|
||||
|
Login
Month Archive
Recent Visitors
cdavan - Wed 25 Jun 2008 11:36 AM EDT
Katy - Tue 27 May 2008 12:39 AM EDT
Scott - Sat 26 Apr 2008 11:11 PM EDT
Retired1 - Wed 02 Apr 2008 12:57 PM EDT
DON KAISER - Wed 12 Mar 2008 10:45 PM EDT
|
Friday, January 21
by
mknjlaw
on Fri 21 Jan 2005 01:59 PM EST
To receive the �fair day�s pay� to which you are entitled under the Fair Labor Standards Act, you must give to your employer in return a �fair day�s work.� And it is your employer�s sole prerogative to determine what work you must perform, when you must perform it by, and how you must perform it. The Court of Claims said it all in 1975:
It is appropriate to observe at the outset that the prime duty and foremost obligation of any employee is to exert effort and energy in the accomplishment of assigned tasks. It is not too much to ask to require a person to function in the job he or she was hired to do. Those in the working force certainly have a legitimate interest in seeking to better their working conditions, and to that end an employee has a right to express his dissatisfactions to those in positions of higher authority. But he is assuredly not free to simply drop assigned work in order to protest management policies; nor is an employee permitted to devote all of his labor--at the expense of his normal duties--to convince superiors that his approach to management techniques is more enlightened than theirs. This court has admonished Government employees in the past that they may not refuse to do work merely because of disagreements with management, and that if they fail to perform their duties, they do so at the risk of being insubordinate. more »
|
|||