Employing people

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Recruitment and getting started

 

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Paying your staff

 

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Setting the rules

 

Working time and time off

Allowing time off work

 

Equal opportunities

 

Health, safety and working environment

 

Employee representatives and trade unions

 

Organisational change

 

Skills and training

 

Motivation

 

Dismissals, redundancies and other exits

 

Disciplinary problems, disputes and grievances

 

Allowing time off work

Introduction

Your staff may request time off for a range of reasons, including jury service, union duties, and health issues.

Some of these activities, notably public and trade union duties and parental/dependant responsibilities, carry statutory rights to time off, ie your staff have a legal right to the time off and you can't refuse.

In other situations, you can choose how you handle requests for time off.

This guide looks at the different situations where employees may ask for time off and whether they have a legal right to time off (with or without pay).

It also looks at good practice for dealing with requests for time off where there is no legal right, so your policy and practice as an employer - rather than the law - is the deciding factor.

Subjects covered in this guide

 

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