Worried Workers Choosing All Work, No Play

Didn’t use all of your vacation days last year? You’re not alone. More than half of workers don’t use all of their vacation time, finds a survey published on April 18 by Hudson, an employment services firm.

The survey suggests that workers are apprehensive about using all of their vacation time allotted in a year, fearful that it will leave them without any room for flexibility should an urgent situation emerge. Of the workers surveyed, 56 percent said they did not use all of their vacation time each year and nearly one-third (30 percent) said they take less than half of their allotted time off.

Other employees balance their need for vacation, as well as extra days in the bank, by limiting their excursions to weekend getaways, noted by 20 percent of workers surveyed.


“Employers are taking notice of the demands of workers who want a work-life balance that allows them to have a personal life alongside their professional one,” said Peg Buchenroth, senior vice president of human resources at Hudson.


“Providing a flexible approach to employees’ lives outside work is going to help employers retain key individuals who do not feel as if they have to choose one or the other.”


Nearly a third of workers surveyed were less stingy with their vacation days and ended up calling in sick when they were not actually ill, feeling that they had few other options.


Yet the Hudson survey suggests that many workers do have other options, as the vast majority of workers felt that their bosses were fairly flexible when it came to unscheduled events that happened during the workday.

Read the full story
on eWEEK.com:
Worried Workers Choosing All Work, No Play

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