Diflower wrote:It's often places like car factories, which closed for 4 weeks each summer (or 2 weeks in some instances, just like most British factories used to do) and so all the workers had 4 weeks off at the same time - their only holiday. They would get paid that 13th amount at the start of those 4 weeks.
When I was talking to a German lady in Portugal years ago (1980s), she explained they were taking their annual 4-week holiday; 2 weeks in Portugal and the rest of the time visiting family at home. They couldn't choose the dates, the whole place closed down and the rest of the year they couldn't take any paid time off at all.
They were office workers but did both work for a car manufacturer; she said it was fairly common practice but i wouldn't know if it still is.
I think at one time most of the manufacturing companies around here closed down at set times, factory shut down it was always referred as. My Dad worked for the MoD and apart from Christmas and Easter I remember he always had the May bank holiday week off, the first two weeks of the Summer holiday and a week at the end of September - there was no way of having holiday at any other time. That was their allocation and that was it!
To a certain extent John's restricted that way. His company do a lot of work for car factories and some factories still shut down at certain times, the end of July/beginning of Aug being one of them, and that's the time when the work done in the office - the designs and planning - all comes together and has to be installed on site so for John and his colleagues, having time off then is out of the question because they may be needed to oversee installations, troubleshoot any problems, modify designs etc.