I know we are all different but I am quite shocked by the amount of time off some of my colleagues take..'sick'. I wasn't raised like that, my mum's reaction was always has you leg fallen off? no? then you can get up and go out the door. I still live by this.
But staff coming into work when they're ill and clearly ill with something contagious isn't fair to the rest of the world either. On one occasion my colleague did exactly that. He was sent home after lunch because he was useless as he was and not safe in the server room or with admin access to the network when he couldn't think clearly. Within 2 days every single member of staff that worked in that building (6 others) were also off sick, most of us off for 2 weeks or longer including the Headmasters wife who passed it on to him. That building, the library and ICT rooms and help desk had to be closed to all staff and students alike because there was no-one to run it at all.I know we are all different but I am quite shocked by the amount of time off some of my colleagues take..'sick'. I wasn't raised like that, my mum's reaction was always has you leg fallen off? no? then you can get up and go out the door. I still live by this.
But staff coming into work when they're ill and clearly ill with something contagious isn't fair to the rest of the world either. On one occasion my colleague did exactly that. He was sent home after lunch because he was useless as he was and not safe in the server room or with admin access to the network when he couldn't think clearly. Within 2 days every single member of staff that worked in that building (6 others) were also off sick, most of us off for 2 weeks or longer including the Headmasters wife who passed it on to him. That building, the library and ICT rooms and help desk had to be closed to all staff and students alike because there was no-one to run it at all.
Plus going to work with something contagious in a boarding school isn't a good move either.
I strongly agree with this, having fallen victim to it before. I’m happy to say, at least where I work now, there’s been a big shift toward staying home (even before covid) if you’re feeling under the weather.But staff coming into work when they're ill and clearly ill with something contagious isn't fair to the rest of the world either.
I strongly agree with this, having fallen victim to it before. I’m happy to say, at least where I work now, there’s been a big shift toward staying home (even before covid) if you’re feeling under the weather.
Obviously, some workers don’t have that luxury (don’t come to work that day, don’t get paid that day), so I get where that’s coming from, too.
Years ago, we all had official “sick time,” a certain amount of days you could be excused from work for being sick, and the understanding was, you were meant to be actually sick, not just “I don’t feel like coming to work today.”
We no longer have that, at least in an official capacity. We now have “occasional absence” days, and they can be used for any kind of reason, really. Car breaks down and you need to get it to the garage? Occasional absence day to the rescue. Wife falls down and needs to go to the hospital? Occasional absence day, please. It’s just a catch-all for unexpected absences.
I think a big reason that changed is because the old “sick day” concept was never very uniform - this manager required a doctor’s note confirming legitimate sickness, that manager didn’t. This employee honored the spirit of the program and took days only when legitimately sick and that one used it like an extra week of vacation, that sort of thing.
Personally, I’m glad that removed that distinction and just call it is - a short-notice absence day. It’s good for emergencies, sickness, a much-needed “mental health” day, and no one really questions it. Everyone is treated the same.
I love him. He looks like his cousin Stewie.Here’s a pic of Norm, my backyard groundhog for groundhog day! He likes sunbathing in the summer. (These are older photos, we’re currently under an extreme cold alert).View attachment 95828View attachment 95829
There are plenty of non-obvious reasons someone may need to take a sick day - bladder infection, migraine, mental health issue, etc.To be honest the majority of 'illness' is another name for 'can't be bothered', very few are genuine. They can't come in as the are really bad with flu, come in the next day right as rain.
I believe you are correct on that.This was in late 2019. Many of us now wonder if it might have been an outbreak of covid before covid was being properly recognized.
Here's a better picture of Stewie:I love him. He looks like his cousin Stewie.
View attachment 96009