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Anybody out there have any advice on how TD's schedule their assistants in busy theaters where amateur one off shows needs sometimes aren't known until the day of?
I usually find out if I have to work tomorrow today. This sucks... this means that I can't actually schedule anything for my private life just in case little Billy needs some one to hold his hand as he walks out onstage for his big first grade droolfest piano recital. At my theater I play the "Assistant to the Technical Director" role. Some days I program the lightboard, some days I project video or 35, some days I run the sound board, some days I pull rope and load weight. Some days I set up shell and music stands and act real nice to our guests. If there's no shows going on, I clean up our shop which is perpetually trashed from the volume of shows that we do (approx. 15 a month) and the lack of staff (me and TD) that we have... I have recently been told that I am not to work over 40 hours a week due to overtime costs. Since then i have worked overtime each week, because there isn't anybody else around. And apparently we can't hire anyone else because it would be too expensive (more expensive than my over time?). The deal is that... My TD refuses to schedule me. So I'm left in this weird place where I don't know when I'm supposed to work and when I'm not. I understand that he isn't always able to predict when exactly I will be needed, but he works 60+ hours a week. So how am I supposed to balance it all out? Say Friday rolls around and we have a big show on Saturday and I already have 37 hours for the week, am I supposed to come in for 3 hours setup and leave my TD hangin come show time? I don't wanna do that because I don't wanna let my boss/friend down, but on the other hand I have my own life to live outside of the theater (imagine that?!?!?!). All I'm askin for is to know whether or not I can go play in my softball league this monday night...and I can't get an answer... Thank y'alls for the room to rant, any advice, and for the site. I lurk around quite a bit. Love this place. Hope this post isn't too rambling...
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Production Assistant Last edited by jongaduet; April 24th, 2009 at 04:40 PM.. |
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Here's your schedule (I wish I could work this event.
How is your job-status classified: full-time, full-time flex, part-time, steady-extra, or on-call/extra-board?
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They are taking advantage of you because you let them. Speak with your supervisor privately. But remember, if you get forced into a corner you should be prepared to either leave for good or get pushed out by them. Not saying it will happen, but it could.
As for the overtime thing, yes, it's cheaper to pay you 1.5 times than hire someone else. Especially if there are benefits involved. They don't pay benefits on your overtime.
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http://www.chicagolightingdesign.com "I don't feel it's healthy to keep your faults bottled up inside me." - Bucky Katt |
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I am full time non-exempt, which basically means they have to pay me overtime.
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Production Assistant |
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I have an assistant that gets a similar kind of workload like you. The way we try to deal with scheduling is every 2 weeks we look at the upcoming event schedule and divide up the calls. Your TD really should know what the requirements of the different gigs are in a two week lead-time window. I prefer to do a one month window, but lately we've gotten a little sloppy in our scheduling and it has turned around and bitten me. As the TD and the guy who is salaried, I expect to take up that slack. I try to schedule my assistant on the times that I KNOW I can't make it due to family issues. (Getting my kids to day-care, etc.)
There are SOME gigs where the clients can be clue-less and not very communicative, but you can feel them out in advance or as the schedule proceeds based on their level of communication. I try hard to advance every rental to make sure we are covered. My assistant has a locked off budget for the year, and I manage his hours to make sure I can get through the year with regular hours and balancing OT. You and your TD need to have a sit-down about scheduling. Otherwise he may end up without an Assistant. (Don't use it as a threat though...) |
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