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all "New hires and statutory holiday entitlement"
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Every employee is entitled to a minimum of 5.6 weeks’ paid annual leave each holiday year. But suppose an employee is leaving. How is the matter of holiday dealt with in their final year of
employment?
Published 16.11.2016
A job candidate has asked if you will honour their two-week holiday which has already been booked. Must you grant a new hire’s pre-booked holiday and if so would they be entitled to pay during this
time?
Published 23.06.2021
To celebrate the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee, June 4 and 5 are bank holidays. Many employees have assumed they are automatically entitled to take both days off - but that’s not necessarily the case.
What’s the legal position?
Published 24.05.2012
According to Citizens Advice, thousands of workers are being denied their rights to statutory annual leave. It says this is often caused by misunderstandings over how the rules operate. So what are
the basics?
Published 05.05.2011
Half way through your holiday year a part-time employee moves over to full time hours. According to the Court of Justice of the European Union, what should happen to their annual leave entitlement in
this situation?
Published 09.12.2015
The Working Time Regulations 1998 (WTR) state that when they leave your employment, an employee is entitled to be paid in lieu of any accrued but untaken statutory minimum holiday. How is this
payment in lieu calculated?
Published 25.11.2021
Due to the way the bank holidays fall in 2018 and 2019, some employers will be in breach of the Working Time Regulations 1998 (WTR) if they don’t give their employees an additional day’s holiday.
What do you need to know?
Published 17.11.2017
The government has declared that Friday, April 29 2011 - the day of the Royal Wedding - will be a bank holiday. Are your staff automatically entitled to this particular day off and what is the
statutory position on pay?
Published 16.12.2010
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