no just be quite
Fed wage law requires overtime for one situation - work in excess of 40 hours in a workweek, if the work is not "exempt" manager and professional work. Fed wage law does not say time AWAY from work for sick leave must count as hours worked. Fed law does not say that an employer cannot reduce a worker's schedule so that sick leave plus work hours total no more than 40 hours. A union contract may address that for the small percent of worker unionized.
Employees work as scheduled by the employer, and stay until released or face discipline. Lunch and break time are unregulated in fed law, but may appear in state law and union contracts.
Common law (judge based law) and Statues ( fed/state/local gov)
fed law 16
Yes, risk management courses are requires by law in the work place. Risk management is so important because it is the ground rules in most any given situations in the work place and insure the safety of everyone.
Law and Order - 1990 Fed 20-11 is rated/received certificates of: USA:TV-14 (V)
labor unionizing place law
Charles' Law states that the volume of a gas is directly proportional to its temperature, assuming pressure remains constant. As the temperature of a gas increases, its volume also increases, and vice versa. This law helps explain how gases expand and contract with changes in temperature.
The material in the thermometer expands and contracts as temperature increases or reduces.
Charles' Law states that the volume of a gas is directly proportional to its temperature when pressure is held constant. This means that as the temperature of a gas increases, its volume also increases, and vice versa. The law helps to explain how gases expand or contract with changes in temperature while keeping pressure constant.
The first law of thermodynamics (law of energy conservation) states that energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transferred or converted. The second law of thermodynamics states that the entropy (disorder) of an isolated system always increases over time, reflecting the tendency of systems to move towards thermodynamic equilibrium.
The First Law of Thermodynamics states that the internal energy of a system is a function of temperature. It describes the relationship between heat transfer, work done, and changes in internal energy. It is a fundamental principle in the field of thermodynamics.