|
1.
Who’s eligible
to request a vacation?
|
A classified employee in Unit
1 must have at least 130 days of paid service in a regular assignment before
he or she is eligible to take vacation. The employee must have accumulated
sufficient vacation balance to cover the duration of the vacation. No
vacation can be taken until it is earned.
See Section E
|
|
2.
When should an employee request and receive vacation
approval?
|
The general rule is that
vacation is taken at a time that is convenient to the employee. An employee
who has made a vacation request 15 days in advance is entitled to a prompt
response from his or her supervisor. The response, either approving or
denying the request, needs to be delivered to the employee in writing within
three working days of the supervisor having received the request. If the
supervisor doesn’t respond within three days, the request is deemed to be
approved.
If the vacation request is
submitted fewer than 15 working days in advance the supervisor must
explicitly approve or disapprove the vacation under those circumstances.
See Section H
|
|
3. Are “black-out
periods,” when no one is permitted to request
vacation,
permissible?
|
No, an employee may always
request to take vacation. Supervisors must always consider any
vacation request. See Section H
|
|
4. Is a supervisor justified
in denying all vacation requests
because staffing is
reduced?
|
No, employees earn vacation
and need to take time off. See Section I |
|
5. Is a supervisor
obligated to explain his or her reason for
denying a request for
vacation, and must he or she ‘prove’
that the denial was
justified? |
The Collective Bargaining
Agreement does not require supervisors to state a reason for denying an
employee’s request for vacation, but it does prohibit them from denying a
request unreasonably. While there is no contractual obligation to state a
reason, supervisors should offer an explanation of their reason for denying
a request.
|
|
6. What are some of the
common reasons a vacation request
might be denied? |
Supervisors are not permitted
to “unreasonably deny” an employee’s request to take vacation, but
legitimate reasons for turning down an employee’s request may include:
§
-lack of
sufficient notice of the request (i.e. 15
working days)
making it difficult or impossible to
reconfigure the work of the department to
accommodate the employee’s absence;
§
-the
need for staffing during departments peak
demand periods;
§
-any
other compelling reasons that impact the
operations.
|
|
7. If circumstances
change (for example, another employee goes
out on sick leave just
before the start of a co-worker’s
approved vacation), can
a supervisor cancel the approval of
the vacation?
|
No, the supervisor can ask
the employee to reschedule his or her vacation, but without the employee’s
consent, the vacation cannot be revoked. If the employee agrees to
reschedule, he or she will be entitled to reimbursement for certain costs
caused by the change in plans
(i.e. cancellation fees or
increased fares due to loss of advanced booking discounts).
See Sections H and H.1
|
|
8. If an employee’s
accumulated vacation balance reaches 400
hours and that employee
requests vacation time to assure no
loss of earned
vacation, can a supervisor deny this request?
|
Yes, however, the employee is
responsible to take or schedule vacation within the next 30 days, which
cannot be denied. The employee and the supervisor should work together to
assure that the employee takes ample vacation in a timely manner so that
vacation accumulation does not exceed 400 hours.
See
Sections H and I, p.17
|
|
9. How should
supervisors/managers inform employees about
how and when to
schedule vacation?
|
Employees should expect the
department supervisor to inform the employee about the process for taking
vacation as it relates to the departments annual calendar. This could be
done at a staff meeting, by memo or individual consultation.
|