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Working/pay Laws?

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rowetta | 14:13 Tue 23rd Apr 2013 | Law
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my boss sent out a memo about a month ago saying that if we didn't fill out our time sheets or forgot to add days we had worked, before the end of the week when they are collected, (collected each week but we are paid every month) even tho we have worked it it cant be added on and therefore we will lose that pay, im sure they cant do that, can they? its not in our contracts
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I suppose he thinks that the memo will encourage you all to fill in time sheets correctly and on time - it would me.
Are you sure they didn't mean it might have to wait until the following month?
Your contractual terms can change and are more than just what was written in your contact document.
However I don't think they can deny payment if you did the work, but they can delay it if you submit the info late
I do a time sheet each week and an expenses log and I've never forgotten to include anything. It odes help if people do things right first time. But occasionally someone may go off sick and not be able to submit it on time so employers need to give some leeway
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no we were told that we would not get paid if the time sheet was filled in after the hours for that week had been calculated
You should get unionised
It sounds like a unilateral change of contract
which you havent agreed to and will involve you in loss.

My employer sudduv did the same to us (I am now retired and I would likek to say the employer threw a party for themselves...)
(not pay sick pay when we were ick)
and this is what we did to him (CMFT Manchester).
"The Royal College of Nursing today (February 23) called for all NHS employers to uphold agreed terms and conditions for staff after winning an important test case at an employment tribunal.

The RCN, alongside Unison and Unite, were successful in challenging a decision by Central Manchester Hospitals Foundation Trusts (CMFT) to withhold incremental pay rises for 83 staff on the basis of their sick records. The NHS Agenda for Change pay agreement provides a contractual entitlement for NHS staff to receive a certain number of pay increments in each grade as they gain greater competence and experience.

The trust withheld increments from staff whose reasons for taking sick leave included being physically assaulted by a patient, and recovering from major surgery. The tribunal found that this constituted an unlawful deduction of pay and that the Trust must repay those deductions to the claimants."

The trust lost the nurses' and ancillary staff case
and didnt take on the doctors' in the High Court
having been told continuously for two years they would lose....
and the BMA claimed their costs against the Trust (£135k)


basically you wait for a loss and then take them to court
but it does cost....
hence the union advice

this is the sort of case they love to take on

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