what s your beef
Does anyone have a link for a simple (preferably point by point) guide to exactly what an employer is required by law to provide for their employees? I have tried google, before anyone asks.
I would go to a solicitor but I don't actually have a complaint to make yet, as I want to make sure I know everything my employer is doing wrong before I take it any further.
what s your beef
Exactly, what's your beef?
Do you have one or are you just trying to pick a fight with your employer?
It's a collection of things, e.g, not giving me a contract of employment despite me being a full time member of staff, not giving any sick pay, not having a pension scheme in place.
As I said, i'm certain there are a fair few more things that they are doing wrong, and I want to identify all of them before I take things any further.
Also, I work around food and I know for a fact that in the shop I work in (my employer owns several) not a single person has a food hygiene certificate or a work related first aid qualification.
Not 100% sure on this but I do believe from your effective start date as a new employee on a contract, you should be issued with a contract of employment within 8 weeks i.e. statement of particulars and other entitlements and regulations you must follow in your job. For example we issue a code of conduct, annual leave statements and information on sick pay. If your contract has changed for any reason for example; hours change. A variation to contract should be issued within 4 weeks from effective date. Unless this variation drastically changes the role you perform, then a new statement of particulars and terms would need to be issued.
As you have not received a contract of employment is it worth checking that you are definitely not a 'casual' employee. You work when required may even be regularly but if you are a casual employee there is no obligation to work for you and no obligation for your employer to provide work to you.
As stated above not 100% sure on this but that seems to be how it works where I work.
Make a confidential call to the Environmetal Health Department will sort that one out.
As for everything else, it should be in your contract of employment
Since you don't have one, have you tried asking your employer for one? Even a casual employee will have a contract stating they are a casual employee.
It may be the case that your employer has got a contract for you - although this should be signed by you!!! - but is keeping it safe on file somewhere so it doesn't get lost.
If all else fails, why not find another job?
Oh, and if you have less than 12 months continuos employment, you have very few 'rights' in the eyes of the law anyway.
I expected better of McDonald's.
I, too, have never been issued with a Contract of Employment - after 5 years! Pretty poor form for an Audit practice don't you think? However, Terms and Conditions are 'implied' if the employer pays and the employee accepts the payments.
Also, I'm being paid up to 6 weeks late (with no advance warning of this).
I'm suing my employer for Constructive Dismissal - seeking 3 months' pay in lieu of notice as this notice period was 'implied'.
So far, the solicitor's advice has cost me £200. Hope that helps - good luck!
they are not obliged to pay sick pay or run a pension scheme
you are entitled to Statutory Sick Pay if you are off sick, but they can choose to make you claim this directly from the government. they are not obliged to pay you any more than that minimum. they are also not obliged to offer you any pension arrangemtns
If you have more than 5 employees you have to have a stakeholder pension scheme in place which allows employees to contribute.
You're right about Stat Sick pay, however this only kicks in after 3 working days which means most people who throw sickies get **** all
http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/MoneyTax...ed/DG_10018786
Here is as concise an overview as you are going to get....
http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/Employme...yees/index.htm
My view is, rather than challenge a crap employer, leave and take your services elsewhere.
Not having a work contract is swings and roundabouts really. Remember you can walk out of the job whenever you want without a contract!
Well, that's what I thought too. But my solicitor tells me that, at the very minimum, you have to give one week's notice for every year of service up to the period 'implied' by your non-existent contract. By accepting your wages every week / month, you are accepting this 'implied' contract.
In my case, it was verbally agreed that the Ts & Cs in force when I transferred from th NHS would be carried over. So this meant giving 3 months' notice by either side.
However, it would probably cost your employer too much to pursue you for the notice period. The worst he could do would be to withold any salary due to you. So walk out on the day you get paid.
http://www.acas.org.uk/index.aspx?articleid=1461
ACAS are not a bad source of employment 'good practice', and are well respected by employers and TU's alike.
If you decide to go down the industrial tribunal route I could recomend the services of SARC, Pete Jenks helped me a few years back and they work on donations so a sort of genuine coscience based 'No Win No Fee' set up, contact them here:
http://www.southampton.gov.uk/employ...yment/sarc.asp
btf, have you left yet? I thought you had to actually leave to claim constructive dismissal. If so good luck with finding something else.
I haven't formally left, Hamster. I have issued proceedings and just haven't been in to work. I'm to expect a response on Monday apparently (together with the P60s and wage slips that have not been supplied for 2 years).
I've had a couple of interviews but haven't been successful, mainly I think because I was considered over-qualified with too much experience. Apparently I've interviewed well but, in each case, there were concerns that I'd get bored quickly / try to take over the new employer's job LOL.
I was advised that my claim would fall if I got another job and gave notice.
I'm only looking for 3 days a week now as I look after my grandchildren for 2 days a week - that doesn't help really.
Thanks for your good wishes![]()
I was going to go ahead with this, but i've decided he's made money in spite of himself for long enough. I've been merrily working 50-60 hours a week on minimum wage with, as i've said, no pension scheme, no sick pay, and terrible, terrible holiday pay. He's happy to let me carry on rather than hire someone else and cost himself money on tax etc.
I'm sick of being exploited, and I don't particularly want anybody else to be in my position.
And yes, he has far more than 5 employees - round about 40-50 I would of said.
Another example of a colossal mistake on his part. My former manager at the shop slipped on a step and injured his back, meaning he had to take 2 weeks off and was in considerable pain for a while afterwards.
The step in question had plastic wall tiling around it as a border - obviously, it has f*ck all grip so people slip all the time but he does nothing about it. Anyway; my manager wasn't paid anything, for either the two week period he was off or as compensation for his injury.
He sounds like a DREADFUL employer St C! How much holiday pay are you getting? By law you are entitled to at least 20 days paid holiday a year.
Did your injured manager sue him for negligence? Sounds to me like he should have done so.
Name and shame St C, name and shame. We won't say anything, honest.
OK, fair enough, it just sounded like a small amateurish outfit. As it happens, it sounds like a medium to large size amateurish outfit.
I understand how you feel and you have every right to feel agreived.
You will of course be legally entitled to do something about it, but bear in mind that if he is as bad as you say he is and you "force" him to change, then "your card will be marked", just human nature I'm afraid.
Have you talked to other members of staff to see how they feel so that this can be done collectively?
I understand this, and I won't be expecting to still be working there should I take any action.
The new manager i'm working under is actually my employers father-in-law (who I might add had never worked in this type of job before, wonder how he got the position). So I won't be discussing this with him.
There are a number of people throughout the whole company though who have complained in the past but never actually taken it further.
Bloody lefties.
This is what you said earlier:
"I was going to go ahead with this, but i've decided he's made money in spite of himself for long enough. I've been merrily working 50-60 hours a week on minimum wage with, as i've said, no pension scheme, no sick pay, and terrible, terrible holiday pay"
I took this to mean that you didn't get your full holiday entitlement. Soz
Yep I think you can still sign an opt out. But I also think that you have to have a determined rest period between each shift. I know Mr TF works 12 hour shifts and that's the maximum he can work each day.
From what I've found by Googling 'rest between shifts' it seems that there has to be 11 hours rest between work periods.
Saint C, are you Polish
You must be insane to work 13 hours a day, or you dont have much of an interesting life. I would actually much rather be on the dull (thankfully I aint) than working these crazy hours!..
I really would advise you to take this to the court for exploiting you in an unfair way.
If i am 'called out' past 12 o'clock the company have to by law allow me to stay in bed for the amount of hours worked past midnight. I normally start at 8 in the morning and have actually been told on a couple of occasions to leave the premises when entering work before my rest period expires.
My advice St Clark is to leave and find employment elsewhere mate, if it is possible to take him to court you could try but i expect it to be costly etc.
What is your actual professional occupational title ?? I expect you could move on.
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