Kind of boring right now, but I'm well paid and I've never been unemployed except by choice for almost my entire working life so I feel pretty fortunate.
Well, sure, I'm not saying I would do nothing forever. But it would be nice to have the option to do nothing if I wanted.
You know what I would do with a million dollars?
Absolutely nothing.
Well, sure, I'm not saying I would do nothing forever. But it would be nice to have the option to do nothing if I wanted.
You know what I would do with a million dollars?
Absolutely nothing.
Not two chicks at the same time?
Yeah...I only get 5 days off per year.Not to rub it in the face of anyone, but that's pretty much the standard here. Most people get 6 weeks of paid holidays during the year. Some people get more, some people less, but that's usually their choice. You guys on the other side of the pond work way too much in my opinion, to the detriment of your health and well-being.
Oh I agree, which is why I feel pretty lucky to get what I have here in the States. I've been looking at a job that gives only two weeks and even for nearly double pay I am still not so sure about it.
Wow. I knew the US was bad for that, but 5 days?!?! I've had more than that off this tax year to date. I've heard that sick days count as holiday in some US employers too?
Statutory minimum here is 5.6 weeks (consisting of whatever your normal week is). They can be sneaky and count bank (public) holidays in that, but even so, that's at least 21 additional days for a full timer.
Once I've worked at this company for a year, I will get 2 weeks paid vacation.Yeah...I only get 5 days off per year.Oh I agree, which is why I feel pretty lucky to get what I have here in the States. I've been looking at a job that gives only two weeks and even for nearly double pay I am still not so sure about it.
Wow. I knew the US was bad for that, but 5 days?!?! I've had more than that off this tax year to date. I've heard that sick days count as holiday in some US employers too?
Statutory minimum here is 5.6 weeks (consisting of whatever your normal week is). They can be sneaky and count bank (public) holidays in that, but even so, that's at least 21 additional days for a full timer.
^Many teachers in the US can bank their sicks days. They build up enough to be able to retire an entire year early while still getting paid.
^Many teachers in the US can bank their sicks days. They build up enough to be able to retire an entire year early while still getting paid.
It's really rather inaccurate to make a blanket statement like this. I don't know how they're doing things in Plainfield, but I know that the Dubuque, IA, East Dubuque, IL, Madison, WI, Des Moines, IA, and Waterloo, IA, districts cap their employees' banked sick days at 30, and anything beyond that is lost if unused.
Richmond's quite nice.
Well, my mom is a teacher in Plainfield, and she has no cap on sick days. My aunt was a teacher in Champaign/Urbana, and she retired a year early because she had accumulated 200+ sick days. My uncle was a teacher in some other town in central IL, and he was also able to retire a year early because he had accumulated so many sick days. My Biology teacher in high school did the same thing.
Of all the teachers that I know, every single one of them has this option, so I don't think my statement was inaccurate at all.
I also said "many teachers," not "all teachers." Hardly a blanket statement.
Richmond's quite nice.
It's decent enough, but on the two occasions I've been there, it's just felt so ... compressed, as though double the city has been squeezed into an area half the size it needs to be. So many short streets and odd alignments.
There's also a personal stigma regarding the city; one of my closest friends got marked by her college roommate at VCU and then mugged and had her head caved in with a baseball bat. Most of her left frontal lobe was removed, and there isn't a whole lot left of her anymore. Not a huge fan of the city after that.![]()
This has never been true.I thought your mom was an assistant superintendent. (So she probably worked with the current super of Dubuque, Dr. Larie Godinez.)
I'm using examples from all the teachers that I've known that have retired or plan to retire in the state of Illinois. Of my sample size, 100% of them have the opportunity to bank unlimited sick days. I don't think saying "many teachers" is all that big of a stretch. There are thousands of teachers in Illinois. I think thousands of people qualify as "many."In any event, you're using examples from one of the more affluent suburbs of Chicago (completely owned by the union), a college town (where teachers are generally treated better than other areas) and "some other town in central IL," and saying "many teachers" can bank unlimited sick days. That seems a bit ... off to me.![]()
Actually, a quick check of Illinois' TRS shows that the state mandates the unlimited banking of sick days. State-wide thing, so the documentation my wife received when teaching in East Dubuque must have been outdated. Odd.
Holy crap, that's terrible. I can certainly see why you would want to avoid it.There's also a personal stigma regarding the city; one of my closest friends got marked by her college roommate at VCU and then mugged and had her head caved in with a baseball bat. Most of her left frontal lobe was removed, and there isn't a whole lot left of her anymore. Not a huge fan of the city after that.![]()
Sometimes I feel like you go out of your way to prove me wrong.
Sometimes I feel like you go out of your way to prove me wrong.
Good grief, I spoke out of turn and admitted that I was wrong after checking state documentation. Settle down.![]()
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