Scott:
I have not seen or heard of anything like that since the pandemic. However, I can say the first two firms I worked for were architectural sweat shops. The first was a small firm where the boss would drive to your house to pick you up if you were not there on a Saturday! He had a " we are all in this together " attitude so I actually never really minded the long hours. My second job was a large, "cover of magazines", "principals on the lecture and book circuit" firm where I was the most senior project manager in our department. 70 to 80 hour weeks were the norm for the PMs and it was not unusual to see an intern sobbing in the bathroom. Our principal would actual berate people for not pulling all nighters! When the other principals saw the outrageous hours our department worked they told him to knock it off....so he told us we were not allowed to report more than 40 hours a week but we still worked the 70 to 80. Pathetically our principal won an award, based on the falsely reported low hours, for turning his group around.
However, it was the best thing that could have happened to me...I quit that place of misery and started my own firm. In 20 years I have never asked an employee to work the weekend or over 45 hours in a week, I suspect that is one reason we tend to be the last job someone has..employee have deep loyalty to us, and us to them.
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[ Nea May] [Poole] AIA
[Principal]
[Poole & Poole Architecture, LLC]
[Midlothian, ] [Virginia]
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Original Message:
Sent: 10-14-2020 12:32
From: Scott Knudson
Subject: 20/20 - Pandemic Work Ethics
This article came across our radar about architect-abuse during COVID in Britain, such as being asked to work for free to keep your place in line the jobs come back.
Has anyone been on either side of a pandemic-related inequity in the employer-employee relationship; how and why did you respond?
Furlough fraud, snooping and firings: architects speak out over lockdown exploitationthe Guardian | remove preview |
| Furlough fraud, snooping and firings: architects speak out over lockdown exploitation | or Maria Gomez, the nightmare began when she couldn't get her boss out of her bedroom. "It felt like he was in there 24/7," she says, "always watching my every move." She was used to architecture's punishing lifestyle, working late nights and weekends, and she had adjusted to the additional stresses of working from home during lockdown. | View this on the Guardian > |
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Scott Knudson AIA
PMKC Leadership Group
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