I do 48 hours in 2 days every week. Bit more spread out, but still just 2 days of work.
My union got me more money in a single year than I will pay in dues for my entire career in at least 3 separate years in the 6 years I've been working for my employer.
I get leave each year that is slightly more than 20 percent of my work hours.
Unions are amazing for workers.
But to add to the irony, a roof is designed to keep water out of the house, as that is it's primary job. If the roof is burned off enough that a downpour can put the fire out the only thing in there that isn't a charred soggy mess is the foundation. This guy has lost everything he has and he's just watching everyone else celebrate someone who was an asshole to him.
Used to see these people with multiple prescriptions for Percocets. They would use one for themselves and sell all the rest as individual pills to pay for treatment.
American healthcare system turned little old ladies with cancer into hardcore drug dealers.
My union has gotten me more money in multiple single years since I've been hired that I'll pay in dues for my whole career.
I have been looking into this lately, it seems there may be some commercial options that are normally for industrial use. I found some on Amazon that seem too cheap for this.
As a firefighter I've been running a bunch of these battery calls. The best case scenario is they just smoke up your house., and worse case I've seen videos online of the room going from nothing to IDLH (Immediately Dangerous to Life and Health) in under 20 seconds.
We've had a ton of ebikes and scooters burn up in homes. Never charge those inside. I've see power tool batteries burn up huge sections of residential houses, and I've seen laptop batteries explode right under the feet of other firefighters. That last bit was super cool, rarely get to see explosions that aren't car tires popping. Those laptop batteries would have caused a huge amount of damage if the building wasn't made of concrete - they allow modern midrises to be stuck built!
My understanding is that is commuter distance to affordable living up there in Canada
My county in MD has had this for years. We have a psychologist with a specialty in PTSD and first responder treatment on staff with multiple therapists in a separate section within the department. That's been around long enough that our first psychiatrist retired from the position.
Unfortunately I'm certain that there are very few places as progressive as we are.
Non Union people are so abused you think this is unethical.
One of our leave types pays out in March any hours over 96 if we don't ask to carry it over to the next year. We can take our overtime pay as leave (at 1.5 hours leave to 1 hour worked), and bonus holiday pay as leave.
This year the local negotiated a cost of living increase and eliminating the bottom two step increases, resulting in an approximate 14 percent pay bump for most employees. I also received a promotion this year.
I banked hundreds of hours of leave earlier this year from overtime and holidays that will payout in March next year 26 percent higher than when I worked it. I've done this every year I have promoted, and we are expected to do this since it is one of the ways we can burn our leave totals without taking off. If I had been really smart I would have carried over my leave from 2022 so it pays out next year, and I would have seen a single paycheck next year that was equal to half my years base pay last year.
When that pays out I will still have nearly 6 months of leave banked.
Your employer can afford to pay you. Make them pay you.
That's probably the price for land with sewer and water connections. There will be a new build there soon.
Lithobreaking maneuver.
I think this is the longest running battle in the history of warfare at this point.