PhDeac
PM a mod to cement your internet status forever
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2011
- Messages
- 155,224
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I have two jobs, because my full time job doesn't pay very well. I have a low paying entry level position in a human services field because it's damn near impossible to get a job in these fields without previous experience or/and a masters degree.but he did choose to take a job where he works 60 hours w/ no benefits because he wanted to work in a sector doing humanitarian work, right
Teaching mistrust of the police at an early age. Nice.
Not really a surprise...to expect Moore to do the decent thing and concede gracefully was always a stretch. Instead, he'll do what Trump would almost certainly have done had he lost to Hillary - refuse to actually concede (at least for a long time), make wild and unproven accusations of vote-stealing, vote fraud, etc., drag everything out for as long as possible while trying to remove any legitimacy from Jones' victory, and foster the conspiracy-minded suspicions of his base ("We didn't really lose the election, it was STOLEN from us by all these sinister minorities and libruls!")
Rubes will embrace this lost cause and build a statue of Moore to celebrate it.
My dad is a salaried employee specifically so he cant get overtime. He gets moved from hourly to salaried multiple times a year depending upon the "business needs" where he works.
Here's what the feds say:
"Misclassification
Employers who switch back and forth between classifying salaried, exempt workers as hourly, non-exempt workers and vice versa may be guilty of incorrectly classifying its employees. The U.S. Department of Labor Wage and Hour Division doesn't look favorably on employers who do this. However, once an employee is classified as salaried, exempt or hourly, non-exempt doesn't necessarily mean that an employer can't change the classification. It simply means there must be sound justification and a paper trail for switching back and forth."
Most states also have laws about this.
Most states also have laws about "comp time" for salaried employees.