@sunny said in The Work Thread:
I apologize, but I don't understand how that makes a difference. If It's PTO that's used for being sick, and you're rewarding people for not using PTO at all, then...it's rewarding people for coming to work sick, whether you call it Sick Leave, PTO, or lollipop time.
In Ohio, sick leave, PTO, and lollipop time are treated differently. I presume that there's a difference between them for the OP because I thought they worked as a teacher, and therefore are in the public sector.
In Ohio, the public sector just works differently than the private sector, thanks to constitutional protections and the work of union lobbyists. Most public sector jobs earn twice as much per cycle in sick leave as a person gathers in vacation time. So, where I earn 120 hours of what may be called PTO in the private sector, I also get 240 hours of paid sick leave. Most other public sector jobs in the state follow the same process. If you run out of sick leave, you can use vacation time.
As for rewarding people for not using their leave, I'm not sure how to get around your accusation. Sick leave also gets paid out (on retirement or death), so I have an incentive to not use it and show up sick because I get a benefit from doing so. All leave systems are like this.
But if I earned a benefit, it's my benefit and I should be able to keep it, but limits are in place to ensure that a mass exodus of public employees doesn't cause a budget crunch.