ChatterBank10 mins ago
contract of employment
i have been working for the same company for neally 3 years, and all i have been given is a staff handbook,
does this constitute a "CONTRACT" as bow i have a few issues with the company
does this constitute a "CONTRACT" as bow i have a few issues with the company
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by nickwh. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.you have a statutory right to receive from your employer - certainly within 3 months of joining, to receive either a written contract or written terms of employment.
if you take them to an employment tribunal - which will cost you nothing - you will - definitely - receive an award of £700 to £1400 (usually the latter) as the court must comply with this law
and its not taxable
in law you cannot be treated disadvantageously because of your request to receive the contract etc
if you take them to an employment tribunal - which will cost you nothing - you will - definitely - receive an award of £700 to £1400 (usually the latter) as the court must comply with this law
and its not taxable
in law you cannot be treated disadvantageously because of your request to receive the contract etc
The first answer is wrong. The staff handbook will form part of the terms and conditions of employment.
The second answer is misleading in that the requirement of the employer within 2 months (not 3) is to provide a written statement of employment particulars. It must contain at least the following:
your name and your employer’s name, your job title or a brief job description
the date when your employment began, your pay rate and when you will be paid
your hours of work, your holiday entitlement
where you will be working (if you are based in more than one place it should say this along with your employer’s address)
sick pay arrangements and notice periods
information about disciplinary and grievance procedures
any collective agreements that affect your employment terms or conditions
pensions and pension schemes
if you are not a permanent employee how long your employment is expected to continue, or if you are a fixed term worker the date your employment will end
What most employers that know what they are doing do is to cover this by a letter when you join and a staff handbook.
Whether or not you can make a case at ET if you don't have this I really don't know, though I'd be surprised if you can. You sure will endear yourself to your employer though. Depends if you want out, extracting the maximum amount of money, I guess.
The second answer is misleading in that the requirement of the employer within 2 months (not 3) is to provide a written statement of employment particulars. It must contain at least the following:
your name and your employer’s name, your job title or a brief job description
the date when your employment began, your pay rate and when you will be paid
your hours of work, your holiday entitlement
where you will be working (if you are based in more than one place it should say this along with your employer’s address)
sick pay arrangements and notice periods
information about disciplinary and grievance procedures
any collective agreements that affect your employment terms or conditions
pensions and pension schemes
if you are not a permanent employee how long your employment is expected to continue, or if you are a fixed term worker the date your employment will end
What most employers that know what they are doing do is to cover this by a letter when you join and a staff handbook.
Whether or not you can make a case at ET if you don't have this I really don't know, though I'd be surprised if you can. You sure will endear yourself to your employer though. Depends if you want out, extracting the maximum amount of money, I guess.