ChatterBank2 mins ago
annual leave
My sister is off from work as she was diagnosed with breast cancer , She isnt expected to be fit enough for work until at least the end of April. Her annual leave year runs from the begining of March to the end of February. He employer has told her that any annual leave she has left will be lost as she wont be there to take it. Can anyone tell me if this is correct as I thought there was some newish regulation that says otherwise. TIA
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.my wife went through serious breast cancer, masectomy/chemo/radiotherapy/plastic surgery,she juggled sick days with holidays as she wasnt paid sick pay so the impact wasnt as bad financially. Not knowing what your sister does for a living makes it difficult to comment on but my wife carried on working in between the various ops/treatment, her choice...
This "seems" to cover these circumstances
http:// www.lew issilki ...er-a utomati cally.a spx
And also, as to the stated "use it or lose it" under these circumstances then [i]The Court of Appeal’s latest ruling does not resolve all outstanding issues, but does give a clear answer on whether the employer can operate a “use it or lose it” holiday policy in relation to sick workers. The short answer is - no! The judgment also gives guidance on some other key issues.[i]
Hope this helps ☺
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And also, as to the stated "use it or lose it" under these circumstances then [i]The Court of Appeal’s latest ruling does not resolve all outstanding issues, but does give a clear answer on whether the employer can operate a “use it or lose it” holiday policy in relation to sick workers. The short answer is - no! The judgment also gives guidance on some other key issues.[i]
Hope this helps ☺
I'm glad that's helped. I suppose it depends on employer but certainly in the civil service you can be off sick (or on maternity leave) and you get all your untaken leave carried over. It's considered that being off sick does not equate to the rest and recuperation ethic of what leave is actually for.
As I read the ruling from the Court of Appeal, [i]It is worth noting that the scope for carry-over is not indefinite. Recent ECJ decisions in KHS AG v Schulte [2012] IRLR 156 and Neidel have suggested that carry-over of holiday can be limited to a specific period of time after the employee has returned to work (with 15 months being permissible and nine months too short). The Court of Appeal’s decision in Larner also expressly confirms that, once an employee has returned to work after illness, he or she will need to request to take carried-over holiday in the usual way.[i]
This would in effect, make the issue, in the case of a teacher MUST take some of the carried over leave during term-time, as not taking the accrued annual leave would be in breach of the ruling & WTD. IMO
This would in effect, make the issue, in the case of a teacher MUST take some of the carried over leave during term-time, as not taking the accrued annual leave would be in breach of the ruling & WTD. IMO