Duty Hours and Time Off Sample Clauses

Duty Hours and Time Off. In order for a Resident to achieve optimal educational benefit and patients to achieve optimum patient care, a variety of duty hours are necessary. The hours of duty and responsibilities of Residents will be determined by the Residency Programs in conformance with standards set by Accrediting Agencies, specialty guidelines, and high standards for the specialty care patients. All duty hours shall be documented in New Innovations. Resident agrees to limit duty hours, including in-house call, to 80 hours per week, averaged over a four-week period. All Residents must have at least one 24 hour day out of seven days, on average, free of all patient care responsibilities, and should be on call no more than every third night when averaged over a four week period. A Resident must report any violations of duty hour rules to his/her Program Director. Time off for any reason must receive prior approval of the Residency Director. Residents must be responsible for understanding the accreditation; graduation licensing and board eligibility may all be affected by Leaves of Absence from a Residency Program. If there is any doubt about the effects of a Leave of Absence on graduation, accreditation, licensing, or board eligibility, the Resident is responsible for obtaining written clarification prior to taking the Leave of Absence. The Program Director may provide guidance and assistance.
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Related to Duty Hours and Time Off

  • Paid Time Off The Executive shall be entitled to take paid time off in accordance with the Company’s applicable paid time off policy for executives, as may be in effect from time to time.

  • Overtime for Part-Time Employees (a) A part-time employee working less than the normal hours per day of a full-time employee, and who is required to work longer than their regular workday, shall be paid at the rate of straight-time for the hours so worked, up to and including the normal hours in the workday of a full-time employee.

  • WORKING HOURS AND OVERTIME 18 A. FULL-TIME EMPLOYEE 18 B. PART-TIME EMPLOYEE 20 6. Part-time Meat Cutter 21 C. EXTRA MEAT CUTTER. 21 D. MEAT DEPARTMENT EIGHT-HOUR GUARANTEE 21 E. WORKWEEK 21 F. OVERTIME 21 G. SIXTH DAY/GROCERY 22 H. SIXTH OR SEVENTH DAY/GROCERY 22 I. SIXTH OR SEVENTH DAY/MEAT 22 J. REGULAR WORKDAY 22 K. READY FOR WORK 22 L. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS 22 M. WORK SCHEDULE 23 N. FALSIFICATION OF TIME RECORDS 23 1. No Employer Knowledge 23 2. Collusion 23 3. Coercion 23 O. CONSECUTIVE DAYS WORKED. 24 P. PREDESIGNATED DAY OFF GUARANTEE 24 Q. SUNDAY GUARANTEE 24 R. WORKDAY DEFINED. 25 S. ON CALL 25 T. PART-TIME EMPLOYEES - SIXTH DAY 25 U. WORK IN A HIGHER CATEGORY AND OTHER DEPARTMENTS (GENERAL MERCHANDISE CLERKS WORKING IN HIGHER CLASSIFICATION) 25 V. TRAVEL PAY 26 W. INTERRUPTION OF OPERATIONS 26 ARTICLE 6 - WAGES 26

  • HOURS AND WORK WEEK Section 1.

  • HOURS AND OVERTIME 3:1 A workweek is defined as seven (7) consecutive calendar days, from Saturday midnight to Saturday midnight. The basic workweek shall consist of five (5) workdays of eight (8) hours each and shall begin Monday and run through Friday, except when a job other than for a public utility is to be done on Saturday, then the Company may assign another day as a non-workday and Saturdays becomes a workday in the basic workweek. An extended workweek shall begin at starting time Monday and continue until the next Monday starting time. The regular hours of work for all employees shall be from 7:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. with an unpaid meal period of thirty (30) minutes which normally will be from 12:00 noon to 12:30 p.m. provided, however, that the regular lunch period may be advance or delayed an hour or less when work must necessarily be performed during the regular lunch period. Such a change in the lunch period shall not be deemed to require the payment of overtime. The regular hours of work may be changed by the Company at the request or direction of the public utility or governmental authorities, and by mutual agreement between the Company and the Union. The Company may change the start times by 30 minutes in either direction of the regular start time to meet the operational need without union approval. Such a change in the regular hours of work shall not be deemed to require the payment of overtime.

  • Overtime Hours Except as otherwise provided in this section, all hours worked in excess of the established work day, before or after an employee's regular scheduled shift, or on any regularly scheduled day off, shall be considered overtime. All paid vacation time, paid holidays, paid sick leave, compensatory time off, and paid leaves of absence shall be considered as "time worked" for purposes of this Article. Part-time employees whose established work day is less than eight (8) hours shall not be considered to be working overtime until having completed eight (8) hours of work.

  • Part-time Vacation Pay If the Employer currently has the computer systems’ capability to implement bi- weekly vacation pay, they shall do so by the start of the next vacation year or earlier. Those Employers with no computer capability will endeavour to implement bi- weekly vacation pay if there is no significant administrative burden, by the start of the next vacation year or earlier. If the Employer does not so implement, it will provide reasons in writing to the Union. Where possible without extensive programming changes, the amount of vacation pay will be separately identified on the pay stub.

  • HOLIDAYS AND VACATION Executive shall be eligible for paid holiday and vacation time in accordance with Company policy as in effect from time to time and made available to Company’s senior management employees.

  • Time Off The company recognises that sufficient time off to attend to personal matters and for recreation are important to the employee’s wellbeing, job satisfaction and overall productivity. Accordingly, time off may be taken with the consent of the Company, which shall not be unreasonably withheld. In considering the approval to have time off, the Parties will have regard to the current works programme and the urgency of the reason for time off. In the event that time off is to be taken, it will be the employee’s obligation to advise the Company in advance or as soon as practicable on the day of absence, recognising that unplanned absences can cause costly disruption to programmed works and are a major source of annoyance for the company, other employees and clients. The object of offering flexible working hours is that in return employees will take very seriously their obligation to turn up when they are expected. In view of the disruption caused by unplanned and or notified absenteeism, repeated failure to observe the protocol for time off would constitute misconduct.

  • Duty Hours 11.01 The regular work week for all employees shall be eighty (80) hours bi-weekly on shifts of eight (8) hours per day. Employees shall not be scheduled to work double shifts as a part of the normal scheduling procedure. The Employer may implement a forty (40) hour workweek on shifts of ten (10) hours per day, according to Departmental needs.

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