April Dawn 12207 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 Here is the situation: A close friend of mine is a welder who works in a shop building stuff for the military. They got a ton of work finished early and didn't have anything to do so their boss asked them to do basic cleaning tasks such as clean their bays, wash floors, wipe down their eating area. My friend was so insulted by this he told his boss he was going home early. In any job that I've had all of which general cleaning tasks were not my primary duties I've always just done them and not thought about it... When I was managing a restaurant wearing dress shirts I've cleaned light covers, scraped down fryer ect and never felt something like that was beneath me... If I didn't have something that I had to do I always cleaned. It just made sense. I guess what I'm asking is without a written job description what should be "normal" duties, and what would you find insulting? Posted via Mobile Device Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest W***ledi*Time Report post Posted October 27, 2011 Just about any written job description ends with "and other duties as assigned". Cleaning and maintaining one's workstation or area is a normal sort of task anywhere I've been, but I know some unionized places are very sensitive as to who is permitted to do what. If there's a regular separate cleaning crew at your friend's workplace, then there'd no doubt be grumbling that the welders were being asked to do the cleaning crew's job for them. Humans being what they are, if previously-enjoyed privileges (such as being paid for sitting around doing nothing after your primary tasks have been completed) are suddenly withdrawn, folks won't like it. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
April Dawn 12207 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 This is an non unionized place oddly enough. Posted via Mobile Device Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Andee 220524 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 (edited) Deleted my comments Edited October 27, 2011 by Mature Angela Better stated by others Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mutau 2516 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 WIT hit it on the head. Most work descriptions have a catch all clause about "other related duties". This means almost anything except for something which could possibly endanger you or cause you injury. At that point you have the legal right to refuse the work under the federal Labour Code. Common sense just tells you that if your regular work is complete, then there is certainly something that you can be doing. In these tough economic times having a job and earning wages is a good thing: why spoil it? No manager wants to see their staff sitting around not doing anything. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
April Dawn 12207 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 Nope he's not in the military he just works for a company that makes things for the military, its a non union job. I was more just confused about how or why somebody would complain about doing any form of general work not directly related to their "normal job"? Like 6 men all age ranges left with him and I had to sit at denny's and listen to them complain. I just don't get it?? Posted via Mobile Device Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Surf_Nazis_Must_Die 8958 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 Here comes a half-drunk, knee jerk reaction... Your buddy needs to mop up his fuckin' tears and get back to work (and imo, he needs to do that mopping off the clock, IE on his own time). As a welder, your buddy gets paid a pretty decent wage. In other words, the average wage for a welder is at least a few bucks over minimum, and anything over minimum is pretty decent in regards to Saskatchewan's overall cheap cost of living. If he happens to be paid hourly, instead of a salaried position, he should be happy his employers gave him the chance to earn his full eight hours on the clock instead of sending him home early. He gets paid the same amount to do braindead, menial tasks like wiping up a lunch area for the same amount he would have earned for doing a specialised, and educated task like welding. In the paid by the hour scenario, he just made easy money instead of being sent home early and making squat. Now lets say he is in a salaried position. This could go either way. If he and his co-workers have been working their butts off, and logging some serious unpaid OT (gotta love salary for that), and they happened to finish their latest project early, then hells yeah he should be insulted by what management proposed! But honestly, how often is that the case? If he and the rest of his coworkers are salaried and finished well below the regular forty hour work week, then management has every right to ask their employees to do a bit of side work. The employees are earning a guaranteed forty hour a week paycheck, regardless of the real amount of hours put in, of course the company wants to get their money's worth out of the salaried employees! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
qwertyaccount 15793 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 I couldn't have said it better that WIT. Getting paid $30+ an hour to do an $8/hr job isn't so bad, especially since it is their working and eating area, and not someone elses. Perhaps if he makes too big a stink of such a reasonable request, and since the work is complete ahead of time, they might do some number crunching and figure out that the welders are scheduled for too many hours or that they don't need as many welders as before, and the whiney ones tend to be the first to go. Maybe this was middle management's way of keeping the excess labour info from upper management and doing the crew a big favour. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Megan'sTouch 23875 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 Suck it up, Princess. Posted via Mobile Device 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kubrickfan 12836 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 Of course it's reasonable. If this guy did this more than once (everyone has a right to blow off some steam, no matter how misguided), it would be "career-limiting" decision! And maybe even a career-ending one.. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JuliasUndies 7288 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 Well wasn't that nice to leave his coworkers behind to clean up his mess. I know everyone here so far has decided what he should have done and it's true. As his friend it's best to just support his decisions and try to see it his way, stay bias to his view. No matter how dumb our choices seem, a good friend has your back..unless it will seriously harm a friend I pretty much check my opinions at the door. Some things I would find insulting, like doing the bosses job *shudders* I'm supposed to be happy to have been intrusted with this sacred job that is supposed to be the bosses/owners..Then the boss might not have been sexed enough the night before, come in and yell at me for a poor job done when really I did it awesome. The insulting part to me is that I feel I am being taken advantage of- they leave early and give me their job and try to act like it's sacred n shit-such a privileged, people really suck that one up to me it's insulting. Do your own fucking job! Bah! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
qwertyaccount 15793 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 As his friend it's best to just support his decisions and try to see it his way, stay bias to his view. No matter how dumb our choices seem, a good friend has your back..unless it will seriously harm a friend I pretty much check my opinions at the door. When dealing with others, I think you're bang on! It's probably just me, but unless I'm really off in left field I would like my friends to stick up for me against others, but to me I want them to be true. I want to have the rose colour glasses ripped off my head, be called out on my BS, and made to realize it when I'm wrong, otherwise how would I ever know I was wrong, learn and grow. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest E*******h S******s Report post Posted October 27, 2011 Suck it up' date=' Princess.Posted via Mobile Device What she said. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
antlerman 17064 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 I work in the trades.....and cleaning up around you and keeping the shop clean belongs to every one in the shop. Is by chance this person a union person.......spoiled.......? A clean shop is a safe shop and anyone who does not have safety first in their job is not proud of the work or workplace. Posted via Mobile Device Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
spud271 47779 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 Suck it up' date=' Princess.Posted via Mobile Device I'm with Megan! I think floggings should be brought back for this exact scenario!!!! LOL Does this moron realize how bad things are around this planet right now? Millions are out of work, and there are few countries with any solutions to fix it! It's people like him who deserve to be fired! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Boomer 33202 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 I'm with Megan on this one, but just maybe he'd rather be sitting at home on pogie. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Reddog01 30280 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 So much for team work and a congenial environment. Cleaning your workspace and lunch/lounge area should be common dog.... Maybe a lay off until more work comes in is a better approach. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kubrickfan 12836 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 When dealing with others, I think you're bang on! It's probably just me, but unless I'm really off in left field I would like my friends to stick up for me against others, but to me I want them to be true. I want to have the rose colour glasses ripped off my head, be called out on my BS, and made to realize it when I'm wrong, otherwise how would I ever know I was wrong, learn and grow. Absolutely. Being his friend requires you to tell him the truth when you think he's wrong, but that does't mean not standing up for him vis-a-vis other people. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
April Dawn 12207 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 Ok good, I wasn't off in some weird parallel universe where cleaning up your area seemed like a normal request. Thanks everybody! Posted via Mobile Device Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
roamingguy 300292 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 Horrible, just horrible...having a job and being expected to work Hope if he left early he got docked pay, there's lots of people out there looking for work RG Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
NotchJohnson 214123 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 I'm with everyone here, this guy must be married to a good wife who does all the cleaning for him. Being a boss and having to deal with this day in and day out just makes my skin crawl. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JuliasUndies 7288 Report post Posted October 27, 2011 Absolutely. Being his friend requires you to tell him the truth when you think he's wrong, but that does't mean not standing up for him vis-a-vis other people. The way I see it sometimes is like this.. If they are too stupid to see their mistake, then they aren't worth your breath since they won't listen or follow the guidance(Unless they asked for it). If my friend decided that she/he was going to jump off a building or do life threatening crap then I might tie them to a chair until they came around, out of love, of course. Unless that happens, my conversation would go something like this.. Friend "Hi Julia, today my boss came up with this idea to clean to pass time, can you believe it? Me clean, who does he think he is..so I took the afternoon off!" Me "That bastard how could he? You clean? geeze doesn't he know you have a maid for those things?, so how was your afternoon off"? Tada- end of story and potential bitch fest from my friend, I've been married too long to bother to argue Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
KaceyKatzegeist 152 Report post Posted October 28, 2011 If someone else is designated to do the cleaning, I would be a bit upset that I was being asked to do their job. After all, what are they being paid for if I'm doing it? But if they're standing around, doing nothing ... I don't see what the problem is with a little clean up. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ethernaut 100 Report post Posted October 28, 2011 That person is just being selfish. Considering the bigger picture when a person needs their job description written in a way that we need to refer to the job description for all aspects of the work then you need to rethink that person's contribution. Clearly this person is not a team player. Everyone should clean up after themselves. Perhaps his boss could have shown some leadership and started the clean up and all of the staff might have followed the example. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites