We have an employee who had a schedule running on auto-pilot. His schedule
was modified to include some vacation days. I thought these days would be
automatically placed in the timesheet. However, they were not. It would be very
good if this was changed.
Thanks
John
scheduled absences should automatically be placed in timeshe
Projected vacation
Is there anyway for a manager to see that a employee has X number of days left to accrue for the year?
Reading the forum posts this was in ver 2.1 the download is 2.2 did I miss it?
Thanks a ton
KJ Plunkert
Reading the forum posts this was in ver 2.1 the download is 2.2 did I miss it?
Thanks a ton
KJ Plunkert
Supervisors/Managers can see employee accruals by going to TimeSheet -> Accruals, and selecting the employee, or when they add an absence in the schedule, or in the timesheet, TimeTrex will show them the accrual balances if the absence policy is assigned to an accrual.
This specific feature has been in TimeTrex for quite a while now.
This specific feature has been in TimeTrex for quite a while now.
Vacation Accrual
The thing I am looking for is if the employee will earn enough vacation to cover the request, not just that he has accrued it.
THanks
THanks
Unfortunately that is not something TimeTrex can say for sure. Accrual policies change, employees quit or are terminated, bank time gets diverted to accruals, or withdrawn from them.
There are just too many different scenarios that would cause this value to be totally incorrect. If you are looking to figure out how many hours an employee would accrue, I would suggest changing their accruals so they get a lump sum at the beginning of the year rather then little chunks throughout the year. Of course this method has its own set of problems too.
There are just too many different scenarios that would cause this value to be totally incorrect. If you are looking to figure out how many hours an employee would accrue, I would suggest changing their accruals so they get a lump sum at the beginning of the year rather then little chunks throughout the year. Of course this method has its own set of problems too.