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a. To be eligible for a vacation in any calendar year, an Employee must: 1) have one year or more of Continuous Service; and (2) have worked for at least 520 hours during the preceding calendar year; or (3) have been off work due to compensable workplace illness or injury, in which case the Employee will be credited up to forty hours of work per week for the purpose determining eligibility described in this section; or (4) have been off work due to service in the Armed Forces, in which case the Employee will be credited up to forty hours of work per week for the purpose determining eligibility described in this section; and (5) has not quit, retired or been discharged for cause prior to January 1 of the vacation year.

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To take vacation time off in a calendar year, you must have been here at least a year, and worked at least 10 hours a week on average; or, been messed up really badly, in which case we'll credit 40 hours a week toward the 520 hour minimum; or, been serving our country, in which case the previous 40 hours a week credit also applies. If you quit, retired, or were fired before the calendar year started, never mind. – Gnawme Feb 2 '12 at 1:25

closed as off topic by slim, Will Hunting, Mahnax, jwpat7, Gnawme Feb 2 '12 at 0:48

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1 Answer

The question of "how this clause as written would be interpreted" can be answered in several ways, as the passage obviously can be misinterpreted in several ways. Predicting how particular individuals will interpret it is a hiding to nowhere.

To see what probably was meant, let us denote the five numbered clauses of the passage by the labels C, H1, H2, H3, and E, respectively. The passage then reduces to

C; and H1; or H2; or H3; and E.

Label C stands for a "Continuous Service" clause. Label E stands for an Employed clause.
I labeled the three inner clauses H1, H2, H3 because they relate to hours worked in a calendar year, and from their content and the or conjunctions, one deduces, surmises, or imagines they are parallel. The intended meaning thus appears to be

C and E and {any one or more of H1, H2, H3}.

A logical employee might argue for a meaning like

H2 or { C and H1 } or { H3 and E }

but of course logic has nothing to do with personnel matters so such an argument would be a waste of time.

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