Go over by 2 mins everyday on the 7 hr days and get your 10 mins of break back. Probably not going to be able to finish duty in 7 hrs anyway.Subman wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 14:20When is two hours not just two hours.?LouBarlow wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 13:48It was a difference of two hours a week which is nothing. Not a big deal at all.redlen wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 13:36Really concerns me with the Newspeak of seasonal variations. No matter how you dress it up, that is code for annualised hours. Thought that was one of the red lines?
If any deal put to the members includes this, then it has to be a No, no matter what financial carrot is dangled.
Example.
I am full time 7:24 per day.
In the summer I work 5 days at 7 hours a day.
35 hours with; 5 thirty minute breaks.
Then;
In the winter I work 5 days at 7:48 a day
39 hours with; 5 forty minute breaks.
The two hours is not just two hours.
Before the proposed change if I worked the same total number of hours over the two weeks ; 74 hours, my breaks would have been a total 6 hours and forty minutes.
But with the change the total breaks is 5 hours , and fifty minutes.
I have just lost or given up 50 minutes in paid breaks,
put it another way;
I will have worked 50 minutes for RM for nothing..
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Backdated Pay Guessing Game
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rambo1
- EX ROYAL MAIL
- Posts: 3266
- Joined: 12 Jun 2013, 20:00
- Gender: Male
Re: Backdated Pay Guessing Game
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Acca Dacca
- Posts: 3189
- Joined: 16 Aug 2009, 17:13
- Gender: Male
Re: Backdated Pay Guessing Game
He said two hours a week, not two hours a day to be fairredlen wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 13:54It is a BIG Deal being a contractual change
Once that is included in your contract, there is no going back as we have agreed it
So full-time staff work six hours a day in the summer and ten hours a day in the winter?
That is a huge deal for employees who have family commitments
If you tolerate this, then your paid break will be next
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Subman
- Posts: 138
- Joined: 24 Mar 2018, 18:12
- Gender: Male
Re: Backdated Pay Guessing Game
Manager: 'Subman, you took an extended break yesterday'.rambo1 wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 14:36Go over by 2 mins everyday on the 7 hr days and get your 10 mins of break back. Probably not going to be able to finish duty in 7 hrs anyway.Subman wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 14:20When is two hours not just two hours.?LouBarlow wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 13:48It was a difference of two hours a week which is nothing. Not a big deal at all.redlen wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 13:36Really concerns me with the Newspeak of seasonal variations. No matter how you dress it up, that is code for annualised hours. Thought that was one of the red lines?
If any deal put to the members includes this, then it has to be a No, no matter what financial carrot is dangled.
Example.
I am full time 7:24 per day.
In the summer I work 5 days at 7 hours a day.
35 hours with; 5 thirty minute breaks.
Then;
In the winter I work 5 days at 7:48 a day
39 hours with; 5 forty minute breaks.
The two hours is not just two hours.
Before the proposed change if I worked the same total number of hours over the two weeks ; 74 hours, my breaks would have been a total 6 hours and forty minutes.
But with the change the total breaks is 5 hours , and fifty minutes.
I have just lost or given up 50 minutes in paid breaks,
put it another way;
I will have worked 50 minutes for RM for nothing..
Subman: 'I worked 7 hours and 2 minutes so I was entitled to a forty minute break'.
Manager: 'if you hadn't taken a forty minute break you would have been finished in 6:52'.
Manager.' I told you before you went out no overtime'
Manager .' Subman, you owe me time'
Subman. Fcuk off you, ass hole....
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LouBarlow
- Posts: 4682
- Joined: 15 Oct 2007, 18:56
Re: Backdated Pay Guessing Game
2 hours a week is nothing. I have no idea what any of your sums mean, but it equates to working two hours longer during the winter and two less in the summer. You won’t be doing any extra unpaid work.Subman wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 14:20When is two hours not just two hours.?LouBarlow wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 13:48It was a difference of two hours a week which is nothing. Not a big deal at all.redlen wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 13:36Really concerns me with the Newspeak of seasonal variations. No matter how you dress it up, that is code for annualised hours. Thought that was one of the red lines?
If any deal put to the members includes this, then it has to be a No, no matter what financial carrot is dangled.
Example.
I am full time 7:24 per day.
In the summer I work 5 days at 7 hours a day.
35 hours with; 5 thirty minute breaks.
Then;
In the winter I work 5 days at 7:48 a day
39 hours with; 5 forty minute breaks.
The two hours is not just two hours.
Before the proposed change if I worked the same total number of hours over the two weeks ; 74 hours, my breaks would have been a total 6 hours and forty minutes.
But with the change the total breaks is 5 hours , and fifty minutes.
I have just lost or given up 50 minutes in paid breaks,
put it another way;
I will have worked 50 minutes for RM for nothing..
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DonkeyOT
- Posts: 70
- Joined: 04 Mar 2023, 15:48
- Gender: Female
Re: Backdated Pay Guessing Game
So just to be clear, are we talking about an extra 24mins a day?
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Subman
- Posts: 138
- Joined: 24 Mar 2018, 18:12
- Gender: Male
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LouBarlow
- Posts: 4682
- Joined: 15 Oct 2007, 18:56
Re: Backdated Pay Guessing Game
Yeah and the same time less in summer. It is hardly an immovable obstacle for anyone surely? I would have thought start times would be a far more important issue for most. Starting up to 2 hours later a day *would* be a deal breaker for a lot of people.
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rambo1
- EX ROYAL MAIL
- Posts: 3266
- Joined: 12 Jun 2013, 20:00
- Gender: Male
Re: Backdated Pay Guessing Game
In that case I guess you don't take your breaks if you don't get what he was trying to say.LouBarlow wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 15:262 hours a week is nothing. I have no idea what any of your sums mean, but it equates to working two hours longer during the winter and two less in the summer. You won’t be doing any extra unpaid work.Subman wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 14:20When is two hours not just two hours.?LouBarlow wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 13:48It was a difference of two hours a week which is nothing. Not a big deal at all.redlen wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 13:36Really concerns me with the Newspeak of seasonal variations. No matter how you dress it up, that is code for annualised hours. Thought that was one of the red lines?
If any deal put to the members includes this, then it has to be a No, no matter what financial carrot is dangled.
Example.
I am full time 7:24 per day.
In the summer I work 5 days at 7 hours a day.
35 hours with; 5 thirty minute breaks.
Then;
In the winter I work 5 days at 7:48 a day
39 hours with; 5 forty minute breaks.
The two hours is not just two hours.
Before the proposed change if I worked the same total number of hours over the two weeks ; 74 hours, my breaks would have been a total 6 hours and forty minutes.
But with the change the total breaks is 5 hours , and fifty minutes.
I have just lost or given up 50 minutes in paid breaks,
put it another way;
I will have worked 50 minutes for RM for nothing..
-
LouBarlow
- Posts: 4682
- Joined: 15 Oct 2007, 18:56
Re: Backdated Pay Guessing Game
It’s not complicated, unless people want to try and tie themselves in knots. If the working day decreases enough to make your allocated break time shorter, so be it. They are there for a reason.rambo1 wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 19:19In that case I guess you don't take your breaks if you don't get what he was trying to say.LouBarlow wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 15:262 hours a week is nothing. I have no idea what any of your sums mean, but it equates to working two hours longer during the winter and two less in the summer. You won’t be doing any extra unpaid work.Subman wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 14:20When is two hours not just two hours.?LouBarlow wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 13:48It was a difference of two hours a week which is nothing. Not a big deal at all.redlen wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 13:36Really concerns me with the Newspeak of seasonal variations. No matter how you dress it up, that is code for annualised hours. Thought that was one of the red lines?
If any deal put to the members includes this, then it has to be a No, no matter what financial carrot is dangled.
Example.
I am full time 7:24 per day.
In the summer I work 5 days at 7 hours a day.
35 hours with; 5 thirty minute breaks.
Then;
In the winter I work 5 days at 7:48 a day
39 hours with; 5 forty minute breaks.
The two hours is not just two hours.
Before the proposed change if I worked the same total number of hours over the two weeks ; 74 hours, my breaks would have been a total 6 hours and forty minutes.
But with the change the total breaks is 5 hours , and fifty minutes.
I have just lost or given up 50 minutes in paid breaks,
put it another way;
I will have worked 50 minutes for RM for nothing..
-
rambo1
- EX ROYAL MAIL
- Posts: 3266
- Joined: 12 Jun 2013, 20:00
- Gender: Male
Re: Backdated Pay Guessing Game
Breaks will be a moot point in the future anyway when they are not paid breaks. It'll happen, surprised they haven't tried it yet.
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Acca Dacca
- Posts: 3189
- Joined: 16 Aug 2009, 17:13
- Gender: Male
Re: Backdated Pay Guessing Game
Our PAID breaks……LouBarlow wrote: ↑18 Mar 2023, 05:13It’s not complicated, unless people want to try and tie themselves in knots. If the working day decreases enough to make your allocated break time shorter, so be it. They are there for a reason.rambo1 wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 19:19In that case I guess you don't take your breaks if you don't get what he was trying to say.LouBarlow wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 15:262 hours a week is nothing. I have no idea what any of your sums mean, but it equates to working two hours longer during the winter and two less in the summer. You won’t be doing any extra unpaid work.Subman wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 14:20When is two hours not just two hours.?LouBarlow wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 13:48It was a difference of two hours a week which is nothing. Not a big deal at all.redlen wrote: ↑17 Mar 2023, 13:36Really concerns me with the Newspeak of seasonal variations. No matter how you dress it up, that is code for annualised hours. Thought that was one of the red lines?
If any deal put to the members includes this, then it has to be a No, no matter what financial carrot is dangled.
Example.
I am full time 7:24 per day.
In the summer I work 5 days at 7 hours a day.
35 hours with; 5 thirty minute breaks.
Then;
In the winter I work 5 days at 7:48 a day
39 hours with; 5 forty minute breaks.
The two hours is not just two hours.
Before the proposed change if I worked the same total number of hours over the two weeks ; 74 hours, my breaks would have been a total 6 hours and forty minutes.
But with the change the total breaks is 5 hours , and fifty minutes.
I have just lost or given up 50 minutes in paid breaks,
put it another way;
I will have worked 50 minutes for RM for nothing..
If you tolerate this, then your paid break will be next
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POSTPERSON50
- Posts: 511
- Joined: 21 Oct 2021, 11:09
- Gender: Female
Re: Backdated Pay Guessing Game
If you think this company is going to pay over a grand in back pay to each employee you're deluded.
Over 100 million pounds in back pay? Yeah right.
Over 100 million pounds in back pay? Yeah right.
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ddtc
- Posts: 252
- Joined: 16 Jul 2012, 19:42
- Gender: Male
Re: Backdated Pay Guessing Game
Well they paid over £500 million to shareholders and gave themselves fat bonuses and payrise knowing full well the business wasn't going to be doing as well. Makes you wonder what if they scaled back the amount they paid out including superhubs, electric cars etc.POSTPERSON50 wrote: ↑18 Mar 2023, 08:34If you think this company is going to pay over a grand in back pay to each employee you're deluded.
Over 100 million pounds in back pay? Yeah right.
If the company was honest and fair from the word go last year then I'd happily discuss the changes needed to turn the business around. But no they just threw money away at any brain dead idea from the top with no common sense whatsoever. Blaming us for the losses and contracts lost through strike action so on so forth.
If they worked with us from the start we might of been in a better place. Which might of meant no strikes and tonnes of money wasted on agency staff who were paid more for doing less work saved. Bonuses for managers breaking strikes saved. No business contracts lost. Paying Evri money to do our work and god knows what else they secretly spent money on.
So yes they best back date because it was their incompetance that lead us to where we are not us.
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robson144
- Posts: 66
- Joined: 05 May 2022, 21:01
- Gender: Male
Re: Backdated Pay Guessing Game
ddtc wrote: ↑18 Mar 2023, 14:04Well they paid over £500 million to shareholders and gave themselves fat bonuses and payrise knowing full well the business wasn't going to be doing as well. Makes you wonder what if they scaled back the amount they paid out including superhubs, electric cars etc.POSTPERSON50 wrote: ↑18 Mar 2023, 08:34If you think this company is going to pay over a grand in back pay to each employee you're deluded.
Over 100 million pounds in back pay? Yeah right.
If the company was honest and fair from the word go last year then I'd happily discuss the changes needed to turn the business around. But no they just threw money away at any brain dead idea from the top with no common sense whatsoever. Blaming us for the losses and contracts lost through strike action so on so forth.
If they worked with us from the start we might of been in a better place. Which might of meant no strikes and tonnes of money wasted on agency staff who were paid more for doing less work saved. Bonuses for managers breaking strikes saved. No business contracts lost. Paying Evri money to do our work and god knows what else they secretly spent money on.
So yes they best back date because it was their incompetance that lead us to where we are not us.
Absolutely spot on