salaryied ee & PTO
Paige
153 Posts
We have a salaried employee who is down to 2.48 hours of PTO. She is taking today off.
I know we cannot do partial day docking, but she is taking the full day off--so it wouldn't be partial day docking. So do I give her 2.48 hours of PTO for today and deduct 5.52 hours from her salary? Or, since she doesn't have a full 8 hours in her bank, do I deduct a full 8 hours from her salary and leave the 2.48 in her bank?
I know we cannot do partial day docking, but she is taking the full day off--so it wouldn't be partial day docking. So do I give her 2.48 hours of PTO for today and deduct 5.52 hours from her salary? Or, since she doesn't have a full 8 hours in her bank, do I deduct a full 8 hours from her salary and leave the 2.48 in her bank?
Comments
Something to think about for the future, anyway.
Since it's a full day & at her request, I would deduct a full day of pay & leave her PTO bank alone. It's the cleanist & I would let her know that she needs to get her PTO balance up to cover absences. How much time did she orginally have in her PTO account? It's great the supervisor is so liberal - but it seems to be coming at the EMPLOYER's expense. I always worry when people cut their time so close (unless she's only been there for a few months or she's been sick a lot). To me, and this is just an observation, the people that fall into this category have usually "disengaged" to a certain extent at work. Don't know the details here though, just an observation...
We don't have a problem with individuals who consistently work over 40 hours taking off early or coming in late on an occasional basis.