question on employment law : Wed Feb 05, 2014 10:19 pm
The company I work for issues contracts with the hours 9am - 5:30 including an hour lunch break, i.e a 37.5 hour week. It is "custom and practice" (and has been since I started in Jan 08) however for staff to work 8am to 4 pm with a 30 min lunch break, so still a 37.5 hour week. Our time sheets are required to be 37.5 hours. Our type of work prevents us from having a working lunch as we work in a laboratory environment. This is pretty much an industry standard for our type of work. Pay is ok for our sector but lower than the industry average by approx 25%. Most of the staff are fresh graduates who don't know any better or like myself have been made redundant from larger companies. The company only has around 30 employees and is not unionised (yet!).At a recent staff meeting which I did not attend due to a holiday, as far as I can make out from my colleagues, management stated their intention to alter the contracts to reflect "custom and practice" in that the new hours would be 8 am - 4pm but that we would be expected to work a 40 hour week excluding lunchtime i.e. we would be working an extra 2.5 hours per week and would have to make up any time we took out for lunch. Currently overtime is paid at time and a half for working 1 day at weekend and double time for the second day at weekend. This is to be reduced to single time and time and a half. This isn't in our contracts so can't really argue but suffice to say I wont be volunteering for overtime any more. They also want to reduce the holiday entitlement for new starters from our current 25 days plus bank hols (again an industry standard) as they allready think we get too many hols! I think one of our directors in particular wants a high tech company with Victorian working conditions.
As quite a few of us end up working late most days I find this penny pinching a bit mean and antagonising to the workforce, especially as the company is growing at 30% pa and is making a healthy profit and because it wont really increase productivity by any great degree . A few of my colleagues have stated that they are going to look to move on, but easier said than done at the moment (I originally took the job as a stop gap as did several others).
Any ideas on how legally enforcable this is as it is really going to have an impact on my life outside work.