Mackenzie Click-Mickelson
Chugging along the path of life
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2015
- Messages
- 29,848
It would end up meaning nothing to my husband because he would still have to work most weeks, some weeks now he has lighter loads but majority he's not going to be able to accomplish what needs to be done in a shorter time like that.
Where a 32 hour work week could work so long as people still maintained benefits and pay was bumped up slightly to accommodate the loss of hours is more on structured jobs. My call center insurance company job for instance I had a specific shift and while I wasn't salaried I was hourly with a base guaranteed rate split up on my paychecks. Reducing down to 32 hours could work there, it would just lead to people working shorter shifts but coverage still being there. But the pay would need to be bumped and the benefits would need to stay there. A 4-day work week actually didn't work out there. They tried that several times and it just left coverage holes. They usually only had 1 to 2 teams per site (there were 3 sites in the U.S.) with a 4/10 work week and Mondays and Fridays were never the days you would get off.
My husband did the 4/10s work week for a while at his job several years back but the end result is he almost always went in on Fridays (the day he would have off) and would just work even if it was for half a day to 3/4 of a day. Work was there and didn't confine itself to specified hours (when you have meetings with people from various countries or you're tracking down pipes and air cooled condensers and whatnot doesn't work all the time to actually not work on your days off). They actually run into issues with projects when it comes to the countries that take whole chunks of time off (like France) where it makes it difficult to complete projects.
The problem with the 40 hour work week is it's so ingrained now in our culture, it's part of our bedrock of pay and benefits that it would be hard to drop down and people still maintain what they have going on now. On the other hand it's easier to add more benefits or protections based on certain number of hours worked. For instance with the law passed several years back even though my husband is salaried he gets overtime at 45 hours.
Perhaps what can be done instead of reducing the work week at a Federal level to 32 hours is doing things like Federally defining what full-time is as often benefits are based on full-time vs part-time. The only concern I would have there is companies doing things like specifically dropping people down below that mark so they don't have to pay/provide full-time benefits, they've def. been doing that. With this pandemic one has to wonder how much will employers do this when they already have enough trouble as is getting employees.
Where a 32 hour work week could work so long as people still maintained benefits and pay was bumped up slightly to accommodate the loss of hours is more on structured jobs. My call center insurance company job for instance I had a specific shift and while I wasn't salaried I was hourly with a base guaranteed rate split up on my paychecks. Reducing down to 32 hours could work there, it would just lead to people working shorter shifts but coverage still being there. But the pay would need to be bumped and the benefits would need to stay there. A 4-day work week actually didn't work out there. They tried that several times and it just left coverage holes. They usually only had 1 to 2 teams per site (there were 3 sites in the U.S.) with a 4/10 work week and Mondays and Fridays were never the days you would get off.
My husband did the 4/10s work week for a while at his job several years back but the end result is he almost always went in on Fridays (the day he would have off) and would just work even if it was for half a day to 3/4 of a day. Work was there and didn't confine itself to specified hours (when you have meetings with people from various countries or you're tracking down pipes and air cooled condensers and whatnot doesn't work all the time to actually not work on your days off). They actually run into issues with projects when it comes to the countries that take whole chunks of time off (like France) where it makes it difficult to complete projects.
The problem with the 40 hour work week is it's so ingrained now in our culture, it's part of our bedrock of pay and benefits that it would be hard to drop down and people still maintain what they have going on now. On the other hand it's easier to add more benefits or protections based on certain number of hours worked. For instance with the law passed several years back even though my husband is salaried he gets overtime at 45 hours.
Perhaps what can be done instead of reducing the work week at a Federal level to 32 hours is doing things like Federally defining what full-time is as often benefits are based on full-time vs part-time. The only concern I would have there is companies doing things like specifically dropping people down below that mark so they don't have to pay/provide full-time benefits, they've def. been doing that. With this pandemic one has to wonder how much will employers do this when they already have enough trouble as is getting employees.