ChatterBank4 mins ago
TErms of employment
2 Answers
Can anyone help me please?
I have just started a new position to which i am salaried paid. For the first week i was paid by the hour because i started in the middle of the week to which i accepted but begrudgingly because i lost hours that was due to me not being rostered on to work. however today i have been told that i have to work between 40 and 45 hours a week. if i do not work forty hours a week then they will pay me hourly and deduct any hours that i have not worked leaving me out of pocket.
Oh by the way it is not because i take time off and cant do the hours it is because i work in a pub and sometimes the managers tell me to go home because we are so quiet and they close the pub down so there is no way i can even do the hours.
is he allowed to deduct money from a salaried pay?
I have just started a new position to which i am salaried paid. For the first week i was paid by the hour because i started in the middle of the week to which i accepted but begrudgingly because i lost hours that was due to me not being rostered on to work. however today i have been told that i have to work between 40 and 45 hours a week. if i do not work forty hours a week then they will pay me hourly and deduct any hours that i have not worked leaving me out of pocket.
Oh by the way it is not because i take time off and cant do the hours it is because i work in a pub and sometimes the managers tell me to go home because we are so quiet and they close the pub down so there is no way i can even do the hours.
is he allowed to deduct money from a salaried pay?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Chellebelle3. 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.It could be a so-called "zero hours contract" which is a means by which empoyers do exactly as you describe - but I don't think that can be described as "salaried" Check the written terms of your employment - if any. http://www.emplaw.co.uk/researchfree-redirecto r.aspx?StartPage=data%2f972u23.htm