Changes to 1999 Employee Guide & Handbook
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We are in the process of updating and redefining areas of our Handbook which was written in 1999. One specific area is the Personal Leave or PTO time. Originally, I believe it was set up to be used for sick days and personal time out of the office. We allow 48 hours of personal time per year but in the past the employees have been allowed to make up their time and not use the personal time. Instead they are using it for extra vacation days. I want to redefine this area and be more specific about the use of personal leave. I'm not changing the time allowed, only changing how it can be used. I also have several other areas that need to be clarified but not changed. I know the manual is being misinterpreted or in some cases being used to suit a situation. Has anyone else tackled this?
Comments
I think many forumites have at one time or another. With all due respect, I'm not clear about your question. Are you asking about how to change a time off policy, whether a change can be made, or how best to undertake a major revision in company policies (including publication of the change in the employee handbook)?
Clarification would be helpful.
Unless there is a state specific regulation that restricts your ability to 'tweak' your benefits, you can and should review the policies periodically and change, modify, ammend, etc. as appropriate. It is wise if you have the time to do so to advertise changes to staff before the changes are implemented, sometimes for as long as 60 days if possible. Doing so will afford you the opportunity to answer questions, clarify concerns, and generally get buy in and support for the changes before they occur. The alternative is to change without advance warning and spend at least 60 days smoothing ruffled feathers, calming angry emotions, justifying after the fact, . . ., etc.
Anything more than tweaking should most definitely be advertised to staff ahead of time. Anything that has to do with $$ may have some regulatory restrictions. Your state may have some specific regulations that are more restrictive than federal regulations. It's always good to check all the bases.
best wishes.
As far as Paid Time Off (PTO), my general rule of thumb in a policy is if the time is in the bank, it has to be utilized in lieu of Leave Without Pay. We have people who would take Leave Without Pay and build up a huge PTO bank and then want to take 2-3 weeks off at a time. We do not allow Leave Without Pay unless the PTO bank has been totally exhausted.