THE PLACE OF NIGHT WORK IN INDUSTRY
OR the purpose of the investigation, night work is
defined as operations conducted by a separate group of
employees whose hours of work commence after the day
force has terminated its work period. It doesnot thereforein-
clude overtime work, because in this case the same group of em-
ployees work the regularly scheduled hours and continue at
their post for an additional, usually indefinite, period of time.
Night work, on the other hand, is done by laborers who are
hired specifically for such work or are transferred to this force
from day work and whose hours of work are generally fixed in
accordance with a predetermined schedule. Where night
work occurs, it may be found in plants which operate con-
tinuously for a part of or throughout the year, or where the
operation is non-continuous, with a break between the shifts.
The greatest number of night workers are engaged in indus-
tries which are continuously operative.
The continuous industries may be broadly defined as those
which are run during the entire 24 hours, because the process,
the heavy overhead, the expense of starting and stopping
operations, or the public service require it. Production may
be absolutely continuous or it may be so for five or six days
with a pause at the week-end. In the report, entitled “The
Twelve-Hour Shift in Industry,” of the Committee on Work-
Periods in Continuous Industry of the Federated American
Engineering Societies, about forty leading continuous indus.
tries are listed as follows:
|. Heat Process Industries—Iron and steel, copper, zinc,
lead, nickel, aluminum, flint glass, bottles, window-glass,
plate glass, portland cement, lime, brick, pottery.!
Chemical Industries—Heavy chemicals, fertilizers, ex-
plosives, dyes, industrial alcohol, wood distillation,
1 Only 29% or 3% of employees are shift workers.
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