Job employment agency UK specialising in industrial, driving and technical vacancies.
404 Not Found

404 Not Found

Click here to return back

Employing people

Current section

Recruitment and getting started

 

Paperwork

 

Paying your staff

 

Pension schemes

 

Setting the rules

 

Working time and time off

 

Equal opportunities

 

Health, safety and working environment

 

Employee representatives and trade unions

 

Organisational change

 

Skills and training

 

Motivation

 

Dismissals, redundancies and other exits

Workers leaving: the basics

 

Disciplinary problems, disputes and grievances

 

Issue the correct periods of notice

Varying the notice period

The statutory or contractual notice period can be varied in a number of circumstances.

Summary dismissal

This occurs where an employee is dismissed without notice - summary dismissal - for gross misconduct. However, unless there is a proper investigation and a fair hearing an employment tribunal might find that the dismissal was unfair.

Breach of contract

The employee can also terminate the contract of employment without notice if the employer has fundamentally breached the contract by their conduct.

Right to waiver

Employers and employees can both waive their right to notice - even though they cannot contract out of the legal minimum period.

Pay instead of notice

If an employer is willing to offer it, employees can choose to receive pay instead of notice. This will be a breach of contract unless the contract expressly provides for it.

Minimum notice periods

The employment contract can be varied by agreement between the parties, but the statutory minimum notice periods will still apply.

Counter-notice

An employee who has been given notice of dismissal can give counter-notice to leave on an earlier date than the one on which the employer's notice period ends. The minimum statutory notice that an employee must give is one week, but usually their contractual notice period will be longer than this. For the purposes of unfair dismissal legislation, the employee will still be treated as having been dismissed.

Redundancy notice

If an employee who has been given a redundancy notice wants to leave before their notice expires, eg to start a new job, they can ask the employer to agree an earlier termination date. If the employer agrees, they will still get their redundancy payment.

However, if the employer objects they may withdraw the original redundancy notice and refuse to give the employee a redundancy payment. The employee could apply to a tribunal which will decide whether the employee should get all, part of, or none of the redundancy payment.

Subjects covered in this guide

 

 Print This Page



Source - Business Link; Crown Copyright.

 

HomeContact UsTerms and Conditions
Driving Recruitment AgencyIndustrial Staffing ServicesTechnical Staffing Services Agency
Driving Job VacanciesIndustrial & Warehousing VacanciesTechnical & Engineering Job Vacancies