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Maternity rights
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The company is in the wrong - All employees are entitled for time off for pregnancy related appointments whether part or full time. All employees are also entitled to maternity pay, providing they have been employed for 6 months or more and have notifed the employer in the correct time scales (although the amount of mat pay they get may vary from that of full time staff).
To qualify for maternity leave, a woman must tell her employer by the end of the 15th week before the expected week of childbirth:
that she is pregnant
the expected week of childbirth, by means of a medical certificate if requested
the date she intends to start maternity leave. This can normally be any date which is no earlier than the beginning of the 11th week before the expected week of childbirth up to the birth.
An employer must then write to the employee, within 28 days of her notification, setting out her return date. The employee can change this date if she gives her employer 28 days' notice.
If it is company practice for your employer to issue a maternity pack of sorts and yet this hasn't been done, it's probably best to raise the issue with the HR department (if there is one) or manager and ask when to expect it. If they claim not to be familiar with the practice, then it should be mentioned that previous employees (such as you) had one but even if company policy has changed, the company still has to write out to the employee within 28 days setting a return date.
For clarifcation, see acas.co.uk. If the employer disputes it, then get them in on a conference call to acas who will set them straight.