Qantas Sick Leave
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2014
Location: Adelaide
Posts: 106
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Qantas Sick Leave
Saw a report today that said that sick leave in Qantas is averaging 10 days per employee.
In contrast Jetstar is averaging 4.5 days per employee. Another example of how Jestar staff are more productive than Qantas staff on average.
Qantas staff sick leave costs $125m per year in itself.
Little surprise that more functions are outsourced and off-shored.
In contrast Jetstar is averaging 4.5 days per employee. Another example of how Jestar staff are more productive than Qantas staff on average.
Qantas staff sick leave costs $125m per year in itself.
Little surprise that more functions are outsourced and off-shored.
Join Date: Jan 2014
Location: melbourne
Posts: 28
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
As a worker I'd rather my work mates be at home sick then next to me infecting the whole crew. Last year I was on shift when some left early on the first day feeling sick the next day it was 3, by the last night shift 16 people were off sick with the same symptoms so sometimes you and the company are better off not being tough and coming in
You would hope people are conversant with these laws;
CIVIL AVIATION SAFETY REGULATIONS 1998 - REG 67.270 Offence--doing act while efficiency impaired
(1) This regulation applies in relation to a licence of any of the following kinds:
(a) flight crew licence;
(b) special pilot licence;
(c) flight radiotelephone licence;
(d) air traffic controller licence.
(2) The holder of the licence must not do an act authorised by the licence if at the time:
(a) he or she knows that he or she has a medically significant condition; and
(b) the condition has the result that his or her ability to do the act is impaired.
Penalty: 50 penalty units.
In other words you can technically be convicted and fined if in breach. Try maintaining your ASIC with a conviction against your name. If you are not fit for duty you shouldn't be crewing an aircraft and based on recent occurrences the CASA definition of medically significant condition is very much 'no matter how minor'.
CIVIL AVIATION SAFETY REGULATIONS 1998 - REG 67.270 Offence--doing act while efficiency impaired
(1) This regulation applies in relation to a licence of any of the following kinds:
(a) flight crew licence;
(b) special pilot licence;
(c) flight radiotelephone licence;
(d) air traffic controller licence.
(2) The holder of the licence must not do an act authorised by the licence if at the time:
(a) he or she knows that he or she has a medically significant condition; and
(b) the condition has the result that his or her ability to do the act is impaired.
Penalty: 50 penalty units.
In other words you can technically be convicted and fined if in breach. Try maintaining your ASIC with a conviction against your name. If you are not fit for duty you shouldn't be crewing an aircraft and based on recent occurrences the CASA definition of medically significant condition is very much 'no matter how minor'.
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Pants on fire
Posts: 68
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
In contrast Jetstar is averaging 4.5 days per employee. Another example of how Jestar staff are more productive than Qantas staff on average.
Then your mate does the same favour for you next week ....
does your mate owe you a case of beer for a successful go at that?
Another example of how Jestar staff are more productive than Qantas staff on average.
Sick leave can be abused and there are probably heaps of abuse throughout Qantas (partly due to over-generous SL provisions in EBAs etc) but I have always found that if you have an engaged happy workforce, people self-regulate and restrict their sick leave to when they are actually sick and that is the time, as an employer, I don't want them in anyway.
Qantas has developed such a poisonous culture that employees are taking extra sick leave because they feel under-valued whilst management treat all sick leave (except their own) as a rort. This is a race to the bottom.
This is a non starter for pilots as in certain instances pilots would actually be taking a pay reduction by going sick, given the structure of the QF pay system.
Until you get pilot data this is a pointless argument if you are throwing in cabin crew, office workers, ground staff etc etc.
Until you get pilot data this is a pointless argument if you are throwing in cabin crew, office workers, ground staff etc etc.
Qantas' workforce include many older workers, past the age of rude good health. Bad **** sometimes happens as you get older, start shaving, have kids etc, CamelSquadron.
QF core staff also toil under an executive team that keeps stress levels high with constant leaking of impending doom, endless strategic reviews and publicly rewarded malfeasance.
Just wait until JQ is no longer the fair-haired boy in the group.
QF core staff also toil under an executive team that keeps stress levels high with constant leaking of impending doom, endless strategic reviews and publicly rewarded malfeasance.
Just wait until JQ is no longer the fair-haired boy in the group.
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2014
Location: Adelaide
Posts: 106
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
If you benchmark sick leave against other companies - 10 is an extremely high number and it reflects very poorly on the mindset and productivity of the Qantas staff.
For it to average 10, there must be many taking more than 10 because in any business you will have a fair proportion of responsible people who will only take sick leave when they are really sick.
For it to average 10, there must be many taking more than 10 because in any business you will have a fair proportion of responsible people who will only take sick leave when they are really sick.
If you benchmark sick leave against other companies - 10 is an extremely high number and it reflects very poorly on the mindset and productivity of the Qantas staff.
I suggest you get real data against a real comparison.
If you benchmark sick leave against other companies - 10 is an extremely high numbe
Perhaps you could share both the data and the source of the data otherwise it is just another opinion dressed up as a fact.
Australian average is 9.4. Public sector in the teens. Qantas seems pretty normal.
This...
Absenteeism reflects sick organisation
Or this...
Cookies must be enabled. | The Australian
Where did you get the figure of ten from CamelSquadron? Did the media department just give you that figure to spread this week before Thursday?
Absenteeism reflects sick organisation
Or this...
Cookies must be enabled. | The Australian
Where did you get the figure of ten from CamelSquadron? Did the media department just give you that figure to spread this week before Thursday?
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Australia, maybe
Posts: 559
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
If you want to have a little giggle, click on CamelSquadron in a post heading and then, "Find More Posts by CamelSquadron".
Every post has the same theme.
Total TROLL.
Hahahahaha
Every post has the same theme.
Total TROLL.
Hahahahaha