• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • LOGIN
  • Law Office ManagerHOME
  • Book StoreBook Store
  • WebinarsWebinars
  • LOGIN
  • Manage Your Account
  •  
Law Office Manager

Law Office Manager

  • Hiring
  • Increasing profits
  • Technology
  • Billing
  • Managing staff
  • More! ⇩
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Time tracking
    • Client relations
    • Termination
    • Tool Box
    • Risk management
    • Recordkeeping
    • Cartoons
    • Reader tips
    • Purchasing & leasing
    • Marketing
    • Managing the office
    • Information security
    • Your career
    • Working with lawyers
    • Employee benefits
    • Compliance
    • Workplace Safety
  • Special Reports

90 minutes of unpaid time off ends a bookkeeping nightmare

September 18, 2015

A Kentucky office manager has devised a method to control time off, focusing on making the paperwork easier.

Keeping track of 45-minute appointments or an hour of personal leave is a bookkeeping nightmare, says the administrator, whose office has 26 staff. So she combined vacation, sick, and personal leave into a single pool of paid time off and made it a rule that the time could be taken only in four-hour increments.

But there was a hitch: nobody wanted to use a full half day of leave on a short appointment. The solution was to allow a 90-minute window in the early morning or late afternoon that staff could take without pay for appointments. It was limited to the start and finish of the day because, as she points out, “everybody is slow getting going in the morning” and because the late afternoon is usually not the most productive time, making those hours easiest to cover. The actual time depends on a staffer’s hours, but for most it’s before 10:30 a.m. or after 3:30 p.m.

There’s no limit to the number of times staff can take the unpaid 90 minutes. However, there are three rules:

  1. The time can only be used for valid absences such as appointments.
  2. The time has to be approved beforehand.
  3. The staffer must bring a note from the doctor, dentist, attorney, school, or whatever explaining the absence.

All of this prevents abuse.

The administrator is strict on monitoring the time. If a staffer’s appointment runs late and requires an absence of more than 90 minutes, the time gets counted at the full four hours of PTO (paid time off). The office might give leeway of five minutes, but that’s rare.

She has found that staff appreciate the unpaid leave for repeat brief appointments. One staffer, for example, used it for physical therapy appointments three times a week. Others use it for school appointments or for taking their children to appointments.

Law Office Manager wants to send you $100.

Tell us how you solved a problem, implemented a successful program, or share any idea you think your colleagues would enjoy. If we use it in our Reader Tips column, we’ll send you $100. Send your stories to catherine@plainlanguagemedia.com.


Editor’s picks:

Paid time-off gives unquestioned days off plus a bank for catastrophes


New Jersey manager turns time clocks and layoffs into staff benefits

Eight rules for running your office right, especially if it’s a small one


Filed Under: Topics, Employee benefits, Managing staff, Managing the office, articles Tagged With: Managing the office, Managing staff, Employee benefits

Primary Sidebar

Free Reports

    • Guide to Advanced Hiring Techniques
    • Employee Morale in the Law Office
    • Workplace Bullying

Free Premium Reports

    • 7 Smart Cost-Cutting Strategies for Your Law Office
    • Guide to Advanced Hiring Techniques
    • Employee Morale in the Law Office
    • Workplace Bullying
    • 7 Proven Ways to Make Your Billing and Collections More Profitable
    • 7 Simple, Proven Steps to Hiring the Right Staff
    • 7 Policies Every Law Office Should Have

Download Current Issue

Current Issue

Recent Headlines

Billing: Should You Keep It In-House or Go Outsourced?

Year-End Reflections: Taking Stock of Your Law Office’s Successes and Challenges

Winter Safety Checklist for Parking Lots, Walkways, and Office Entrances

January To-Do List for a Busy Law Office Manager

Want to Work Smarter, Not Harder? AI Can Help You Do Just That

Your Career

Year-End Reflections: Taking Stock of Your Law Office’s Successes and Challenges

Want to Work Smarter, Not Harder? AI Can Help You Do Just That

Administrator a Key Player in Firm’s Ethics and Integrity

Reconnecting with Purpose: How to Invite Someone from the Past into Your Career Network

To Make a Point, Use the Body Language that Supports Your Words

Deliver Your Message

Footer

Return to the Top

Download the Current issue
Monthly Magazine Archive
Advertise in Law Office Manager
Download Media Kit

Become a Premium Member
Download a Sample Issue of LOM
Renew your Law Office Manager Membership
Manage Your Account
Contact Law Office Manager
About Law Office Manager
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy
Give Us Feedback


Copyright © 2025 Plain Language Media, LLLP • 1-888-729-2315