Alternative Worksite Sample Clauses

The Alternative Worksite clause defines the conditions under which an employee may perform their job duties at a location other than the employer’s primary place of business. This clause typically outlines requirements for approval, expectations for work hours, and responsibilities regarding equipment, data security, and communication when working remotely or from another designated site. Its core practical function is to provide flexibility for both employer and employee while ensuring that work standards and company policies are maintained outside the traditional office environment.
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Alternative Worksite. A place away from the official worksite that has been approved for the performance of assigned official duties. It may be an employee’s home, a telework center, or other approved worksite.
Alternative Worksite. A location in the employee's home, designated by the employee as the location they will use to perform their official SEC duties, or another location approved by the SEC (e.g., telework center).
Alternative Worksite. This is a worksite, other than the assigned worksite, that supports productive work and provides an environment, connectivity, and security appropriate to the work effort as approved by the Agency. The worksite may be an employee’s residence or other appropriate work location.
Alternative Worksite. A. An employee’s Alternative Worksite shall be approved if: 1. it is within the Continental United States; 2. the worksite meets the safety and technology requirements for effective telework; 3. the employee represents the location will not impede productivity, impact their ability to adhere to the core hours of their Reporting Office, or limit their ability to return to the Reporting Office to execute their job duties in a timely manner and acknowledges they may have this approval rescinded in the event that it does; and 4. the employee’s Official Worksite will remain the employee’s Reporting Office so the Employer is not liable for additional expenses associated with the employee’s chosen location. B. Location Considerations: in selecting an Alternative Worksite, the employee should consider their ability to commute from such a location in accordance with their schedule, the costs associated with traveling to the Reporting Office, and any environmental obstacles to conducting work from the location (e.g. pattern of recurring weather events leading to evacuation or power loss). The Employer will not grant Weather & Safety administrative leave for events associated with an employee’s chosen telework location unless: 1. The event giving rise to the need for Weather & Safety administrative leave at their approved Alternative Worksite also results in the closure of the employee’s Reporting Office; or 2. The state has issued an evacuation order for the employee’s approved Alternative Worksite location, in which case, the employee may be granted up to 16 hours of Weather & Safety administrative leave if the employee is unable to work. Weather & Safety administrative leave will not be granted to an employee engaging in Situational Telework away from their approved Alternative Worksite at an Approved Temporary Telework Location.
Alternative Worksite. The Employee’s alternative worksite is: Address: Location of home office or work area: Phone: Fax: Email: Address: Phone: Fax: Email: Address: Phone: Fax: Email: Employees who telework must be available to work at the traditional worksite on telework days on an occasional basis if necessitated by work requirements. Requests by the Employee to change his or her scheduled telework day in a particular week or biweekly pay period should be accommodated by the supervisor wherever practicable, consistent with mission requirements. A permanent change in the telework arrangement must be reflected in a new Telework Agreement. It is the responsibility of the Employee to ensure that a proper work environment is maintained while teleworking. Work-at-home teleworkers must complete and sign a safety checklist that proclaims the home safe for an official home worksite, to ensure that all the requirements to do official work are met in an environment that allows the tasks to be performed safely. The Employee agrees to permit access to the home worksite by agency representatives as required, during normal working hours, to repair or maintain Government-furnished equipment, and to ensure compliance with the terms of this telework agreement. For work at home arrangements, the Employee is required to designate one area in the home as the official work or office area that is suitable for the performance of official Government business. The Government's potential exposure to liability is restricted to this official work or office area for the purposes of telework. The Employee acknowledges that telework is not a substitute for dependent care. The Government is not responsible for any operating costs that are associated with the Employee using his or her personal residence as an alternative worksite, including home maintenance, insurance, or utilities.
Alternative Worksite. A place away from the regular worksite that has been approved for the performance of assigned official duties. It may be a private home or other approved worksite.
Alternative Worksite. The employee’s alternative worksite is (check one): Address: Street Apt # City State Zip Code Location of home office work area: ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇: ▇▇▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇ # ▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇ Zip Code Direct Phone Number: Address: Street Suite # City State Zip Code
Alternative Worksite 

Related to Alternative Worksite

  • Alternative Work Schedule An alternate forty (40) hour work schedule (other than five (5) uniform and consecutive eight (8) hour days in a seven (7) day period), or for hospital personnel an eighty (80) hour workweek in a fourteen (14) day period and other mutually agreed upon schedules that comply with applicable federal and state law. Employee work schedules normally include two (2) consecutive days off.

  • Alternative Work Schedules Employees may request alternative work schedules such as a nine (9) day - 80 hour two week schedule or a four (4) day - 40 hour week schedule. Management will respond to an employee's request within 15 calendar days. Any changes from existing work schedules will be based on the needs of the service as determined by Management. Employees covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act will not be placed on alternate work schedules that mandate the payment of overtime under the Act.

  • Creative Work The Executive agrees that all creative work and work product, including but not limited to all technology, business management tools, processes, software, patents, trademarks, and copyrights developed by the Executive during the term of this Agreement, regardless of when or where such work or work product was produced, constitutes work made for hire, all rights of which are owned by the Employer. The Executive hereby assigns to the Employer all rights, title, and interest, whether by way of copyrights, trade secret, trademark, patent, or otherwise, in all such work or work product, regardless of whether the same is subject to protection by patent, trademark, or copyright laws.

  • Outside Work All work necessary to the assembling, installation, erection, operation, maintenance, repair, control, in- spection and supervision of all electrical apparatus, devices, wires, cables, supports, insulators, conduc- tors, ducts and raceways when part of distributing systems outside of buildings, railroads and outside the directly related railroad property and yards. In- stalling and maintaining the catenary and trolley work on railroad property, and bonding of rails. All underground ducts and cables when they are in- stalled by and are part of the system of a distrib- uting company, except in power stations during new construction, including ducts and cables to adjacent switch racks or substations. All outdoor substations and electrical connections up to and including the setting of transformers and the connecting of the secondary buses thereto. Outside work to include renewable electrical energy sources such as solar photovoltaic, geothermal, wind, biomass, wave, etc., and other distributed en- ergy installations such as fuel cells, microturbines, etc.

  • Defective Work Work that, for any reason, is not in compliance with the Contract Documents. Defective Work is usually identified in a Notice of Non-Compliant Work.