In most labs, you are a slave. I have a lot of scientists in my family, and none of them stayed in research and all of them were very glad to get past the graduate student and post-doc stage.If you are a non-student lab technician, then you have found yourself in a lab where everyone is dedicated to the task at hand, and those getting a degree can see the light at the end of the tunnel. You as a non-student employee though could potentially be there for a LONG time, and not taking time off is unacceptable.Either find another job, or just take the time off anyway and deal with any repercussions later. Make sure your work is STELLAR though and your interactions with post docs and the one in charge are STELLAR, because if the one who runs the lab wants to terminate you because you took earned vacation, you could sue for wrongful termination. They have to show cause. They could probably get around it though by "restructuring" their lab and eliminate your position, hiring someone later or bringing in another grad student, so if you decide to take vacations anyway, be prepared to have to find another job.
explorer wrote:
I work full time at a university and get 1.5 days of paid vacation as well as 8 hours of sick leave each month. Given that summer is coming up and there are a lot of cool hiking opportunities nearby, I was planning on taking a few three day weekends. Well, so far I've been told by three people in the lab that even though we technically get vacation and sick days, we're not allowed to take them because our lab is too busy. The guy I'm replacing and who's training me said he never took even a single sick day in the four years he worked there and has over 30 days paid vacation saved up that he's not going to use. (!)
Basically, I'm kind of pissed off that anyone would even suggest that we are "not allowed" to take time off that the university gives us. (Is that even legal?) And I'm wondering what you would do in this situation. The work I do is pretty much all prep work for the postdocs and my boss (a tenured professor), and while time consuming, it's easy and can be done by anyone else in the lab.
Everyone in the lab is a foreigner if that matters. I'm the only natural born American.