'You get paid more than I do. You figure it out': Sick employee pressured to come in after manager can't find coverage

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    Cheezburger Image 10408298240
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    can an employer say 'no' to me calling out sick? i work in a chain retail store (in california, in case that's relevant) and i messaged my manager today about 6 hours before my shift letting her know i wasn't feeling well, and couldn't come in to work.
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    she told me i need to find coverage, or come in. i asked everyone available if they could cover for me, and not a single person responded. i let my manager know about the situation,
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    and her only response was "sorry, we need the coverage so you'll need to come in". so now im on my way to work, with a blinding migraine.
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    is this..allowed? i've never had a job do this before, i've always just been able to call out if i need to. this is the second time this exact thing has happened, the last time it happened i had and was still told to come in for the day, again because we "need the coverage".
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    the whole thing just doesn't sit well with me. i understand lack of coverage can be difficult, but as an employee (meaning not in any manager/supervisory role) that isn't something i should have to feel responsible for.
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    EDIT: thank yall for ur responses, even the ones calling me stupid. since this was brought up in a comment, i do have various medical conditions that do qualify me as a person with
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    but the only "paperwork" i have is some MyChart forms filled out by a previous dr, and accommodation paperwork i had to submit to my college. i don't have any accommodations at work, and dont even quite know how to go
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    about it. EDIT 2: for those concerned, i don't drive. i take public transit. i stopped driving a few months ago because i realized it wasn't safe for me to be doing so, due to the decline in my physical health.
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    and if u guys are shook by this story, someday i'll tell the story of when i got fired because i was seriously sick (had mono), and my job (again, another corporation) said they "don't accept doctors notes" for absences, after telling me point blank i needed drs notes for missing work.
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    Mean-Eggplant1008. 20 hr. ago "I am sick and will not be coming in. Coverage? You're the manager, you get paid more than I do, you figure it out. Not my job."
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    If I'm sick enough to be calling in, I'm not going in, end of story. Fire me if you want, too sick to care anyway, and you just proved I was gonna have to quit sooner or later because you and your job Better sooner.
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    g3shy OP 19 hr. ago this job is incredibly temporary for me. i started in july, and am leaving CA in feb when i graduate college, but that
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    being said if i lost this job id be .it took me 6 months to get hired (i have a really good resume, but even with emailing/calling/appl ying to 20+ places a week, not a single person even replied to me until this job)
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    xdaemonisx 21 hr. ago . edited 21 hr. ago The next time they ask you to cover your own shift, tell them that fixing scheduling issues aren't part of your job description.
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    They can say no to you calling out, but they can't force you to come in. You can be fired for not going in, though, and it would be legal.
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    Legion1117.20 hr. ago "Making sure the store has coverage when I am unable to work is not my job responsibilities as I am not a manager. I am not physically capable of working today and will not be doing so."
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    That's your response. This continues to happen because we allow it to happen. If more of us would tell these "managers" to ◉, this would not be happening as often as it does.

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