BrianL
Doom Buggy Driver
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2013
- Messages
- 27,131
Where I work - top execs got a 30% paycut, middle management got a 20% paycut, the rest of us salaried non-management workers got a 10% paycut (including me). Some also were let go, some took voluntary early retirement. We were very lucky in our department because we are such a small staff and one person left early during the pandemic. They've now just eliminated that position.
We all also had to use a certain amount of vacation days.
Some hourly workers were furloughed, some had cut hrs, some weren't affected. It all depended on how the workload in their respective departments was affected.
The hospital did this to offset the losses of this year and try and set the start of next fiscal year back on even ground (in the red? black? I don't know).
They had a set time for all of this and our pay comes back full in November. Some hourly people come back full in November.
They've already met their goal and then some. So less people are going to lose their jobs.
Unfortunately some are still going to be furloughed in areas (mostly provider offices that never reopened) that never bounced back. In fact they may be involuntarily let go.
Is it sad? Of course! But that's business.
What would you propose? I should never get my full salary back because business was bad due to Covid and others lost their jobs? Even though my job workload increased? Even if they cut the redundancy in middle management, it still would't bring back the jobs that were lost due to lack of customers.
And I'm not being flippant about this. Everyday I wait for that call that my job suddenly isn't needed anymore.
I'm sure someone can explain this better than me.
This is similar to my situation and we are getting full pay reinstated too. Some workers were laid off and that's unfortunate, but you can't keep everyone that you want to without full pay. I am not very high-up on the food chain, I didn't have to take a huge cut, but it's still nice to be getting it back.