I've never heard of this discretionary holiday thing.
Also known as a floating holiday or a floater. Basically the same thing as a personal day at our company, which we can't carry over into the next year if we don't use, vs. vacation time, up to three weeks of which we can.
and then one day I can use on my birthday or adjacent to a paid set day. Which means my only options are next to New Year's, or next to Christmas, since I rarely take blocks off around the others, and wouldn't need my b-day off
Oh, huh. No, that is different (from our personal days). And, yeah, weird.
The country with the longest gap between two regularly scheduled holidays in Bosnia, where residents sometimes have to go 731 days without a holiday.
But really, isn't every day in Bosnia a holiday?
I wonder what holdiay is ever 2 years a day? Or maybe what calendar they are using.
some Canadians never have to go more than 60 days between holidays,
Okay, there are no National Holidays between New Year's and Easter, so this is not me. I bet it's Quebec or Newfoundland.
In Quebec, they get New Year's Day and January 2nd off. I guess they figure the hangover will be very bad.
5 million topics later: the thing I liked about the evite quote was that little smile he made afterwards.
I do get MLK day off --- thank goodness. My office is a shambles. And I'm too tired to do anything about it.
I wonder what holdiay is ever 2 years a day?
They're not counting holidays that fall on weekends, which is why their language is a bit handwavey. I'd love to see the algorithms they ran to get those answers. And meet the geeks who thought it would be worth doing.
731 days between holidays?
6 day weeks?
Madness.
some Canadians never have to go more than 60 days between holidays,
According to these lists of national and provincial that's not true. The shortest winter gap is between Jan. 1 and March 17th in Newfoundland.
ETA: Whoops! It's in Alberta. Damn Albertans!
Maybe there is a secret Canadian holliday.