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More On The Absence Interviews
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My superiors once again have sent me a letter. This time for only THREE days absence since Sept 5th 2016 to present day. There are other employees with more days off than myself who haven't got a letter. There's only three of us who have received the letter and I am the one with the least time off sick. There's one girl who hasn't been back to work in over a year.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.if you have regular /frequent absences even if only a day or time at a day this will alert HR ..if some one is off long term for serious complaint that is explainable it may not be considered questionable...I know someone who had a day or two every month off..it transpired they had another job and were calling in sick to do it !
The girl who has been off for a year probably isn't being paid, she will have certified absence, and the employer can cover such absences more easily than they can cover short, unforeseen (paid) absences.
You may want to ask whether they will tell you the trigger points for such letters- although many employers won't do that in case some see that as an entitlement below which they can escape any action
You may want to ask whether they will tell you the trigger points for such letters- although many employers won't do that in case some see that as an entitlement below which they can escape any action
For someone to be off work for over a year would mean your firm knows about the reasons and accepts them. To offer their absence as a mitigating factor for your own absences is rather unsympathetic, one would imagine that their illness must be severe to warrant a year off and I congratulate your firm for sticking with them.
And you were interviewed in June and advised that they were concerned about your absence. Some people are genuinely too ill to work fairly regularly but (aside from cases where it is classed as disability) the employer can follow a process based on capability. Some people struggle into work when they are not 100% whereas others take regular short uncertified absences when it's snowing or they have a delivery expected or if they feel a bit tired, and it's unfair on those who have to cover their work.
If you have been there for less than two years they could probably just dismiss you without evening following the process- how long have you worked there Chelsea-girl?
If you have been there for less than two years they could probably just dismiss you without evening following the process- how long have you worked there Chelsea-girl?
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