NHdisneylover
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2007
- Messages
- 18,120
(Not picking on this poster specifically, it was just a good description to start from.)
I still think it's a broken system. You wait years and years to finally get something...only when you don't need it anymore? (For example, you finally get school vacation week once your kids are out of school, or Christmas morning after they don't believe in Santa anymore.) There has to be a better system!
And please nobody jump on me for saying parents should always get their way, and nobody else's family members count! That's not what I mean. I just lean toward taking turns on a short-term scale rather than in huge chunks, and negotiating around individual conditions rather than just picking something that sounds fair but might not fit the actual, changing make-up of a particular workplace.
I sort of see this point, it worked that way with my parents. my dad was a career DJ. He worked every Christmas morning from teh time I was a baby until I was in junior high--at that point he got first choice of which of the big three (Thanksgiving, Christmas or New Years) to take off. Since i was older then and some of hte others had young kids, he took Thanksgiving--leaving Christmas for those with little ones and NY for the single peopel who would like to party the night before. But not everyone is that considerate---or thy might have other reasons (like everyone has young kids, or they have young grandkids they want to spend time with, or want to travel home for the holidays or whatever).
Likewise, my mom worked for the phone company and they had the same seniority system described by the OP. My mom got Spring Break week off once, when I was in grade 8 or 10. That's it. My parents pulled me out of school for 1-2 weeks yearly otherwise so we could vacation and visit family in another state. Not hte best solution, but it was that or never visit my grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins.
Many of her corworkers waited to have kids until they were 10 or so years into their careers--which meant they could generally get at least one week that worked with their kids' schedules and many of the new hires had no kids so that was not an issue for them at the time.
Unless the work enviornment does not need any particular number of people working at any given time (so everyone could take off mroe or less at the same time if wanted), there will never be a system that is totally fair and ideal for all---I don't think teh seniority system is better or worse than others, just different