doubtfulfungus
Mar 11, 2008, 10:08 PM
My sister in law is an RN with a Home Health agency in rural South Dakota for almost 13 years now. Right away, she was put on salary because she worked a lot of overtime. She's worked this way for 10+ years, and has never taken sick leave but two times, is always the first one on the road and the last one to get home. She now gets two weeks paid vacation, is always the one that takes the on call, the after hours calls, and now another nurse who is on salary is ill for three weeks, so they added her patient load to my sister in law's. More than once she's had to see 16 patients in one 8 hour day. This did not include travel time, or any other time that she had to do to get these patients appropriate care. She asked to be taken off salary, because she is feeling very overloaded. The boss and her minions responded by telling her that they couldn't do that because it would overtime because she gets two weeks vacation pay per year. This was supposed to be a benefit. Her "bonus" that she gets was also threatened to be pulled.
So my question is if it is a benefit that a person has had, for a number of years... and the work has increased, is it legal to not pay an employee when the workload goes up to such an outrageous number is that legal? She leaves her house at 6:30 every am and does not get done until 6:00 at night, sometimes later and then cares for her children and then her self. She loves her job, is very loyal and does not want to give up her patients... but is there anything that can be done about this slippery business practice.
Another employee who has been there for 5 years was trying to get health insurance, but they are telling her she can't because she works only 38 hours a week and that's not considered full time, but when she has gotten the overtime, they use her vacation pay, against her too. They also told her holiday pay doesn't count as worked hours, or any of the vaction hours.
:confused:
So my question is if it is a benefit that a person has had, for a number of years... and the work has increased, is it legal to not pay an employee when the workload goes up to such an outrageous number is that legal? She leaves her house at 6:30 every am and does not get done until 6:00 at night, sometimes later and then cares for her children and then her self. She loves her job, is very loyal and does not want to give up her patients... but is there anything that can be done about this slippery business practice.
Another employee who has been there for 5 years was trying to get health insurance, but they are telling her she can't because she works only 38 hours a week and that's not considered full time, but when she has gotten the overtime, they use her vacation pay, against her too. They also told her holiday pay doesn't count as worked hours, or any of the vaction hours.
:confused: