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No Legal Rights to Your Vacation

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  • No Legal Rights to Your Vacation

    By Valerie S. Johnson

    Ahhh, it’s almost time for summer vacations. But there is no U.S. law that requires your boss to give you a single paid day off. Ever. Many companies do, probably because of competitive pressures, but twenty-five percent of private sector employees get no paid vacation time or holidays. You are less likely to get paid time off if you are a part-timer, a low wager earner, or work for a small company (under 100 employees).

    It is astonishing that the U.S. is the only developed country that does not guarantee its workers paid vacation or holidays. In the EU countries, workers are entitled to at least four weeks’ annual leave each year, with additional time for national holidays. In France and Finland, thirty days is the minimum standard. Other counties including Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Japan also provide guaranteed paid leave for their workers.

    According to a recent study entitled “No-Vacation Nation” by the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, DC, Americans get an average of 15 total paid days off per year, comprised of nine vacation days and six holidays. This falls well below the required standard in the nineteen other countries studied.

    Other studies have shown that even with these comparatively paltry leave policies, many Americans do not take all of their allowed vacation time. When paid days off are the perk rather than the rule, why don’t more people take full advantage of their benefits?

    The report by the Center for Economic and Policy Research is available here.

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  • #2
    even bettwer (or worse, i guess): when people don't take the days they're allotted, the allotmen of days can and will be decreases by some companies.

    also, not taking time off from work to recharge can lead to stress, medical issues, and reduced performance at work.

    hmmmm, maybe i'll take a mental health day today....

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    • #3
      Aside from a lack of universal health care, this is one of the biggest complaints that I have about this country!

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      • #4
        Guess that is one example of where having a union can be good.

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        • #5
          hehe my DH company has just revised their vacation and sick leave policies
          the way it used to work is you had vacation days as soon as you walked in the door as well as paid sick days
          well this year hey hard several people in a row who worked there for less than a month during that time they used up all their sick leave and vacation then quit !

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          • #6
            I know a lot of people who do not get paid vacation leave. I don't think their wages (not salary) are good either. Then there are a number who string together several part time jobs (such as teaching at 2-3 different colleges and maybe one industry) and thus work full time from their own point of view, but are only part-timers to all the institutions they work for and therefore entitled to zero benefits. Nope, they hustle for work, not for vacation.
            "There is some ontological doubt as to whether it may even be possible in principle to nail down these things in the universe we're given to study." --text msg from my kid

            "It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men." --Frederick Douglass

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