Published Mar 26, 2016
tokmom, BSN, RN
4,568 Posts
Scenario: You typically work a 12 hour shift, but are scheduled for a mandatory 8 hour class. You cannot go back to work due to travel time to and from class.
What do you do about the 4 hour loss?
Does your facility pay you for a 12 hour day, regardless?
You eat the 4 hours?
You take vacation time to get your hours?
Pangea Reunited, ASN, RN
1,547 Posts
We don't get paid for time not actual working (or in class). I've never heard of PTO as an option, either. I guess it's like an extended, unpaid break. In the rare cases when this happens at my place, people tend to go to a nearby restaurant to pass the time. My personal strategy is to skip the "mandatory" thing that's scheduled since I worked the night before. If they make an issue of it, then I can skip work instead- their choice. I don't tolerate garbage scheduling like that.
Dogen
897 Posts
If the class dropped me below my FTE I would have 8 hours of pay and 4 hours of PTO. Typically, they would avoid this by scheduling me for class on a day I don't work, which is a double edged sword (no PTO used, but lost a day off).
Yes it is. What sucks is the classes are set days and to move one person around means moving another to accommodate the other. A huge pain in the butt.
No class, no work. It's total mandatory.
RNKPCE
1,170 Posts
You can either take PTO for the 4 hours or elect to take it unpaid(if you are saving PTO for a vacation or something).
AJJKRN
1,224 Posts
I would get paid my hourly base wage for non-Pt care for anything mandatory. Must be the difference in facility but I don't see how they can get away with not paying you legally for a mandatory class.
So you get paid your full day regardless?
mmc51264, BSN, MSN, RN
3,308 Posts
PTO fill for the 4 hours
I don't understand how a facility can do this? It isn't fair to use vacation to supplement a paycheck that is short due to mandatory education
lunchboxRN
48 Posts
We are given the choice between PTO or a 4 hr shift. Like no way am I using my PTO for that!
Some people choose to work a full 3 shifts, plus the class. We are so short staffed right now, it's no issue.
dream'n, BSN, RN
1,162 Posts
Not much different than low census days. We either take PTO or go unpaid. Or as others said, we work our 3 days and use a day off for the mandatory education, which will pay us 8 hours overtime.