riptides
Super Star Member
....The deadline to accept is at the close of business today... doesn't look like I will have answers before then...
Bird in hand and all that....
Have a backup/back-out plan formulating.
....The deadline to accept is at the close of business today... doesn't look like I will have answers before then...
Some anxiety could be of my own doing... I do take things very literally, especially when I "Voluntarily" agree to the writing job description with the little footnote on the last page stating I will be evaluated by this agreement and failure to perform is grounds for dismissal... words have meaning.
The men in the family tend to kick off at age 73 and on the job... it has been this way for my Grandfather, Dad, Uncles and Dad's cousin... Mom's side, the farming side never really retire either but it is different and the men go in their 90's fairly fit... Dad's side it's always leukemia... I seem to be losing a good friend every couple of months and many are in their 60's and 70's.
...One of my pet peeves is the word "resource." A resource is a chair, a building, a truck, a bulldozer, a computer, etc. I AM NOT A F^&*()ing resource. The reason the R word is used by managers is to ease their mental anguish when layoffs occur. It is much easier to layoff a resource instead of a person. It is like surplusing an old computer system. One can surplus a system, old furniture, or people. Tis all the same.The mindset of using the R word is telling. I started working in PERSONNEL not Human Resources where the word Human is often dropped.
Later,
Dan
I worked at a union plant that had a similar 4 hr. pay call in. The difference is if I got a call because of an alarm or anything else I could refuse and the next in line would take it, it just depended how you felt at the time. In my case if I came in and hit the reset button or closed the valve off and went home after 3 minutes, you would get paid 4 hrs. If the job was such that you needed to stay, you get paid as long as you stayed.Every job I have had, all hourly and some union, some non.....all had call-in pay minimums for skilled trade jobs. Which is what I am. And some states do have laws. But how the company treats call in pay is not always right, and its usually up to the employees to force their hand. After all, they dont want to pay you any more than necessary.
IE: they call you in and you go out of your way, cancel all your plans, and go bail their @$$es out. Takes you 30 minutes to do so. If they have a 4 hour call pay minimum.....they have the option to find an additional 3.5 hours of work for you to do. If YOU decide to leave after the 30 minutes, they consider it voluntary and think they are not obligated to pay you anything more than the 30 minutes.
Now I cannot speak for a hospital environment, but the solution to this in an industrial sector......the handful of skilled trade employees (maintenance / electricians), have to stand together. If you get called in, save their butts in 30 minutes, and they force you to decide to stay to get full 4 hours call in pay, or voluntarily leave and not get paid.......well.......next time you dont answer your phone. And with everyone in the department on the same page, they get the idea real quick when they have production lines sitting idle all night because they refused to do what was right.
ultra, I also work for a hospital (florida) I am the only electrician on our staff (PlantOps). We are owned by HCA. Our department has 5 daytime, 1 2nd shift and 1 3rd shift employee. We hire out a lot of jobs. The 5 daytime employees share the 'on call, weekends. We are paid $3 hour we are on call. When called in we dod not get the $3 we are on time-and-a-half salery. Does not matter 15 minutes or 2 hour we are paid 2 hours time-and-a-half. If we are needed 3 hours we are paid 3 hours time-and-a-half.
Weekends are on call
Saturday 7am to 8am on call
punch in 8am till 4:30pm saturday (minus 1/2 hour lunch).
on call 4:30pm saturday till 8am sunday
8am sunday punch in till 4:30pm (minus 1/2 hour lunch)
on call 4:30pm sunday till 7am monday
We have taught the Nursing Supervisors over the years if the problems at night are not life threatening or absolutely necessary for patient satisfaction we are not coming in to work.
Exactly why I say.....go enjoy life.......get out of the corp. life as soon as you can........good luck!
.......
This week has been a wake up call... tonight two of my co-workers were in tears... they have more time in than I do and their positions are being eliminated as all accounts payable and receivable will no longer be onsite... both have been offered positions in admitting and medical records and are willing to give it a try but it is very much like starting over.
Some here have said it should be looked at as starting a new job... and that is very true.
I worked at a union plant that had a similar 4 hr. pay call in. The difference is if I got a call because of an alarm or anything else I could refuse and the next in line would take it, it just depended how you felt at the time. In my case if I came in and hit the reset button or closed the valve off and went home after 3 minutes, you would get paid 4 hrs. If the job was such that you needed to stay, you get paid as long as you stayed.
So the thing to do was come in, fix the problem and if the cleanup or solution could wait until normal hours, that's what would be done.
If you got a call, came in then a quick fix took care of it and went home, you are ahead of the game. But if you did that and got called again that day for another unrelated problem, another 4 hrs.
If you came in and fixed the problem and went home, and the supposed fix broke again, then you come in for free, or refuse it and let somebody else come in. But pride would never let me do that.
Call ins were not very often but really paid off well most of the time.
Any regrets for those opting early retirement... other than waiting too long?
A lot of my friends are retired... most are career military or public safety. As one told me, he was basically working for a couple of bucks an hour as an Oakland Police Officer as his pension with medical was 90% of his pay... so at 53 he retired with 30 years in... spends most of his time being there for his grandkids as he missed a lot when his two were young...
I can see where those with a nice pension might have an easier choice.
This week has been a wake up call... tonight two of my co-workers were in tears... they have more time in than I do and their positions are being eliminated as all accounts payable and receivable will no longer be onsite... both have been offered positions in admitting and medical records and are willing to give it a try but it is very much like starting over.
Some here have said it should be looked at as starting a new job... and that is very true.
Any regrets for those opting early retirement... other than waiting too long?
A lot of my friends are retired... most are career military or public safety. As one told me, he was basically working for a couple of bucks an hour as an Oakland Police Officer as his pension with medical was 90% of his pay... so at 53 he retired with 30 years in... spends most of his time being there for his grandkids as he missed a lot when his two were young...
I can see where those with a nice pension might have an easier choice.
This week has been a wake up call... tonight two of my co-workers were in tears... they have more time in than I do and their positions are being eliminated as all accounts payable and receivable will no longer be onsite... both have been offered positions in admitting and medical records and are willing to give it a try but it is very much like starting over.
Some here have said it should be looked at as starting a new job... and that is very true.
No regrets so far. I retired at age 63 last April after 38 years at 2 hospitals (7 yrs. at 1st & 31 yrs. at 2nd). Parents died early (52 & 68). Grandparents didn't make it past 70 either so I figured out what I needed to get by financially and found that by supplementing my S.S. with some interest money from my 401K and IRA's I'd have enough to get by. Here are just a few (not all) of my pros and cons off the top of my head. Not necessarily in order.
Pro's
1) No longer have to set and alarm, report or answer to anyone but myself.
2) No job stress.
3) Fewer miles on vehicles and less gas purchased.
4) Cheaper car insurance due to fewer miles driven.
5) More time to travel, play with classic cars, go to more car shows.
6) More time to catch up on honey-do list. That will take years to do and never be complete.
7) I enjoy working on classic cars (been doing that since I was 13) so I have more time to make some side money tinkering with other peoples cars when I want to.
8) Now able to pick up some winter plowing jobs that I couldn't do before due to work schedule.
9) Nice to do what I want when I want.
10) More family time.
Cons
1) Miss the people from work. I've stopped back a few times for coffee and to say hello.
2) Miss the extra money a regular paycheck brought in.
3) Miss the cheaper health insurance rate I paid while employed.
If I recall, you have some income from rental properties so if you have enough income to cover monthly expenses and you're still young enough to make some side job money I'd go for it.