I have been looking for manufacturing, assembly, production positions all over the Midwest. It’s absolutely shocking how many of them want you to work rotating shifts.

Look at the image I submitted. That company wants you to work 3rd shift one week, then 2nd shift the next, then 1st shift the next, and then repeat it over and over. How in the hell is that healthy?

And this requirement for rotating shifts is prevalent in so many job ads now. WTF is going on with the world?

Full job ad here:

https://www.indeed.com/viewjob?jk=2ac8cd23b6411f88

  • bitwaba@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Without knowing anything about the situation, my guess is that if you run a static 1st, 2nd, 3rd shift style rotation, you can pay market rate for 1st and 2nd shift, but you have to pay a premium for 3rd shift due to it being a less desirable shift for the general public.

    With rotating shifts you just hire people and make them work the graveyard shift for no additional money, and get to argue with those that have to work it as “look, no one wants to work 3rd shift. That’s why we rotate it between everyone on. We’re a team here. We all pull our own weight”. Which is a bad faith argument, but they’ll happily use it on you and frame you as the over demanding worker, instead of the underpaid worker.

    • razoloto999@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      8 months ago

      With rotating shifts you just hire people and make them work the graveyard shift for no additional money,

      The job ad states:

      COMPENSATION: $22.73/hour + premiums

      So, I assume that premiums might be what they call differentials (or additional money)

    • Kiernian@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      This is it. If they’re not technically third shift, they don’t have to be paid a shift differential.

      They can claim everyone is “normal thing, payroll-wise” and the fact that a full third (or 2/3) of the work they do is “outside of normal” can be classified as “as needed” and “occasional other shifts as required”.

      It allows them to be one thing on the books while being completely different in practice.