disgruntled h blocker
Active member
Companies are simply getting around the stigma of Zero Hour Contracts by simply putting staff who are effectively full time on 3 hour/week contracts. Not ideal for anyone.
I am talking of firms within the trades like the building trade where because they have no work they can say to a man we have no work today dont come in and obviously he doesnt get paid. If that happens 2 or 3 days in a week what is the worker supposed to do? This could even extend to other types of job such as garages etc.
Works well for my lad, good money, flexible hours round his college work.
Companies are simply getting around the stigma of Zero Hour Contracts by simply putting staff who are effectively full time on 3 hour/week contracts. Not ideal for anyone.
Stigma driven largely by people spouting bollocks ??
The reality is you might say that but I have spoken to a few people who work for a major UK based coffee franchise and they don't know from week-to-week how many hours they are doing because of the lottery system the franchise run for staff rotas. How is that fair? Or the reverse where you are working for a multinational fast food outlet where your offering of hours is reduced if you cannot start at 5am 5 days a week and then do the late shift the next week.
Zero hour contracts are not contracts, it’s just a way to put workers in a massively insecure position, where many invisible forces can be used to lean on them in favour of the people running it!
Weren’t zero hours a Tony Blair new labour thing to doctor the unemployment figures?
Zero hour contracts are not contracts, it’s just a way to put workers in a massively insecure position, where many invisible forces can be used to lean on them in favour of the people running it!
Weren’t zero hours a Tony Blair new labour thing to doctor the unemployment figures?
After reading this comment i'd say these companies should not be in business if they can't afford to employ full time staff.Great recipe for making loads of businesses go bust but do carry on.
After reading this comment i'd say these companies should not be in business if they can't afford to employ full time staff.
I agree it should be abolished as many companies are abusing the system and it's all about what suits these companies.
We now live in a society where employees are just numbers and this is all to common when the population rises.
You are all getting the wrong angle of this or misinterpreting my view. I am not talking of staff that are taken on for a specific need as in a pub who advertise for a barmaid who must be prepared to do Friday and Saturday but firms that employ somebody full time 5 days a week in what ever job and then turn around and say to the worker we have no work for you today or tomorrow. Consequently they receive no pay through no fault of theirs
You are all getting the wrong angle of this or misinterpreting my view. I am not talking of staff that are taken on for a specific need as in a pub who advertise for a barmaid who must be prepared to do Friday and Saturday but firms that employ somebody full time 5 days a week in what ever job and then turn around and say to the worker we have no work for you today or tomorrow. Consequently they receive no pay through no fault of theirs