Viewing 39 posts - 41 through 79 (of 79 total)
  • Holiday entitlement at work – legal opinions pls…
  • ebygomm
    Free Member

    28 days is the legal minimum so it can hardly be said to be generous can it?

    breatheeasy
    Free Member

    Without being negative, the “business is expanding and we need to current employees to work more hours” starts to sound like a firm I used to work for that ‘expected’ you not to use your full holiday entitlement each year. Soon you’ll be onto unpaid overtime too….

    Maybe try the line of you are going to lose this entitlement but this year we’ll give you a week wages as a bonus to change contract?

    mastiles_fanylion
    Free Member

    28 days is the legal minimum so it can hardly be said to be generous can it?

    We give 28 days (29 this year with the extra day) AND three additional day at Christmas.

    Which is more generous.

    And as a small business in tough times, we can’t afford to be generous.

    sadmadalan
    Full Member

    Ignore the 28 day minimum – given that the UK bank holidays take up 8 of those you are giving your staff 20 days of leave to take off during the year. Ignore the fact that you are giving them ‘extra’ days at Christmas, that is your choice as an employer.

    The key point is that you are going to mandate that staff must take a number of their days leave off at Christmas. Unless this is in their T&Cs that they signed up to when joining the company, I would have thought that you don’t stand a chance! To get the staff to agree to this would be a change in T&C’s and would require you staff to agree to it and sign new T&C’s. You could always increase the leave amount to 23 days and in the revised T&C’s make it clear that the three days were to be allocated by the company on an individual basis and would allow you to have some staff covering at Christmas.

    I work for a very large IT company – we were absorbed into it during the last takeover. The company has three days that is closes down for at Christmas, however this does not apply to me as my T&C’s are from my previous company.

    (I am NOT an HR specialist or legal type person and as such any comments I make here are my understanding only. You are advised to get proper advice.

    IanMunro
    Free Member

    I’m not sure how 28 days is seen as stingy?

    28 is the legal minimum, so can’t really be classed as generous 🙂
    Though if it’s 28 days + bank holidays then no, not stingy.

    dazzlingboy
    Full Member

    /Do you want to be a good employer? Retain your staff? Then giving a few days more than legal minimum is a decent way to do this. 28 days is stingy.

    Agree with TJ and others here. How much work gets done for 3 days over Christmas anyway – F all in our experience. I cannot believe any business will notice that on the bottom line – and I speak from experience running a business with currently half a dozen employees. Give staff a bit leeway and 9 times out of 10 you will be repaid with loyalty and being able to call on favours etc when extra hands are needed on deck. Give it to them tight over Christmas and when you put the call out for someone to work after hours/weekend or something you’re liable to get 2 fingers in return! As they, likewise, will be tempted to stick to their “legal minimum”.

    What goes around comes around IMO.

    Scamper
    Free Member

    It used to be 20 days and if you had 28 days it was generous. Therefore just because its now the minimum its a generous minimum 😀

    brakes
    Free Member

    I don’t think some of you are actually reading the proposal properly.

    allthepies
    Free Member

    Give staff a bit leeway and 9 times out of 10 you will be repaid with loyalty and being able to call on favours etc when extra hands are needed on deck.

    Except Christmas when you ask people to help out (during their “free” days off) and they all refuse of course 🙂

    chakaping
    Free Member

    whether there’s a bunch of union representatives trying to make a name for themselves.

    Erm, it’s not the 1970s you know. It doesn’t really work like that now. Union reps are more likely to be trying to support their colleagues in redundancy negotiations.

    MF – Have you approached any of the staff about this? Do they have any collective representation? This is a situation where the employer would probably benefit from the existence of a union chapel.

    STATO
    Free Member

    So you wont open the office over christmas, but this christmas you needed work completed and had to get freelanceers to do it. Not sure how cutting staff holidays is going to help you here?

    I dont see why your worried what your staff will think if they dont hang round for more than 2 years anyway.

    craigxxl
    Free Member

    You are a walking disaster as an employer. First thinking of sacking someone because they old you they may want to move on, then trying to cut holidays that you have set a precedent of by giving it to the employees previously. I’ll assume none of your employees have contracts or at least any that legally binding.
    I urge you to seek professional legal advice before you really screw up an get brought up on breach of contract or unfair dismissal. Any employment solictor will have a field day with you.
    If you speak to your accountant about fee protection insurance which costs a couple of £hundred they have free advice lines on taxation and employment. Keep going in your current direction and your business will be short lived.

    Northwind
    Full Member

    TBH I said this in the other post about the guy who “might be leaving”- your business obviously has big problems and you’re fiddling while Rome burns. In that case, you couldn’t afford to lose him so you wanted to fire him, and you never seemed to think “What if someone else leaves, what do I do then?”.

    In this case, you can’t afford the holidays but you can afford to pay freelancers to cover a gap. You’re getting yourself into messes and then turning to other people to pay the price of fixing it rather than looking at the problems. You obviously have a habit of overcommitting or under-resourcing, and even if you change the holidays you’re just going to do the exact same thing again with your fractionally higher resources. Get some professional help, and I don’t mean employment lawyers. Get to the root.

    geoffj – Member
    “Very true – the problem is, that there are a range of things which make us contented and what works for 1 may not work for another.”

    True this- but what makes people contented when you give it to them, is not the same as what makes people discontented when you take it away (ie, giving everyone an extra day’s holiday will make some staff very happy, some less so… But taking away a day’s holiday will make almost all staff less happy)

    A lot of employers struggle with this but it’s pretty well proven, in fact if you take away a privilege that most employees didn’t know they had, they’ll still be pissed off to lose it.

    Scamper
    Free Member

    Or join FSB and get free (decent) legal advice.

    crispedwheel
    Free Member

    You have to look at this ‘in the round’ I think, rather than just take holiday entitlement in isolation – people talking about whether you’re a ‘generous’ employer or not, or if your staff are ‘content and motivated’ need to consider other aspects beyond the bare stats of x number of days annual leave.

    So, things like whether you offer maternity/paternity/sickness pay above the statutory mimimum, flexi-time for those employees who have kids so they can drop them off/pick them from school, letting staff work from home if they have sick children etc, might all be other important considerations for your staff, beyond just holiday entitlements.

    Haze
    Full Member

    I’m about to switch jobs from one where I have fixed holidays, albiet with 5 or 6 floating.

    The new position comes with additional days, all of which are flexible.

    It’s a big draw…

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    Any employment solictor will have a field day with you

    are stw threads admissable in court 😯

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    Certainly are Junkyard. I have all your posts saved. You had better pay me a “consultancy fee”

    mastiles_fanylion
    Free Member

    I dont see why your worried what your staff will think if they dont hang round for more than 2 years anyway.

    Didn’t have employees more than 2 years ago…

    First thinking of sacking someone because they old you they may want to move on

    Well no, I wasn’t thinking that, I was wanting to know how we stood legally. I made it clear again and again that we weren’t looking to sack him. Just go and look at the thread to remind yourself.

    Get some professional help, and I don’t mean employment lawyers. Get to the root.

    We are currently undergoing a period of planning for the future using outside professionals.

    Can I make this clear – we are a small business and are new to all this. We try to be fair, but fairness is a two-way street. If I felt an employee has done something above and beyond, I will go out of my way to say thank you in whatever way I can. Similarly, if I think someone is taking the Michael, then I am sure to look at it dimly. After all, it is a job to them, it is my life, my business. I gave up a very secure job (13 years in the same place) and went out on a limb and took a massive risk.

    We always have several events every year such as night’s out doing ghost walks and going for meals, days out of the office doing something like gorge scrambling, zip wires, absailing etc, we take staff out for meals *most* Friday lunchtimes, we often treat them to bacon butties etc, at Christmas we pay for a night out + hotel costs etc.

    craigxxl
    Free Member

    None of that makes the slightest difference legally. Get advice now and start to act professionally. Business first and friendship second.

    geoffj
    Full Member

    geoffj – Member
    “Very true – the problem is, that there are a range of things which make us contented and what works for 1 may not work for another.”

    True this- but what makes people contented when you give it to them, is not the same as what makes people discontented when you take it away (ie, giving everyone an extra day’s holiday will make some staff very happy, some less so… But taking away a day’s holiday will make almost all staff less happy)

    A lot of employers struggle with this but it’s pretty well proven, in fact if you take away a privilege that most employees didn’t know they had, they’ll still be pissed off to lose it.

    Herzberg and his pesky hygiene factors!

    Northwind
    Full Member

    I’m glad I didn’t reference that, I was going to say it was Minzberg 😳 Min, Her, what’s the difference eh.

    mastiles_fanylion
    Free Member

    Business first and friendship second.

    Totally agree – but it is a damn difficult balance to achieve.

    Edric64
    Free Member

    28 days is stingy.

    You wouldn’t say that if you ran a small business and tried to work things round holidays it can be a real pita

    Sanny
    Free Member

    Mastiles

    E mail me off line. I should be able to help (wearing HR hat) and can also point you in the direction of a couple of excellent employment lawyers.

    Cheers

    Sanny

    mastiles_fanylion
    Free Member

    Many thanks Sanny – will try to email tomorrow but away most of the day doing (free) tutoring at our local art college.

    See – I really am not all bad evil nasty employer.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    Certainly are Junkyard. I have all your posts saved. You had better pay me a “consultancy fee”

    I have some helmets if they will do as payment in lieu 😆

    TooTall
    Free Member

    We always have several events every year such as night’s out doing ghost walks and going for meals, days out of the office doing something like gorge scrambling, zip wires, absailing etc, we take staff out for meals *most* Friday lunchtimes, we often treat them to bacon butties etc, at Christmas we pay for a night out + hotel costs etc.

    Cut out the fripperies and let them keep their personal time off. Most people would rather have time with their loved ones than their colleagues. If you keep that guff and kick them in the nuts over time off, then you are focused on the wrong things. Like asking legal advice on STW when you should be working as hard as your staff.

    mastiles_fanylion
    Free Member

    Harsh tootall – you have no idea how hard I work really now do you?

    sturmey
    Free Member

    After reading through this post finding lots of similarities to where I work I think what you want to do is perfectly reasonable my entitlement is the same as you are proposing. If anyone of your staff want to leave let me know I could do with a change.

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    I tend to agree with too tall. I’d much rather have 3 days holiday than the things you list. For example I would never go on a Christmas night out that involved a hotel stay even if paid for and that must cost similar to a day off.

    AlasdairMc
    Full Member

    How many of them do you realistically need in over Christmas? Is it to do actual work or just in case work comes up?

    Why not offer an on-call allowance or critical payments paid if someone is needed during the company’s downtime? Or perhaps keep the existing holiday arrangements but offer lieu days to people who offer to work them? Surely you’re not running at full capacity all the time so can schedule lieu days when your business is quieter.

    Personally I got bored over Christmas this year, first time off in ages for the whole time and it was rubbish. Days spent doing not much – have you asked your employees what their views are?

    Could you afford to lose a number of your staff if you drop their benefit levels?

    shortbread_fanylion
    Free Member

    Agreed. I see enough of my colleagues at work…wouldn’t want to go to any silly team bonding nonsense. If you must though, thake them mountain biking….you used to do it remember! You were actually alright at it too! 😉

    mudshark
    Free Member

    I’m sure MF paid more for his contractors than the cost of a hotel. We’ve got our annual hotel thing this weekend, not that keen really.

    Anyway, in these troubled times all staff are making all sorts of compromises, I believe CSC staff have been asked to take 5 days off before April though will be given a bonus day off if they do.

    woffle
    Free Member

    28 days is the legal minimum so it can hardly be said to be generous can it?

    Has it been mentioned that this can INCLUDE the 8 bank holidays and public holidays so 28 days sounds remarkably generous to me if they’re additional too. Here it’s 21 days starting allowance, rising by 1 day for every year you’ve worked for the company to a maximum of 25 days.

    Can’t say I’ve ever felt short-changed either.

    cbrsyd
    Free Member

    If you are reducing your employees holiday entitlement (which you are) you are changing their contracts. Contracts are not only what is written down they also include what happens in practice so if for two years you have been giving extra hols at christmas I would argue that those hols have become contractual.
    There are only two ways you can legally change contracts. You do it either by consent or by imposing the change. Consent is always the best route. It involves talking to staff, explaining way the change is needed and getting them to sign up to the change. Imposition is necessary if employees don’t agree to the change. You still have to explain why the change is necessary, listen to what your employees say, look at alternatives but if there are genuine business reasons for the change and you have consulted effectively with your staff you can impose the change. The requires that you terminate their current contracts and issue new ones with the new holiday entitlement.

    That’s the strict legal interpretation and would protect you form any legal challenge in the courts. If you are small business with few employees you may chose to take a punt and do it differently but would leave yourself open to challenge by doing so.

    Here endeth the first lesson.

    lodious
    Free Member

    TBH, I don’t think what your doing is unreasonable in any way. Every employer I have worked for operates a system where they block out 3-4 days a year over Christmas as the office is shut. These days come out of the employees holiday quota.

    I work in engineering, and TBH, where i’ve worked as staff, if you kicked up about something trivial like this, you’d be laughed at, and ‘managed out’ soon after.

    On a personal level, I’d try to get your employee’s onside with it. I understand employment law as got to be considered, but if your a small business, you are going to have to keep focused on doing what you do, not all the BS surrounding H&S/employment law/data protection.

    If one positive thing has come out of this thread, at least you have found a cheap way of psychoanalysing future potential employee’s….Give them a selection of STW threads to respond to and read the answers.

    Some of the responses on this thread show just how far from the real world some peoples expectations have got.

    Good luck!

    mastiles_fanylion
    Free Member

    Some of the responses on this thread show just how far from the real world some peoples expectations have got.

    8)

    wouldn’t want to go to any silly team bonding nonsense

    It isn’t team bonding, it is just time away from the office doing something fun. Unless I am spectacularly wrong, surely anyone would prefer going out for lunch then spend the afternoon at Go Ape than sat in the office? At no point is there any team-building challenges or anything like that.

    And the hotels bit – we offer to pay for hotels so people can have a drink and not worry about how to get home (we also offer taxis if they prefer to go home, but everyone has (so far) taken us up on the hotel offer).

    shortbread_fanylion
    Free Member

    Seriously Mastiles, us cooncil workers are too busy to be mincing around go ape! Not sure it would be a very good PR stunt to pull in the current climate 😐

Viewing 39 posts - 41 through 79 (of 79 total)

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