Hello HR Skippers, Please find attached a very interesting article on Legal Clarification on Absconding & Contract Labour.
From India, Mumbai
From India, Mumbai
Hi All,
in our company a female employee asked 1 month leave on medical ground in march 2018 and without approval went on leave. in April again she asked for 8-9 month leave as she mention that she in the process of mother hood. she did not share any medical document that she is expecting a baby or not nothing was mention,
from HR side 2-3 reply send on her mail by Jun 2018 that a private sector company cant allow that much leave and hr asked her to give resignation. but she did not do and gave excuse that she has been working from last 10 years and she deserve that much leave. till the time again she never shared any maternity or medical certificate or document,nor even HR send any letter or notice.
Now in Dec 2018 she shared a document that she bless with baby and kindly give her maternity benefits.
Now as per company she is not working and she is not eligble for benefit.
Kindly suggest how and on which ground company can denied to pay or avoid this situtaton because money matter a lot as per new rule of maternity
From India
in our company a female employee asked 1 month leave on medical ground in march 2018 and without approval went on leave. in April again she asked for 8-9 month leave as she mention that she in the process of mother hood. she did not share any medical document that she is expecting a baby or not nothing was mention,
from HR side 2-3 reply send on her mail by Jun 2018 that a private sector company cant allow that much leave and hr asked her to give resignation. but she did not do and gave excuse that she has been working from last 10 years and she deserve that much leave. till the time again she never shared any maternity or medical certificate or document,nor even HR send any letter or notice.
Now in Dec 2018 she shared a document that she bless with baby and kindly give her maternity benefits.
Now as per company she is not working and she is not eligble for benefit.
Kindly suggest how and on which ground company can denied to pay or avoid this situtaton because money matter a lot as per new rule of maternity
From India
A pregnant employee has maternity protection if she has been at her job for at least 3 months. This means that if a pregnant employee is dismissed without sufficient cause, or is retrenched, the employer is still required to pay her maternity benefits.
Female employees at rare case share history of being pregnant, and If she takes leaves without approval deduct her Paid leaves and minimal amount of leaves are given to a maternity cause in Pvt sector. Because employee remarks the goodwill of the organisation.
she will be eligible to put up a case for terminating or not providing maternity benefits.
https://paycheck.in/labour-law-india/maternity-and-work.
I hope this resolves your query
From India, Mumbai
Female employees at rare case share history of being pregnant, and If she takes leaves without approval deduct her Paid leaves and minimal amount of leaves are given to a maternity cause in Pvt sector. Because employee remarks the goodwill of the organisation.
she will be eligible to put up a case for terminating or not providing maternity benefits.
https://paycheck.in/labour-law-india/maternity-and-work.
I hope this resolves your query
From India, Mumbai
I was working in a company as legal advisor, the work culture of company was not good, some directors of the company used to treat employees on their fever and disfever instead of work performance, I suffer work depression due to their rude behaviour so i took uninformed leave after 7 days i got warning letter but in that warning letter they mentioned to come and find the way on my issue but when I went for meeting they give me exit form and give me penalty amount fnf statement I have refuse ot they mail it to me, what I have to do, ?
From India, Pune
From India, Pune
Find answers from people who have previously dealt with business and work issues similar to yours - Please Register and Log In to CiteHR and post your query.