Training repayment agreement provisions (TRAPs),are a new form of “stay-or-pay” contract that indebts employees to their bosses. Often inserted into contracts without workers’ knowledge, these restrictive labor covenants turn employer-sponsored job training and education programs into conditional loans that must be paid back — sometimes at a premium — if employees leave before a set date.

Employers argue that these clauses are a way to recoup their investment in employees who decide to leave the company prematurely. But these contracts have come under fire from labor groups and regulators. Oftentimes, the amount of debt demanded under TRAP contracts — which can be upward of $50,000 — is far higher than the employer’s training costs.

SLAVERY, WITH EXTRA STEPS.

  • ZoteTheMighty@lemmy.zip
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    2 days ago

    Here’s a few tricks that will ensure your employees can NEVER leave, you will save a ton on turnover.

    1. Pay above market
    2. Treat employees with respect, engrain this culture in your management
    3. Offer good benefits options
    4. Ensure there are long-term opportunities for career growth at all levels
    5. Communicate routinely from the upper management to the whole organization. Create opportunities for people to provide feedback in small groups
    6. Never even consider making employees liable for training you encouraged them to do. Fire anyone who suggests you write something so insane into a contract immediately

    There are still companies out there where the primary way people leave is via retirement. They are profitable and productive companies. Employees want to leave immediately after getting trainings because turnover has become the dominant culture in large companies.

    • RisingSwell@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 days ago

      Can confirm high pay works.

      My job is shit, most of the stuff is broken, but on weekends I get $45 AUD an hour so I bitch about it instead of quitting. I’m not getting that pay elsewhere, especially not locally.

      • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        People don’t quit bad jobs; They quit bad pay and bad management. There are people whose job is to pump shit. Literally roll a shit-sucker truck up to a site, pump a bunch of shit out of a hole, (porta-potty, septic tank, outhouse, etc), drive the shit truck all the way across town, and reverse the shit-sucking process to blow all of the shit out of the truck at a waste treatment plant.

        It’s a really fucking bad job… You need to have a strong stomach, and you’ll go home smelling like literal shit every single day. But people still wake up and choose to do it every day, because it pays well and management typically stays out of their hair.

      • Canonical_Warlock@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        Same, I routinely get called out to fuck around on rooftops working on HVAC equipment either when it is -20F at midnight in the dead of winter or 100F with 80% humidity in the middle of summer (those are the only times HVAC equipment goes down). But if its an emergency call out then I make $50 USD per hour drive time included which is damn good for my low cost of living area so I am more than happy to do it.

        If you pay well enough then you will find people willing to put up with the absolute worst work conditions. If companies want to keep people then they either need to make the work conditions better or pay more. It’s that simple. If you can’t make the conditions better then you need to increase the pay to account for that.