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As an employer you may be wondering if you have just been lumbered with the expense of another bank holiday in order for the country to celebrate the Royal Wedding on the 29th April 2011.
Whatever your feelings are about the wedding it is worth checking the wording of your contracts to establish whether you do actually have to give staff the day off and pay for it.
If your contracts are specifically worded to say that staff get e.g. 20 days plus the 8 normal bank/public holidays you do not have to give it or pay it as extra (unless of course you want to!)
If your contracts say that staff get 20 days plus bank/public holidays then it looks highly likely that you will have to give it and pay it.
If you want to find out more or have your wording reviewed just get in touch
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The National Minimum Wage (NMW) hourly rates from 1 October 2010 are:
Age 21 and over £5.93 per hour
Age 18 – 20 £ 4.92 per hour
Age 16 and 17 £3.64 per hour
New rate for apprentices under 19 (or over 19 and in their 1st year) is £2.50 per hour.
New for 2010 the top rate now applies to those over 21 (previously it was over 22)
TOP TIP: If you pay your staff a salary based on their normal working hours at minimum wage, be careful if they work unpaid overtime as they will fall below minimum wage and you will have breached the regulations.
It is useful to round up the hourly rate to take account of occasional extra unpaid hours worked by salaried staff.
For more information and advice, just call Natasha on 07736 814 552
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Following a recent case Pereda v Madrid Movilidad SA the situation relating to how an employer manages holiday for an employee who becomes sick whilst on holiday has changed.
An employee who becomes sick whilst on holiday is now entitled to delay that holiday to be taken at a later date.
In order to stop employment law taking over and leaving your employees free to take a holiday, then declare that they were sick and take the holiday again later, you can do the following:
- Update your staff contracts and handbooks to specify the process for reporting in sick when they are on holiday – this should ask them to call in sick on the day they become ill on holiday and make it clear that failure to follow the procedure may result in them being unable to retake their holiday later on.
- Require them to provide proof of their illness in the form of a Doctors note, even if this is from a foreign Doctor or Hospital. Alternatively, their insurer may be able to provide proof documentation.
- Require a Doctors note from the 1st day of absence – if they have to pay for this you can offer to reimburse them if it proves their illness.
- Carry out a return to work interview on their first day back.
For further assistance on the employee holiday rights and HR and Employment Law support please call Natasha at Grassroots HR on 07736 814 552 for expert Employment Law and Human Resources advice that puts business owners back in control.
I’d love to hear your views on this situation – so, what do you think?
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support given to the staff of uk copywriter - inkwell pr
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