eating lunch at your desk....
Mhedden
2 Posts
We've received some complaints from employees - that other employees are eating at their desks and the smells are offensive. Also - the perception is that employees will leave the building for their lunch hour - come back after the hour with lunch and proceed to eat their lunch at their desk.
I have been asked by some of the employees that are offended to address this. Our company does offer 2 kitchens with tables/chairs - however I believe it's become a habit to eat at the desk.
Has anyone else run into this issue - and if so, how have you handled it?
Thanks!
I have been asked by some of the employees that are offended to address this. Our company does offer 2 kitchens with tables/chairs - however I believe it's become a habit to eat at the desk.
Has anyone else run into this issue - and if so, how have you handled it?
Thanks!
Comments
The employees like it, yet we get mixed reviews from management. It's nice to offer this flexibility and it attracts people, but I also feel that people need a break in their day to clear their heads or stretch if they're doing repetitive keyboard work.
We haven't had any issues about smells, like with heating up fish, etc - YET!
Are we talking about exempt ees? Here in Oregon, if an ee is not completely relieved of all duties during a meal period, that time must be paid.
So if one of your ee's is sitting at his desk eating lunch and gets a work related phone call, that meal period would be considered paid time.
We do not allow one to work and eat. It is very easy for a lunch/eating rest break to become a paid 30 minutes or one hour paid lunch break by keeping my own personal record in my desk calendar and when I leave after several years of keeping my record of the lunch break (eating at my desk) and now charge your company with a wage and hour audit and you will pay me for those eating hours at my desk that you refused to pay back when I was employed. I will win because your company has no record of when I worked and when I ate over the lunch/rest period.
I have been there and done that, my recommendation is for the company to get behind a policy that says lunch breaks are rest breaks and everyone not scheduled for work during that time will leave the work site to rest or/and eat. Going out for an hour for rest and then bringing lunch back, where I consum my meal and try to get my mind on the job at hand is also not allowed.
Our very weak stance on this issue cost the company with perfect records to show what we did pay, was no match for the personal record of the X-ee, written in 40 to 50 spiral pockets note books. You can not defend, it is a loosing battle because we had nothing to show that we did not cause her to work while eating and did not get paid! We also did not have a record of discipline on any employee that refused to work during their lunch break, no we had records which proved that her record was possibly true. The excuse, that she volunteered and was not forced to leave her desk will not hold water either and it supports the X-ee's claim. Her record is the trumping records. It cost our company $25,000.00 plus interest to get clean with our bad habits of not following company policy.
This is a money maker for those EEs with a reasonable knowledge of the FLSA. It takes time but upon leaving the company my expense to create periods of time when no one was watching or recording will have been well worth my efforts. Some consider it a little savings bank. The only way to defend is to have a pure policy and stick with it. If your company needs people in the building during lunch hire a temp for two hours a day and everybody leave the desk area and don't allow anyone other than EXEMPT employees to return to their desk before the end of the lunch period.
PORK
Hourly employees must leave their work area for the lunch period. Once in a while we have had employees run errands on their lunch break and bring lunch back with them. One in particular was getting carried away with it. The only reason we noticed (she sits in the back corner) was that the lunch she was bringing back smelled really bad. Her manager told her that eating at her desk should be limited and only used in extreme situations (you have to pick up a sick child and you do it during your lunch break as opposed to shopping for a new outfit). The manager also told her that even if she eats at her desk, she must make sure that whatever she is eating does not have a strong smell and offend others nearby. The employee can eat the smelly stuff if she wants, just not at her desk or anywhere in the work area.
Too bad we can't make that order building-wide. We have an employee who brings in some kind of vegetable dish and eats it nearly every day. She heats in the microwave and the odor seems to spread throughout the entire building. It smells so bad employees end up avoiding that part of the building.
Good luck!
Nae
We have recently asked people, especially those in public contact, not to eat at their desk in view of patients. This is not a professional image that you want to cultivate with people having their breakfast and lunch spread out at their work station. We have break areas on each floor for the purpose of eating. Occasionally when we are short staffed, employees will eat on the run and it may just be for ten or fifteen minutes.
We also have had the problem of "stinky" food in the breakrooms. One of the worst is burnt popcorn which I have found out, some people like. We had to ban this as it was actually making people nauseous.
>areas open to the public to eat at their desks.
>We also discourage it at all locaitons, but
>...some superivsors are not as strict as others.
> On a topic not net mentioned, during a previous
>life we had a problem with insects and mice.
>The exterminatior that was called stated in his
>opinion this was due to so many ee's eating at
>their desk resulting in crumbs on the floor and
>food trash being thrown in the waste cans by
>their desk. Also a lot of the ee's were keeping
>some sort of snak cakes,candy, etc. in their
>desk. When we eliminated the fook at the work
>stations, the pests problem did not recur.
Yeah Dutch,I forgot to mention that on my post. We had a HUGE infestation of ants this past year and it was mostly traced back to people having stuff in their desks, dropping crumbs on the floor, etc.
Time for lunch.
MikeatUniversityofColonialAvenue hasbeenhereawhile (whocanforgetthatname) butonlypostseveryonceinawhile. Good to see you again, Mike.
A friend did an experiment in college that showed that the top of a desk can have more germs than a toilet seat. But I'm not ready to eat in the restroom.
James Sokolowski
HRhero.com
Offices are not deli's - don't allow employees to use them as such.