and agreed upon at the weekly staff emeting, April 16, 2004. Unless objections are raised on the list or at a staff meeting, this is current staff policy.

=Scope=

This policy applies to staff members who qualify to earn vacation hours. Currently that includes all members of the collective, but excludes interns.

=Rate of Accrual=

Workers accrue sick and vacation time at the rate of three weeks per year. This is a straight fraction of every hour paid that currently works out to 0.056 hours for each hour worked. There is no difference between sick and vacation time in terms of accounting. Taking hours before they have accrued:

Workers must have already accrued their vacation hours prior to taking the vacation time. However, the worker should be allowed to take sick time in advance when necessary for actual sickness or otherwise approved by the collective. (For instance in the case of a family emergency, the collective could allow the worker to take time not yet earned.)

=Notification=

Workers should use common sense in announcing general vacation plans as far in advance as is possible within reason.

Workers must request vacation time in advance with the specific times they will be away from work clearly stated. This should be done on the staff mailing list and at a staff meeting. All requests should be posted to the staff calendar as soon as feasible. Approval:

The staff can grant or deny specific vacation requests. When denying a vacation the staff must clearly state the reason for denial. The staff must make efforts to accommodate any worker asking for vacation providing the worker has accrued the hours required for the vacation and gave a reasonable amount of notice.

In the event that two or more workers want overlapping vacations, the staff may determine that there is a conflict and will need to decide which worker may take the vacation. In that event the following procedure must be followed:


 * First, the contending workers should be asked to try to work out the conflict.
 * If the conflict cannot be resolved, the staff should grant vacation using the following priority:
 * Already granted requests receive the highest priority.
 * If neither request has yet been granted, the worker with the most seniority receives the next highest priority.
 * In the event that two workers have equal seniority, the vacation will be decided by a coin toss.