Viewing 40 posts - 561 through 600 (of 616 total)
  • CORONA VIRUS, Hows your company/workplace doing
  • sobriety
    Free Member

    Me too, it’d be like being a funded MSc student all over again.

    FB-ATB
    Full Member

    Reluctantjumper
    If your workplace still needs staff present, but just a lower number at mo, then on the govt site it does say workers can move in and out of furlough and employment. Say your company needs to furlough 50 staff but only 30 volunteer, the other places could be filled by staff who can’t/don’t want to furlough rotating. If the co will only pay 80%, it also gives people the chance to work a few weeks on full pay. Might be worth discussing with work?

    FB-ATB
    Full Member

    Zilog

    Surely that’s offset by the fact you’re not going out and spending money? I’d jump at the chance to get paid 80%

    I jump at 80% pay, I’d actually buy a full price ready built Bird if I was furloughed on that. But I’ll be on less than 80% and am the only earner in the house. We don’t get out much- having a disabled child restricts one’s social life somewhat so little saving to be had there.

    reluctantjumper
    Full Member

    We’ll be fine FB-ATB, the numbers being asked for men’s we’ll still have a few spare staff at base every day. Our workload is very predictable with generally a 6 week lead time so easy to call people back from furlough when needed. They have said that there will be no dipping in and out of work though, don’t know why but if they allowed people to do so there are a lot who would totally take the piss so I agree with that stance.

    Erring towards staying at work as the opportunity to socialise with colleagues and customers plus getting outdoors most days is worth more to me right now than a bit of extra time slobbing round the flat.

    FB-ATB
    Full Member

    I can foresee a fair bit of friction in companies when it’s back to normal where people that stayed working make snidey comments about the others on furlough getting paid for nowt.
    It’s similar to any remarks people used to make about those that WFH pre lockdown.

    reluctantjumper
    Full Member

    That ∆∆∆ is starting to rear it’s ugly head at my work.

    We were asked for volunteers to go on furlough and we had enough by Wednesday that we could have new rosters drawn up. Those of us that will be working will be on basic 39 hours pay every week, fine with that as it keeps money coming in and stops me getting bored sat in my flat at home getting fat. What’s not fine is that the company are taking the rate to be used for the furlough calculation as the average wage you accrued over the last 12 months. This is not fine as we had lots of work for the most part of last year so everyone was hitting loads of overtime. This has led to the furloughed workers are going to be paid a decent amount more than those of us that are staying in work even after the 80% chop. My figures as an example would leave me £196 a month better off before you take into account the savings on commuting costs etc. One lad is going to be £200 better off just on pay plus he’s saving on childcare costs and commuting, he reckons he’ll be over £600 better off every month this goes on for! The bosses have realised that head office have made a massive cockup and are going to see if anything can be done about it. What really annoys me is that the lazy ones who drag out their day every day are basically being rewarded for being even lazier and sitting at home.

    Somehow I don’t think this was how the scheme was meant to work.

    yourguitarhero
    Free Member

    Well, I don’t know what’s happening at my work.
    I had an inconclusive phonecall from my boss last week saying they don’t need me any more, will try and keep paying me until the end of my contract in June and something mumbled about garden leave, then we got cut off. She did say they’d be calling every day to check up that I was coping OK being at home.
    So I wrote all my notes up last week and sent them to her. Never had a single piece of communication from them at all then.

    Haven’t heard a peep from them on the phone or email this week either?

    So, nothing in writing – either confirming furlough or terminating my contract.

    So I’ve just decided to ignore it. I figure they can’t really make me redundant until they do it writing, so I’m just assuming I’m getting paid. Until I don’t.
    But I’m acting like I won’t – so, applying for jobs and cutting spending massively.

    Weird, but I feel relieved. That job was bringing me down, and now I just to do DIY, play guitar and go for walks and bike rides. And it’s sunny.

    Simon
    Full Member

    Does anyone know the rules of the furlough scheme?
    Can employees be furloughed for say 3 weeks then brought back in to work for a couple of weeks then furloughed again.
    Or once someone is furloughed is that it until the end of the corona crisis?

    FB-ATB
    Full Member

    I don’t think anyone does, not even HMRC.

    My understanding was that you could based on business need, we even looked at a rota system so you don’t get the issues above. Our auditors say that’s a no no, but I’m waiting for them to provide evidence.

    When it was first announced it implied that the rebate was 80% of an employers cost ie you include employers NI and pension to get the cap, whereas it has been clarified as 80% for the employee and ers NI and pension.

    A lot of the finer detail is being thrashed out was we go along.

    project
    Free Member

    British Airways Furloughing most staff,35.000 so a lot fewer planes going to be about,

    National Express coaches cancelling all coaches from Sunday night,and most of the coaches are run by smaller companies, so going to seriously affect their cash flow aS they still need to pay insurance and lease charges for the vehicles.

    Quite a few transport mags not publishing,for next few weeks or months,

    Local buses and trains decimated, one large company taking 300 buses off the road, new deliveries of buses not arriving,

    Hull Trains suspending all services.

    Wickes,B and Q,Toolstation,Screwfix,Travis Perkins,Jewson and local builders merchants all closed down, having a major effect on us tradesmen and builders.

    Banks closed,bank call centres not answering calls.

    Going to be a very tough summer for a lot of us.

    frankconway
    Full Member

    project – yes, diy stores and merchants have closed physical stores but all are offering click’n’collect and/or delivery; in some cases it’s restricted to those who have trade a/cs.
    I can’t comment on your local independent merchants.
    As for banks, there have been some closures but an online check will tell you which branches are open in your area and what their revised opening hours are.
    Bank call centres have limited staff numbers so that, combined with massively increased call volumes, has significantly extended their response times.

    colp
    Full Member

    I found this link very useful in understanding the furlough scheme

    Understanding the COVID 19 Job Retention Scheme

    project
    Free Member

    thanks to Frank,totally aware of all you pointed out, banks are not allowing us customers in if it can be done over the phone,and theyre not answering the phones,never heard of WFH,whats the answer.

    DIY sheds are only offering limited stocks, of stuff,and then only one person lifts,eg if its heavy no chance.

    jimw
    Free Member

    The suggestion on Channel4 news was that many more firms are reporting to be considering taking up the scheme than anticipated although where that can be attributed from wasn’t clear

    matt_outandabout
    Full Member

    We have a trustee who works for a multinational as head of HR. On his advice, wishing they had done this in China and across Europe, we are all having an extra weeks leave next week, fully paid.

    Why we’re taking the time out to rest, reflect and readjust to the “new normal”.

    jonba
    Free Member

    Its not clear at all. Martin Lewis is a good source of info. He seems to be all over this

    https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/news/2020/

    I think you have to be furloughed for 3 weeks or more. But you can do it on rotation if work is there but down on usual.

    pondo
    Full Member

    We have a trustee who works for a multinational as head of HR. On his advice, wishing they had done this in China and across Europe, we are all having an extra weeks leave next week, fully paid.

    Very cool, wish more were like that.

    m0rk
    Free Member

    So I started a new job, with a new firm on Monday good timing after relocation from Canada for it…

    Stayed home Monday, car delivered. Stayed home Tuesday. Wednesday meet at the office to pick up laptop & IT & log it onto the network. WFH from thereon.

    Keyworker status, letter issued if I have to go to a site.

    I’m very very pleased to be working for them again.

    frankconway
    Full Member

    project, my experience of banks is different to yours; earlier this week, something I needed to do but couldn’t sort online – called but in massive queue so walked to local branch and they sorted for me.
    As for DIY sheds and merchants, some are delivering – but not as quick as usual.
    I take it you’re self-employed.

    Mikeypies
    Free Member

    Wickes,B and Q,Toolstation,Screwfix,Travis Perkins,Jewson and local builders merchants all closed down, having a major effect on us tradesmen and builders.

    A few of the above are doing click and collect and here in the SW Bradfords builders merchants are open for the trade only, prior appointment only and are busy

    13thfloormonk
    Full Member

    Wife worked for a company who were funded by a local council. Council has been looking to shut company down, and have announced redundancies this week.

    C’est la vie we thought, at least furlough will cover her until such time as the employment market wakes up again.

    WRONG! Because the company is shutting down, and wife is not an employee of the council, there is no mechanism to receive furlough payments, so benefits it is…

    Just one example of many I suspect of how people can slip between the cracks.

    gallowayboy
    Full Member

    National Trust has furloughed swathes of staff over the last two days (2/3rds at our property), but will pay the 20% over and above the govt. offer. I’m still working, now taking responsibility for looking after our property, as most of the management are included in the furlough. We’ve had our annual pay award withdrawn, after discussions with the union, and a renewed pay offer has been put forward, focussing all increases on the lowest two grades. I’ll vote for it.
    No idea how long we can be supported in this way though, NT income from direct debit memberships had plummeted as well as revenue from cafe/retail etc.
    My partner manages an advocacy service for people with no capacity – psychiatric wards, care homes, people with learning disabilities etc. – LA funded, statutory service. Demand has gone crazy with DNR notices being handed out without discussion, and both her and her staff have to do visits by phone. Difficult, but at least we have money coming in.
    Feel for everyone who’s not getting the support they need.

    Dickyboy
    Full Member

    Just been furloughed for 3 weeks as from Monday, no top up from company, got no problem with that, without manufacturing & installations Co have been earning zero for past 10days or so.

    zippykona
    Full Member

    Has anyone with a small business been notified about their £10000 payment?

    Some shops in our village were notified on Tuesday and others Wednesday. We’ve not heard a peep.

    fooman
    Full Member

    Has anyone with a small business been notified about their £10000 payment?

    It’s already in our bank account, only after I re-read the rates letter, which basically said ‘don’t pay your rates’ but also had a sentence 3/4 down the page that said ’email your bank account details’ we did and it was paid within 24 hours. Actual process depends on local council, I’m told ours is sending out a second letter as the first wasn’t clear enough.

    crazy-legs
    Full Member

    As a company, were doing quite well from WFH. The IT is all in place, internal meetings and calls happen with no issues.

    However we deal with a lot of external people – councils mainly – and that has really highlighted the vast gaps in both IT infrastructure and IT literacy nationally.

    Some (actually quite a lot) of councils are pretty good, most use Modern.gov meeting management software but what is very noticeable with some is the old equipment, lack of training and general lack of knowledge of some councils and councillors. Not all by any means, but the ones that are bad, it’s catastrophic.

    Constant dropping in and out of virtual meetings, inability to operate Skype or Teams, stuff like sharing screens, using in-meeting chat functions is beyond them. I get that some people’s home broadband is probably shit and that’s not helping but this lockdown has really shown how vital it is that companies invest in both the equipment that they’re issuing to staff and the training in how to use it before they let loose with WFH.

    You can tell I’ve just come out of a disruptive videoconference can’t you?!

    colp
    Full Member

    Our 10k grant came through this morning from the council.
    Should see us through until the government furlough money starts to come through, providing our landlord doesn’t chase us for rent

    13thfloormonk
    Full Member

    Well it’s confirmed, our local city council are a bunch of despicable low life ****s.

    Have made wife and her co-workers redundant with no access to furlough DESPITE a local MSP stepping in and making it clear they could bend the rules in whatever way necessary to allow council to keep the department open long enough to allow people to access furlough.

    It’s just so needless, they’re citing ‘cash flow’ which I can’t believe, I just think somebody is too lazy, inept or politically motivated to get their finger out and help the staff…

    Time to start lining bikes up for the classifieds… ☹

    (apologies for self-pity, appreciate lots of people in a similar predicament)

    Kryton57
    Full Member

    As a company, were doing quite well from WFH. The IT is all in place, internal meetings and calls happen with no issues.

    Us too. Our company has told us to ease off sales though, as they prepare the VC for the C19 effect.  I’ve been asked to relax my quarterly attainment a bit and spend more time with the kids.   My paranoia says they are trying to reduce the salary bill by lowering commissions, maybe someone more clever than me can see a down turn.   Anyway, having run 4yrs being chased to make my quarterly target I find this relaxed attitude a tad odd!

    seadog101
    Full Member

    OK. Now I’m just starting to feel a bit fed up about all this.

    Most at home seem to be doing OK with their enforced isolation, Wife and son are getting on remarkably well (in fact I think it’s helping them both out).

    However, I’m now into day 48 of being stuck on the ship. Unlike other ships we work round the clock, 24/7, so no real break from activity. We are being graciously given an afternoon off once a week, (which I haven’t been able to take due to stuff that was happening during said afternoon’s stand-downs, required on the bridge 🙄). Even though we are now at anchor, we still have work to do.

    Despite good words from the shore end of our business Zero realistic progress has been made toward getting our reliefs in, and getting us home. Some guys were dispacted home last week, after we managed to get space on a flight chartered by Exxon Mobil, however, that meant flying through the US, which my Wife was very reluctant for me to do (underlying health problems).

    I expect a minimum of another week, probably 2 before I MAY be out of here.

    Trying to focus on the positive side of things, which are:
    1- The monster chunck of leave I am going to enjoy. Will somehow have to self isolate once home as I’ll be flying home via ?? route.
    2- Not having to return to work before some sort of organisation is in place for rejoining the ship.
    3- I left home at the end of winter, it’ll be starting with Summer once I’m home.

    Kryton57
    Full Member

    Well, we all have our problems to face, and now it’s our turn.   An all company call today is expected to reveal salary reductions for staff, with the exception of the Sales teams as they need to keep motivated to keep revenue incoming.
    <span style=”font-size: 0.8rem;”>
    I’m in Sales.   I’ve just been given a 9 month target that’s double last years 12 month target, and a pay plan that means I won’t receive barely any commission until I’ve sold half of that number.  To put that in perspective, commission is 50% of my pay.  Not only that, of a UK team of 4 we fired one in January and another left last week, so there’s two of us for the UK, with a huge workload.  The spin of course is that “we have much more opportunity to make our numbers…”.  The reality is that we’ll be working like dogs for not a huge amount of money, so much for my earlier situation where I was told to back off.

    </span>

    At the end of the day, we have a job to go to and to be grateful for I guess.

    stumpyjon
    Full Member

    Kryton that’s pretty shitty. I reckon there will be a lot of people looking to move when this quietens down based on employer behaviour.

    Seems there are some incapable of changing management style and will expect reduced numbers of employees on lower pay to dig companies out of the poo whilst they get prgressively nastier. In Krytons case i can’t understand the thinking behind the changes, how do they that’s going to motivate someone. It’s like they don’t believe people have been trying hard enough and feel the best way forward is to incentivise people by restricting pay and upping targets. Absolute opposite effect is going to happen.

    jeffl
    Full Member

    I think some companies will be using the motivational stick that Kryton mentioned at the end of his post…

    At the end of the day, we have a job to go to and to be grateful for I guess.

    bruceandhisbonus
    Free Member

    My company (oil and gas) is making 25% reduction in global head count and my role is now in a 1 month group consultancy period for redundancy so a very high chance at the end of that I’ll be unemployed.

    It’s understandable that they have to adjust as the industry is on it’s backside but I didn’t realise quite how big the numbers would be. It’ll be thousands of people. I think anyone left will also be given 20% paycuts (they have already culled staff and given paycuts in the US as I think it can be done pretty much instantly over there).

    Left me in a world of worry as job prospects are pretty remote at the moment. Hopefully living frugally and my redundancy pay will keep me ticking over for a few months if I can’t get anything else. It’s a shame they don’t see furloughs as a viable short term solution but I assume it is because the long term forecast for the industry is so poor.

    Kryton57
    Full Member

    In Krytons case i can’t understand the thinking behind the changes, how do they that’s going to motivate someone. It’s like they don’t believe people have been trying hard enough and feel the best way forward is to incentivise people by restricting pay and upping targets. Absolute opposite effect is going to happen.

    With likely outcome being I might be able to achieve 75% of my salary if nothing gets worse (?) and I get lucky, with no holiday or break to look forward to for a year at least, I really don’t need that shit.

    They also forget we all have challenges at home – kids to manage, bills going up, in our case no shopping delivered now until May 6th.  Needless to say I’ve be up since 4:30 this morning – can’t sleep.

    Having said that, people like me need to consider people like Bruce ^^. That’s not great, I feel for him.

    firestarter
    Free Member

    We cant social distance in the fire brigade, I’ve tested positive, lad on my shift was the week before, one of lads wife just tested positive, I’ve just given it to the wife
    Other watches on station have at least 4 confirmed cases, one lad who came to our station to cover for an absence now has it, we have one station with 12 confirmed cases its madness

    Hob-Nob
    Free Member

    We’re sticking ticking along, we have revised our targets down to a more realistic level for the next 6 months. We’re forcasting to just about break even by the end of the year, which will be a 20% reduction in T/O, which is a significant amount of money.

    Still operating on minimal staff, but planning to start to phase people back into the business as of the 11th May, pending some more key customers coming back online. We’ve been asked as HoD’s/Directors to review with our respective management team bringing back the better members of staff, keeping others on the furloughing scheme until the end with a view to making some redundancies from that point.

    It gives us an opportunity to clear the decks a bit, and the reality is as part of a very big global company, a 20% revenue reduction will mean this will have to happen regardless. Doing it this way means we retain some control over the process, rather than having our hand forced by group.

    I’m expecting some casualties in my sales team, aftersales team & customer service team. Not going to be pretty.

    sobriety
    Free Member

    It’s a shame they don’t see furloughs as a viable short term solution but I assume it is because the long term forecast for the industry is so poor.

    I’m not sure it’s becasue the long term forecast is poor, more that when it picks up they can, initially at least, re-employ staff for lower wages, until demand outstrips supply and the wages go mental again, the O&G industry has always been thus.

    reluctantjumper
    Full Member

    Well things have properly kicked off at my workplace.

    We have it written into our contract that you are not allowed to have a second job, it’s a sackable offence. But when the furlough lost was announced we all received a pdf that stated the revised rules for those on furlough. If you are furloughed you are allowed to get a second job if you can find one. A few of my colleagues have, mostly driving for supermarkets. This was challenged by a few who thought it was unfair, especially as those that are on furlough pay are actually getting more pay from the company than those of us still working but minimum hours (see my earlier post as to how that works). This challenge was dismissed on Friday morning and pay slips were sent out today digitally too. Cue one or two colleagues popping up on our WhatsApp group boasting about how they’re getting roughly £200-250 more than basic from the company and an extra £1k or so from their second jobs. This has properly gone down like a lead balloon. Without going into details a few people have been trading insults with each other and bad blood has definitely been drawn in one case. When they come back to work it is going to cause real issues as we occasionally have to work in two’s or three’s for some jobs and a few have now said they will not work with any of the furloughed workers on these jobs. My manager is in the group and is trying to calm things down but failing as there isn’t anything he can really do to defuse the situation.

    I thought this whole situation would throw up some issues later on but nowhere near this level. I’m staying out of it as much as I can but it’s going to create a horrible atmosphere at work for a while I fear.

    longmover
    Free Member

    Day 72 on site now, we are locked down on site until 31st May. Currently there are no internal passenger trains running and no flights in and out of the country, any repatriation flights are hideously expensive. We have been told there will be no flights leaving the country regularly until July and we will not be able to return until at least October. Looks like I will be here for a while.

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