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Labor Question.... Do Hourly employess on shift during Daylight savings Time change lose an hour of pay ?
#1
Just wondering...
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#2
I'm not sure, but when I was doing residency, it always seemed that I was on call or working in the ER in the fall (so I had to work an extra hour) and had the day off in the spring when we went back to EDT.
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#3
The night shift has to cover the hour with paid time in the spring and they get an hour of overtime in the fall.
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#4
Hospital shift work is this way in my experience: one less paid hour in spring, one extra paid hour in fall, but only when you happen to work those shifts.
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#5
If you are part of a union then most likely you cannot be paid for less than 8 hours of work, so with DST you get paid for an extra hour, and then in the fall you get paid for 9 hours.
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#6
I worked non-union major factory and we always got 8 hours pay for the 7 hour midnight to 8am shift. Going the other way, we got 1 hour over time for the shift in the fall.


Fred
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#7
......not sure this works for the person(s) that work for 10 cents a dance......
_____________________________________
I reject your reality and substitute my own!
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#8
When I was in the Navy when we adjusted clocks in the middle of the night the watch on duty just sucked up an extra hour going West and got a short watch going East. The watches were staggered across 3 or 4 teams or sections who covered 5 or 7 watches a day so nobody "always" got a long or short watch.

I was in the Pacific so short watches were a sign we were headed home.
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#9
tenders- what did you do when you crossed the Date Line ?

I know, I know... those wild ceremonies...
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#10
One of my sisters' boyfriend works a weekend shift and they change the clock between shifts rather than at 2.
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