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Associations and nonprofits hold on to employee time off

Time on the clock costs money. But time off, it seems, is cheap. CEO Update’s Top Places to Work survey found that in an effort to maintain the spirit of a workforce all too familiar with employment uncertainty, many associations are not paring employee time-off benefits and flexible work schedules, despite economic pressures. Paul Meese, a veteran human resources executive and vice president of client services for SingleSource Services Corporation, a Jacksonville Beach, Fla., provider of technology-based employee management tools, told CEO Update that paid time off is a benefit companies are loath to cut, because, like health care, it is “very important … on an employee… Read More