35 – DiamondBack Covers
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The 35-hour production work week.

Work 35 hours,
get paid for 40.

Spend more time at home, with family and enjoying the outdoors.

icon_350yr

What would you do
with more time?

A typical production employee works 40 hours/week and is required to take a 30 minute unpaid lunch. This means they’re onsite 42.5 hours/week. The 35 hour work week requires only 35.5 hours/week onsite. Employees gain 7 hours/week or about 350 hours/year.

icon_weekdays — D A Y — M F

All weekday, daylight
hours
 ending by 5:30pm.

You have Questions.
We have answers

4 days/week you'll work 6 hours and 15 minutes, and 1 day/week you'll work 10 hours.

Instead of a standard 1st (AM), 2nd (PM), or 3rd (overnight) shifts, we have AM and PM crews that have core hours.

AM crew works 5:00am to 11:15am

PM crew works 11:15am to 5:30pm

For the 1 day/week when you work 10 hours, you'll work 4 hours in addition to your crew's core hours. The additional 4 hours will occur either before or after your crew's core hours, depending on your crew assignment.

Absolutely. Here's an example of a person's schedule on AM crew and PM crew.

AM Crew

Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday - 5:00am to 11:15am

Wednesday - 5:00am to 3:30pm

PM Crew

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday - 11:15am to 5:30pm

Thursday - 7:00am to 5:30pm

In addition to the 35 hours you worked, you'll get 5 free hours on your paycheck.

There isn't one. We've tested this out and have proven we can be just as efficient in 35 hours as we can be in 40 hours. Here's the secret. The more time we spend working while we're at work, the less hours in a day we have to be at work getting our jobs done.

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