Notice period - post Furlough
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Discussion

Wilmslowboy

Original Poster:

4,646 posts

229 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
Slightly hypothetical situation at the moment, but could get real.

A member of staff suggested to another he is planning on leaving, and will not be looking to honour his notice period (3 months) if successful in getting the other role, (he has not resigned yet).

Cited reason for feeling he doesn't have to honour his notice, is he was put on furlough,

- had to face a near 50% pay cut (normally paid £45k) for 3 months, all of which is counter to his contract. This short fall has not been made up to him.
- he never explicitly gave consent do go on furlough, simply didn't raise any objections (in writing) when offered, says it was it was presented to him as a fate complete.

I've asked our HR and they are suggesting him being furloughed has no bearing on his obligation to his notice period going forward.

Question, other than put my arm around him, and appeal to his better nature, is there anything concrete I can do if he chooses to give us a weeks notice instead of three months.

Will this set a precedent for other staff members who were furloughed ?

V8 Stang

4,482 posts

206 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
I would just let him go, having someone in the workplace who does not wasn't to be there won't be productive.

Benrad

653 posts

172 months

Friday 28th August 2020
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I'm no expert but it feels to me like his employment contract was broken by not paying him his full wage, so the notice period would no longer apply.

Morally I can certainly see why he'd feel he doesn't owe the company anything, although that would depend on how much he felt he had been valued in other ways, at other times.

Heartworm

1,938 posts

184 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
My place set the precedent that those who got another job when on furlough didn’t need to work any notice period.

They are the ones who feel most vulnerable should redundancies be made so I understand why they would be looking.

Wilmslowboy

Original Poster:

4,646 posts

229 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
V8 Stang said:
I would just let him go, having someone in the workplace who does not wasn't to be there won't be productive.
This would be my normal position, however it might just be a bit of a wobble by him, so a bit of support and reassurance (from his line manager and I) might be enough to regain his trust/ support.

He works on projects and therefore notice is important to ensure a reasonable level of continuation and handover.


PurplePJ

293 posts

228 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
Not a lot you can do if someone doesn't fulfil their notice period to be honest. Not unless you want to spend a lot of time/money on solicitors, etc.

To me it's an honour thing, says a lot about the person if they see out their notice professionally.

stumpage

2,195 posts

249 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
PurplePJ said:
Not a lot you can do if someone doesn't fulfil their notice period to be honest. Not unless you want to spend a lot of time/money on solicitors, etc.

To me it's an honour thing, says a lot about the person if they see out their notice professionally.
Bosses never make phone calls to other bosses and never ask for off the record info on a previous employee and they never ever let any info on a potential employee help with their hiring decision.



xjay1337

15,966 posts

141 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
stumpage said:
PurplePJ said:
Not a lot you can do if someone doesn't fulfil their notice period to be honest. Not unless you want to spend a lot of time/money on solicitors, etc.

To me it's an honour thing, says a lot about the person if they see out their notice professionally.
Bosses never make phone calls to other bosses and never ask for off the record info on a previous employee and they never ever let any info on a potential employee help with their hiring decision.
Two sides to everything though

If you were earning £45k then put on 50% salary when Furloughed (is that what's happened?) then that's really rather stty of the company to do.


stumpage

2,195 posts

249 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
xjay1337 said:
stumpage said:
PurplePJ said:
Not a lot you can do if someone doesn't fulfil their notice period to be honest. Not unless you want to spend a lot of time/money on solicitors, etc.

To me it's an honour thing, says a lot about the person if they see out their notice professionally.
Bosses never make phone calls to other bosses and never ask for off the record info on a previous employee and they never ever let any info on a potential employee help with their hiring decision.
Two sides to everything though

If you were earning £45k then put on 50% salary when Furloughed (is that what's happened?) then that's really rather stty of the company to do.
Exactly why a professional discussion and agreement on notice is always the best way forward. Employee and Employer have to have less reason to cause future aggro to each other.

xjay1337

15,966 posts

141 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
stumpage said:
xjay1337 said:
stumpage said:
PurplePJ said:
Not a lot you can do if someone doesn't fulfil their notice period to be honest. Not unless you want to spend a lot of time/money on solicitors, etc.

To me it's an honour thing, says a lot about the person if they see out their notice professionally.
Bosses never make phone calls to other bosses and never ask for off the record info on a previous employee and they never ever let any info on a potential employee help with their hiring decision.
Two sides to everything though

If you were earning £45k then put on 50% salary when Furloughed (is that what's happened?) then that's really rather stty of the company to do.
Exactly why a professional discussion and agreement on notice is always the best way forward. Employee and Employer have to have less reason to cause future aggro to each other.
I agree talky talky beats punchy punchy.

Myself though if I was OP and this happened

1) I was earning £45k per year
2) My salary was cut in half without express permission from myself
3) I was placed on Furlough without discussion and even further out of pocket
4) No additional monies have been paid etc.

And then I found another job :

There would be no way I would be working my notice period either.



I am a consummate professional and I've only ever once in 15 years of working "fallen out" with an employer and many cases I have been doing projects right up until the end of my notice period but there are cases and times where you need to do what is best for you, whether it's because the company have fked you over in the past etc.
An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind and all of that, but that is the reality of it.

His company are directly responsible for him suffering financially in a rather significant way and sound like they've gone about it very badly so why should he offer ANY good grace in the situation?


anonymous-user

77 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
IANAL, however if the employee failed to object to the changes and carried on as 'normal', there may be an argument they've accepted the contractual changes by their conduct.

Depending on the contractual provisions, the notice period and any attached conditions (for example, gardening leave) may be enforceable. Beware that, if you want to rely on non-compete clauses later, you may want to take advice to ensure your own conduct doesn't nullify their efficacy later on.

From a pragmatic point of view, if the employee doesn't respond to an arm around the shoulder and decide to stay, you may create an unpleasant situation by enforcing an unhappy employee's notice period. That spare time on gardening leave can be used to create mischief, of which you're paying them to create.

spikeyhead

19,645 posts

220 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
Wilmslowboy said:
V8 Stang said:
I would just let him go, having someone in the workplace who does not wasn't to be there won't be productive.
This would be my normal position, however it might just be a bit of a wobble by him, so a bit of support and reassurance (from his line manager and I) might be enough to regain his trust/ support.

He works on projects and therefore notice is important to ensure a reasonable level of continuation and handover.
That bit in bold was basically thrown away by you when you cut his wages in half and put him on furlough.

Wilmslowboy

Original Poster:

4,646 posts

229 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all

I wholly agree we (company) are on the lower moral ground due to furlough and nothing is owned (by him).


However, furlough is a new phenomenon and I would like to understand if there is a precedent that by furloughing, employees obligations such as notice are no longer expected or valid.


Furlough originated in the US (I think) and if I'm right notice periods (either side) are rare in the US ??




edc

9,482 posts

274 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
Furlough does not negate the contractual obligations. It might change your attitude towards them. If the employee in question is on full time furlough anyway now and you don't need him or her then their notice will be on furlough. If you need them back for a bit to do handover tell them and lay them as normal for their time.

CourtAgain

3,777 posts

87 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
I would have no problem finding another job if I was in such a position, and wouldn't give a notice period either. Some employees have been on Furlough then have ended up being made redundant. We will see more of this in October.

Being on 50% of your pay is not great, so if another job offered a proper (non-furloughed) wage, I'd take it, as I'd be in a better financial position.

edc

9,482 posts

274 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
If your salary was £45k and you were full time furloughed then you should not face a 50% pay cut but a 20% cut. If you were flexible furlough the cut would be even less.

Wilmslowboy

Original Poster:

4,646 posts

229 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
edc said:
If your salary was £45k and you were full time furloughed then you should not face a 50% pay cut but a 20% cut. If you were flexible furlough the cut would be even less.
Yep that's correct, my error, max furlough is £2,500 and his salary was probably around £3,750
33% reduction (before tax)

jimmyjimjim

8,024 posts

261 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
Wilmslowboy said:
fate complete.
fait accompli?

Wilmslowboy said:
Furlough originated in the US (I think) and if I'm right notice periods (either side) are rare in the US ??
Yes, I've been furloughed from my previous job a couple of times. Notice period is usually 2 weeks unless otherwise agreed.





edc

9,482 posts

274 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
Lay-off and short time working have existed in the UK for a long time, just rarely used.

Short time working government funded social security schemes have been in many other European countries for perhaps longer and are a bit more commonly used.

Mgd_uk

401 posts

127 months

Friday 28th August 2020
quotequote all
Personally if I was in his shoes I wouldn’t give any notice, your company basically st on him to the tune of £1250 a month, how you think it’s acceptable to give him days notice that he is no longer needed on projects and furloughed him with no notice, but expect 3months when it suits you.

Contractually you could go after him for any losses incurred, but morally your company is wrong.

I’m an employer and had a few staff furloughed but ensured they were topped up to 100% salary for the 6 weeks period they were on furlough leave.