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Are you working for minimum wage? If not you actually do not have 14 days sick leave by law.Motofreek wrote:Thank you all for your responses but my question is really about when is a sick leave required. I am entitled to 14 days SL as the law states but the Company's policy states that I must present a Medical Certificate (Sick Leave Certificate) if I exceed 7 of the 14 days. It doesn't matter if I take 1 day or 1 hour, any time your exceed 7 days SL for the year, you must present the Medical Certification from a doctor or face disciplinary action.
Is this legal?
Dizzy28 wrote:Are you working for minimum wage? If not you actually do not have 14 days sick leave by law.Motofreek wrote:Thank you all for your responses but my question is really about when is a sick leave required. I am entitled to 14 days SL as the law states but the Company's policy states that I must present a Medical Certificate (Sick Leave Certificate) if I exceed 7 of the 14 days. It doesn't matter if I take 1 day or 1 hour, any time your exceed 7 days SL for the year, you must present the Medical Certification from a doctor or face disciplinary action.
Is this legal?
Those not covered by the min wage order would be governed by company policy.
redmanjp wrote:Dizzy28 wrote:Are you working for minimum wage? If not you actually do not have 14 days sick leave by law.Motofreek wrote:Thank you all for your responses but my question is really about when is a sick leave required. I am entitled to 14 days SL as the law states but the Company's policy states that I must present a Medical Certificate (Sick Leave Certificate) if I exceed 7 of the 14 days. It doesn't matter if I take 1 day or 1 hour, any time your exceed 7 days SL for the year, you must present the Medical Certification from a doctor or face disciplinary action.
Is this legal?
Those not covered by the min wage order would be governed by company policy.
so u saying only a fraction of ppl (those who working EXACTLY minimum wage) entitled to 14 days and the vast majority not? im sure there are other Acts that apply e.g. Industrial Relations Act or others?
that part about having to get sick leave for 1 hr is ridiculous- why would someone take sick leave for 1 hr? personal errands? in that case its not sick leave that applies and the company effectively is preventing ppl from taking more than 7 days because who d a$$ will get a medical cert for 1 hr?
if i were u OP i would consult a labour or union officer about this.
Slave campdjruncrowd wrote:At my workplace we are entitled to ( 7 days uncertified, S/L)
( 8 days certified, S/L)
( 4 days emergency, L) which can also be used as hours
I thought slavery was abolisheddjruncrowd wrote:At my workplace we are entitled to ( 7 days uncertified, S/L)
( 8 days certified, S/L)
( 4 days emergency, L) which can also be used as hours
Well it seems that Trinidad labour laws are uselesshover11 wrote:I thought slavery was abolisheddjruncrowd wrote:At my workplace we are entitled to ( 7 days uncertified, S/L)
( 8 days certified, S/L)
( 4 days emergency, L) which can also be used as hours
This actually seems quite reasomable.hover11 wrote:I thought slavery was abolisheddjruncrowd wrote:At my workplace we are entitled to ( 7 days uncertified, S/L)
( 8 days certified, S/L)
( 4 days emergency, L) which can also be used as hours
FACTSzoom rader wrote:Well it seems that Trinidad labour laws are uselesshover11 wrote:I thought slavery was abolisheddjruncrowd wrote:At my workplace we are entitled to ( 7 days uncertified, S/L)
( 8 days certified, S/L)
( 4 days emergency, L) which can also be used as hours
Motofreek wrote:Thank you all for your responses but my question is really about when is a sick leave required. I am entitled to 14 days SL as the law states but the Company's policy states that I must present a Medical Certificate (Sick Leave Certificate) if I exceed 7 of the 14 days. It doesn't matter if I take 1 day or 1 hour, any time your exceed 7 days SL for the year, you must present the Medical Certification from a doctor or face disciplinary action.
Is this legal?
And So are the Labour Courts, totally useless and always in favor of large Employers.hover11 wrote:FACTSzoom rader wrote:Well it seems that Trinidad labour laws are uselesshover11 wrote:I thought slavery was abolisheddjruncrowd wrote:At my workplace we are entitled to ( 7 days uncertified, S/L)
( 8 days certified, S/L)
( 4 days emergency, L) which can also be used as hours
Name one new labour law PNM created in the nine years in government....Nada
Imagine PNM fired an industrial court Judge via a telephone call while the woman was in another country because she was on the side of the workers now they put a yes man who always siding with employers. Rich must get richer.zoom rader wrote:And So are the Labour Courts, totally useless and always in favor of large Employers.hover11 wrote:FACTSzoom rader wrote:Well it seems that Trinidad labour laws are uselesshover11 wrote:I thought slavery was abolisheddjruncrowd wrote:At my workplace we are entitled to ( 7 days uncertified, S/L)
( 8 days certified, S/L)
( 4 days emergency, L) which can also be used as hours
Name one new labour law PNM created in the nine years in government....Nada
Then these Trade unions are nothings more but extensions of the PNM
This is correct and its why the Unions are full of sheit.Drea wrote:The challenge with these scenarios are that the law in no way explicitly prohibits the company from making such policies, and the only way to really challenge it is to take the matter to the industrial court which the employer knows 90% of the time the employee will not want to expend the time and energy it takes to get a resolution.
Unions today have gone soft when compared to their older counterparts, gone are the days when unions made a real impact in the world of work. Past union leaders like Adrian Reinzi and Uriah Butler probably turning in their graves at what all their hard work yielded to looking at today's society.zoom rader wrote:This is correct and its why the Unions are full of sheit.Drea wrote:The challenge with these scenarios are that the law in no way explicitly prohibits the company from making such policies, and the only way to really challenge it is to take the matter to the industrial court which the employer knows 90% of the time the employee will not want to expend the time and energy it takes to get a resolution.
Employers without unions take advantage
Even if an employee challenges the employer they get victimised .
Drea wrote:The challenge with these scenarios are that the law in no way explicitly prohibits the company from making such policies, and the only way to really challenge it is to take the matter to the industrial court which the employer knows 90% of the time the employee will not want to expend the time and energy it takes to get a resolution.
A company can give you your 14 days and also have an excessive absenteeism policy. For example, you can't stay home or call in sick ( uncertified)5 times within a twelve week period or you will be written up. This deters employees from sporadically staying home when they wish.Motofreek wrote:So I guess the answer to my question is "YES" . Companies can do as they wish regarding Sick Leave Policies.
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